Birch Ranch & Oil Co. v. Hopkins

276 P.2d 134, 128 Cal. App. 2d 730, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1531
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 16, 1954
DocketCiv. No. 4761
StatusPublished

This text of 276 P.2d 134 (Birch Ranch & Oil Co. v. Hopkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birch Ranch & Oil Co. v. Hopkins, 276 P.2d 134, 128 Cal. App. 2d 730, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1531 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

MUSSELL, J.

This is an action for declaratory relief, dissolution of a partnership, if found to exist, or, in the alternative, for partition. In their answer defendants claim an interest of at least 33% per cent in the property involved, deny generally the allegations of the complaint and seek an accounting. The trial court found that a receiver should be appointed, the property sold and that the proceeds from the sale should be divided as follows:

Otis Birch, M. Estelle Birch, B. F. Con-
away and Anna M. Conaway.........70-17/18%
Louise Smith Hopkins.................14-19/36%
Ruth Smith Hopkins ..................14-19/36%

An interlocutory decree was entered and the receiver sold the property. Final judgment was entered based upon findings of fact and conclusions of law and the interlocutory decree, and a motion for new trial was denied.

Appellants state that this appeal is taken from that portion of the findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment wherein it was found that A. Otis Birch, neither as an individual, director or managing agent of the Menges Oil Company, nor manager of the Birch Oil Company, wrongfully used any property of the defendants or of the Menges Oil Company for his own profit or for any purpose, or at any time obtained or sought to obtain any advantage over the defend[732]*732ants Hopkins by misrepresentation, concealment, threat, undue influence or adverse pressure of any kind, and that A. Otis Birch had not violated any fiduciary relationship or duty to the appellants. They contend that the evidence does not sustain the findings, conclusions and judgment and that they are entitled to an accounting in accordance with the percentages claimed by them.

The Menges Oil Company was incorporated with an authorized capital stock of $90,000, divided into 90,000 shares of the par value of $1.00 each and the corporation owned 21.16 acres of proven oil property in Orange County. This corporation was dissolved on August 19, 1911, and at that time A. Otis and M. Estelle Birch owned 43,850 shares, B. F. and Anna M. Conaway owned 20,000 shares, and Louise and Ruth Smith, defendants herein, owned 26,150 shares. In January, 1911, the Menges Oil Company had four producing wells on the property and were drilling well No. 5. This well came in as a “gusher” on March 28, 1911, and produced approximately 2,480 barrels per day. On January 17, 1911, the stock of the Menges Oil Company was held and owned in the following manner:

Mr. and Mrs. A. Otis Birch............... 15,000
Mr. and Mrs. Conaway................... 8,000
Ruth and Louise Smith................... 26,150
Treasury shares, Certificate 24 ............ 5,000
Porter.................................. 9,750
Dawes ................................. 4,925
Mathews................................ 3,275
Huff .........................'.......... 1,250
Campbell ............................... 1,250
Edwards ............................... 1,250
Bishop ................................. 5,000
Tedford ................................ 1,500
Ainsworth .............................. 1,750
Travis .................................. 500
Thomas ................................ 650
Blee ................................... 1,000
Williams ............................... 3,750
Total issued shares........... 90,000

On January 18, 1911, Birch acquired an option to purchase the shares owned by Porter and thereafter and until March 14, 1911, acquired similar options from other stockholders. These options provided for the purchase of shares on terms and allowed three months for the payment of twenty-five per [733]*733cent of the purchase price, the balance payable in one year. Birch acquired such options on 35,850 shares as follows:

Porter ................................. 9,750
Mathews ............................... 3,275
Huff.................................... 1,250
Campbell ............................... 1,250
Bishop.................................. 5,000
Tedford ................................ 1,500
Travis.................................. 500
Thomas................................. 650
Edwards ............................... 1,250
Ainsworth .............................. 1,750
Blee.................................... 1,000
Dawes ................................. 4,925
Williams................................ 3,750
Total shares ................ 35,850

Birch testified that in addition to the option shares which were placed in escrow, he purchased in March, 1911, 5,000 shares from one Morrison who had purchased them from the corporation in February, 1911.

On April 6, 1911, the Menges Oil Company issued its certificates Nos. 95, 96 and 97, each for 10,975 shares of stock to the First National Bank of Los Angeles, pledgee, and on April 10,1911, issued another certificate to said bank, pledgee, for 4,075 shares, making in all a total of 37,000 shares of pledged stock. This stock was pledged by Birch as security for a loan to him by said bank of the sum of $23,000. Birch testified in this connection that this money was loaned to him in three different installments to apply on the purchase of the stock that was then in escrow; that he used this and other money borrowed and obtained from other sources to release the pledged stock from escrow; that at the time the pledged certificates were issued he had 12,900 shares of his own; his wife had 2,100, and the Conaways’ shares, numbering 8,000, were available to him. He had purchased the Dawes shares, numbering 4,925, 5,000 Bishop shares and 5,000 Morrison shares, or a total of 37,925 shares, 925 shares in excess of the pledged stock issued; that the shares pledged to the First National Bank were the shares he purchased through the escrow and that he did not use any of the Menges Company’s corporate funds or any funds of the defendants to purchase the stock in escrow; that when he obtained stock certificates from the escrow he reissued them as pledged shares and de[734]*734livered them to the First National Bank as security for the loan of $23,000.

Louise Smith Hopkins was born in November, 1891, and her sister, Ruth, in November, 1893. Following the death of their mother in 1906, Birch assisted them with their financial affairs until their marriages in 1917 to Messrs. Hopkins.

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276 P.2d 134, 128 Cal. App. 2d 730, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birch-ranch-oil-co-v-hopkins-calctapp-1954.