California-Calaveras Mining Co. v. Walls

149 P. 595, 170 Cal. 285, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 396
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1915
DocketSac. No. 2115.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 149 P. 595 (California-Calaveras Mining Co. v. Walls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California-Calaveras Mining Co. v. Walls, 149 P. 595, 170 Cal. 285, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 396 (Cal. 1915).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

The plaintiff corporation sued for a decree canceling a promissory note for one hundred thousand dollars delivered by it to defendant Wails; to have annulled a trust deed made by it to defendant Wilson, as trustee, to secure said note; to have-canneled-certain stock certificates issued by plaintiff and held by defendants Manson, Jarmuth, and McGuinn, and for an .accounting by Manson to plaintiff. Manson was served by publication and failing to appear his default was entered. The action was dismissed as to the defendant McGuinn. Jarmuth, Walls, and Wilson answered and contested the right of the plaintiff to recover. Plaintiff obtained a decree canceling said note, annulling said trust-deed, canceling all stock certificates issued by the corporation to and held by Manson and Jarmuth, and also a judgment against Manson and Jarmuth for eightyAhree thojigand five hundred dollars. Defendants Walls and Wilson appeal.

The findings are very full and as far as practical we epitomize them; as also other facts in the case.

*287 The court found that defendants Manson and Jarmuth prior to January 7, 1907, became familiar with a mining and ranch property consisting of seven thousand two hundred acres located in Calaveras and Sutter counties in this state, the property of a Mrs. Caroline Wright, which she was offering for sale for one hundred and twenty thousand dollars, and a sale of which at that figure they had discussed with her. About January 7, 1907, Manson, for himself and Jarmuth, visited Chicago for the purpose of interesting parties there in the purchase of this property. He got into conference with David T. Adams, J. H. James, Edmund D. Brigham, John T. Jones, and Paul Brown, residents of Chicago, and hereafter to be designated the Chicago parties. He sought the co-operation of these parties with himself and Jarmuth in the purchase of this property. Several meetings and conferences were had between them on the subject in which Manson stated that he had a verbal option on the property for two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, but was with its owner, could purchase it for less than any one else; that he would, however, require Jarmuth’s services to effect it, but that he, Manson, would attend to the entire matter for the benefit of all of them should they join with him in purchasing it. Some of the Chicago parties wanted to visit the property, but Manson protested against their doing so, stating that the owner was an old woman, highly nervous, and that if she learned that Eastern parties were trying to purchase the property she would become excited and raise its price. As a result of these conferences, the Chicago parties believing all these representations of Manson, it was agreed that they and Manson and Jarmuth should co-operate in the purchase of it. As the most convenient way of accomplishing this, it was agreed between them that a corporation should be formed and stock thereof distributed to all associated in the enterprise; that all of them would compose the corporation; that the Chicago parties would finance the corporation to be so formed by purchasing or causing to be purchased such of its stock as would be necessary to place sufficient funds in the treasury to pay certain promissory notes to be issued by the corporation; that Manson should act in the organization of the corporation, attend entirely to the purchase of the mining property, transfer it to the corporation, *288 and on the assumption of the truth of Manson’s statement that the least price at which it could be purchased by him from its owner for the benefit of said proposed corporation was two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, that in payment therefor the corporation should make and deliver to Manson its three promissory notes for one hundred thousand dollars each—the fifty thousand dollars above the actual price of the mining property to be paid to Manson by the corporation, as he insisted it should be, as his profit for his services in attending to the securing of the property for the mutual benefit of all concerned and the formation of the corporation to take it over. This arrangement being reached between the parties, on January 7, 1907, a written agreement for the purpose of carrying it out was signed by Manson and Brigham, the latter as representing himself and the other Chicago parties in the transaction. This agreement provided that Manson should organize the plaintiff corporation in California with a capital stock of two million five hundred thousand dollars divided into five hundred thousand shares of the par value of five dollars each; that its directors should consist of seven members to be selected by Manson; that on the organization of the corporation Manson should transfer to it the mining property, and in full payment therefor the corporation should issue to Manson all its capital stock fully paid up and nonassessable, and deliver to him three of its promissory notes for one hundred thousand dollars each without interest, due, respectively, February 5, 1907, March 5, 1907, and April 5, 1907; that of this 500,000 shares of the capital stock Manson should transfer to the treasury of the corporation 150,000 shares as a fund for future use by the corporation; that 199,965 shares of said 500,000 shares should be deposited with a trustee to be delivered on payment of said three promissory notes, as follows: 50,000 shares to Brigham, 107,143 shares to Brigham for himself and his assignees, and 42,822 shares to Manson; that further, of said 100,000 shares Manson should forthwith turn into the treasury of the corporation 150,000 shares to be issued by it to Paul Brown, as trustee, to be sold by him for the corporation at par on certain terms of payment specified in the agreement.

On the execution of this agreement Manson immediately came to California and he and Jarmuth visited Mrs. Wright. She had given an option to Jarmuth on this property for *289 one hundred and twenty thousand dollars before any negotiations were entered into with the Chicago parties and would have sold it at any time for that figure. At this conference Mrs. Wright agreed to sell it to Manson for one hundred and twenty thousand dollars—seventy-five thousand dollars in cash—and the delivery of certain bonds and a note and mortgage held by Jarmuth representing the balance—and on January 21, 1907, deposited in escrow with a certain bank a deed to Manson of the property to be delivered to him on payment of the money and delivery of the bonds and note and mortgage on or before February 10, 1907. On January 21, 1907, Manson caused to be carried out the written agreement between himself and the Chicago parties as far as its literal terms are concerned. He caused the corporation plaintiff to be organized, conveyed to it one-half of the mining property and in consideration therefor the corporation issued and delivered to him all its capital stock. At an adjourned meeting on the same day he conveyed to the corporation the other half of the property and delivered to it as treasury stock of the corporation 300,000 of said shares issued to him and received from the corporation the three promissory notes for one hundred thousand dollars each payable at the respective dates without interest as provided in the agreement. The other terms of the agreement as to the distribution of the shares of stock by Manson and the issuance by the corporation of the treasury stock to Brown were also carried out.

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Bluebook (online)
149 P. 595, 170 Cal. 285, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-calaveras-mining-co-v-walls-cal-1915.