Bottle Mining and Milling Co. v. Kern

99 P. 994, 9 Cal. App. 527, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 92
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 17, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 561.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 99 P. 994 (Bottle Mining and Milling Co. v. Kern) 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
Bottle Mining and Milling Co. v. Kern, 99 P. 994, 9 Cal. App. 527, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 92 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

TAGGART, J.

This appeal comes to this court by transfer from the supreme court. The appeal was taken to that court on the theory that the “assessment,” the validity of which is attacked, was such as to give that court appellate jurisdiction in the case. (154 Cal. 96, [97 Pac. 25].)

The action was brought by the plaintiff corporation to recover from the defendant, who is the holder of 50,000 shares of its capital stock, the sum of $350, the unpaid balance of an assessment levied upon such shares of stock. At the time said assessment was levied 462,000 out of its 500,000 shares of stock, of the par value of one dollar each, had been subscribed, and certificates therefor issued to its stockholders as fully paid-up stock. The necessity for the levy of the assessment upon which this action is based is stated in the complaint as follows: Said corporation was in debt to tona fide creditors in the sum of $5,000, and that it was necessary for said corporation to expend about $500 more for the maintenance and operation of its mining claims and to procure the performance of the necessary assessment work thereon required by law, and for other necessary expenses essential to the con- *530 • ducting of its business and paying of its debts, and that the corporation was without means to pay said indebtedness, present or prospective, and it was necessary to raise the sum of $5,500 in order to pay the same.

Judgment was entered by default for failure to answer, after demurrer overruled, and the question of the validity of the assessment is before us to be determined on the sufficiency of the complaint. The assessment was made on September 28, 1906, and October 30, 1906, and November 15, 1906, were named respectively as the dates when unpaid assessments would be delinquent and the sale of delinquent stock be made. By reason of a failure to properly publish assessment notice, in accordance with law and the resolution passed, another meeting of the directors was held on December 6, 1906, at which a resolution was passed vacating all proceedings subsequent to the levy of the assessment, and fixing new dates when the stock would become delinquent and sold respectively, to wit, delinquent January 15, 1907, and sold February 4, 1907. There was no personal service of notice, and the allegation as to the publication of the notice of the time fixed for delinquency and date of sale is merely that the notice was published once a week for four successive weeks (giving papers), but it is not stated when such publication was made, either by dates or time of commencement of the publication. The only language used which can be construed to refer to time of the commencement of the publication is the allegation: “That upon making the resolution aforesaid the secretary of the corporation caused to be published,” etc.

The contention of appellant that an assessment cannot be made upon fully paid-up stock or collected by personal action in this state cannot be sustained. As said in Son on Corporations in California (page 227), the two great distinguishing features of the California law as to calls and assessments are (a) that each of them can be collected by forced sale of the stock, (b) that assessments can be collected by personal action at law. (Santa Cruz Co. v. Spreckels, 65 Cal. 193, [3 Pac. 661, 802]; Spurgeon v. Santa Ana Co.,120 Cal. 71, [52 Pac. 140]; Green v. Abientine Medical Co., 96 Cal. 328, [31 Pac. 100].) That such was not the case at common law is asserted by the same authority, and that the rule is different in most of the states is also declared by most of the text-writers on the subject. (1 Cook on Corporations, *531 see. 241; Clark & Marshall on Private Corporations, sees. 402-404; Purdy’s Beach on Private Corporations, sec. 336; 26 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 2d ed., 923.)

As said in the last-cited work, the general rule is well established that corporations have no implied power to levy assessments on stock which has been fully paid up. The stockholder becomes such by virtue of his contract with the company, and is entitled to stand upon Ms rights under it. When the amount called for in it has been paid, he cannot be required to contribute an additional amount, unless the power to levy such an assessment is expressly conferred by the charter of the corporation or by a statute in force at the time the stock was issued. WTien there is such a statute, it becomes a part of the stockholder’s contract with the corporation as much as if its provisions were set out in such contract, subject only to the rule of construction that where the power is given by statute the mode provided must be strictly pursued.

Assessments are authorized by the Civil Code for the purpose of paying expenses, conducting business or paying debts, and may be levied any time after one-fourth of the capital stock has been subscribed. (See. 331.) The last provision is complied with by the issuance of, and full payment for, certificates for more than one-fourth of the stock. (Bell v. Standard Quicksilver Co., 146 Cal. 706, [81 Pac. 17].) The sections providing the limitations placed upon the power to levy an assessment (sees. 332, 333) indicate that, except in respect to the amount that may be levied, there is no distinction between an assessment upon unpaid stock and one upon fully paid-up stock. The procedure for levying and collecting an assessment, and for the sale of delinquent stock, is the same whether it be a “call” for subscription, or an “assessment” on paid-up stock to pay debts and expenses which is under consideration. The provisions of sections 331 to 349 are alike applicable. And, although appellant lays some stress upon the fact that plaintiff is a mining corporation, there is nothing in the sections of the Civil Code relating especially to such corporations to take them out of the general rule. (Secs. 586 to 590.) The opinion in the federal case of In re South Mountain etc. Mining Co., 14 Fed. 347, relied upon by appellant, expressly distinguishes the collection of an assessment by personal action where the levy was voluntarily *532 made by the directors of the corporation, from the case before it (page 350), and it is therefore not necessary to say that the distinction there made between mining and other corporations in respect to collecting assessments and calls is, or is not, approved.

Section 349 provides that on the day specified for declaring the stock delinquent, or at any time subsequent thereto, and before the sale of the delinquent stock, the board of directors may elect to waive further proceedings under this chapter for the collection of delinquent assessments, or any part or portion thereof, and may elect to proceed by action, etc. This waiver must be made at a time when the power to exercise the right waived is in existence, as there can be no waiver of a right that has been lost. Unless there are two existing remedies, both open to the corporation at the time, there can be no election. (San Bernardino v. Merrill, 108 Cal. 494, [41 Pac.

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99 P. 994, 9 Cal. App. 527, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bottle-mining-and-milling-co-v-kern-calctapp-1908.