California Collection Agency, Inc. v. Fontana

143 P.2d 507, 61 Cal. App. 2d 648, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 701
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1943
DocketCiv. 12385
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 143 P.2d 507 (California Collection Agency, Inc. v. Fontana) 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
California Collection Agency, Inc. v. Fontana, 143 P.2d 507, 61 Cal. App. 2d 648, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 701 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

SPENCE, J.

Plaintiff, as the assignee of the trustee in bankruptcy of Escalón Winery, Inc., sued eight defendants, who had been the officers and directors of the corporation, seeking the recovery of funds of the corporation alleged to have been wrongfully applied by said defendants to the payment of their individual liabilities. The complaint was filed in the Superior Court in San Francisco. Three defendants, who resided in Stanislaus County, filed a notice of motion for change of venue to Stanislaus County. Numerous affidavits were filed in support of and in opposition to said motion. The trial court entered its order granting said motion and plaintiff appeals from said order.

It is conceded that only one of the eight defendants, namely Marino Lima, resided in the city and county of San Francisco ; that the three moving defendants resided in Stanislaus County; and that of the remaining defendants, one resided in Sacramento County and three resided in San Joaquin County. It seems to be further conceded that the complaint alleged sufficient facts to state a cause of action against all defendants, including the resident defendant. The contention made by the moving defendants upon the hearing of the motion was that the resident defendant Marino Lima, had been “improperly joined as a defendant, or had been made a defendant solely for the purpose of having the action tried in” the city and county of San Francisco so that the residence of said resident defendant should not be considered in determining the proper place for the trial of the action. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 395.)

Certain facts were undisputed upon the hearing of the motion, said facts appearing from the uncontradicted allegations of the verified complaint and uncontradicted allegations found in the affidavits offered by plaintiff and the uncontradicted allegations found in the affidavits offered by defendants. A partnership formerly conducted a winery prior to the incorporation of Escalón Winery, Inc. Upon the incorporation, stock was issued to the partners under a permit *650 from the Division of Corporations in exchange for the partnership assets, the amount of which stock was determined by an appraisal of the net value of the partnership assets. In submitting the statement for the purpose of the appraisal, the partners had failed to list a liability of the partnership in the sum of $17,185.04 for taxes owed to the federal government upon the fortification of certain wines. The stock was issued and the partners became directors of the corporation. Thereafter the directors of the corporation caused said taxes to be paid from the funds of the corporation and certain entries were made in the corporation journal and ledger. In the journal appeared entries purporting to list proportionate charges against each of the former partners for these expenditures. The following notation appeared in the journal immediately under these charges :

“At the time the corporation took over the assets and liabilities of the partnership, there was a liability of $17,-185.04 for fortifying tax on the 1935 production of wine which had been produced by the partnership.
“This liability was not known until after the stock had been issued to the respective partners in exchange for their net worth.
“The journal entry is made for the purpose of charging the tax back to the respective partners in proportion to their interest in the partnership, as this tax would reduce the net profit of the partnership which has been credited to the partners. ’ ’

Similar entries purporting to cover proportionate charges against each of the former partners were made in the ledger under “Stockholders Accounts Receivable.” In both the journal and ledger, Marino Lima, the resident defendant, was charged as a partner with two per cent of the total tax expenditure or $343.70.

The complaint was drawn in four counts. The first count charged that all defendants had been partners and that after the incorporation, all defendants became officers and directors of the corporation. It further charged that the defendants, while acting as such directors, conspired to appropriate and did appropriate the corporation funds to pay their individual liability for said taxes thereby becoming jointly and severally-liable to the corporation for the funds so appropriated. The second count charged defendants with a joint and several liability upon a common count for money paid by the corporation for the use and benefit of defendants. The *651 third count charged defendants with a joint and several liability upon an open and current book account. And the fourth count, charged that when the Commissioner of Corporations threatened to cancel the permit and rescind the issuance of the stock to defendants, defendants expressly agreed, for the purpose of avoiding such action, to pay to the corporation amounts equal to those charged against them in the journal and ledger of the corporation.

The affidavits offered by defendants in support of the motion for change of venue were all directed to the claim that Marino Lima, the resident defendant, had not been a partner of the remaining defendants. The affidavit of defendant Marino Lima read “That affiant was and is improperly joined as defendant in the above entitled matter, in that, at all times mentioned in the complaint herein filed, affiant was not, or at any time since has been, a partner or in any way associated with the remaining defendants.” Similar language was used in other affidavits of other defendants with the following language added “Affiant further states that the obligation, indebtedness or liability against the said Marino Lima, if any, was and is the obligation, indebtedness or liability of the remaining defendant partners.” We will not pause to discuss the sufficiency of these affidavits for the purpose for which they were offered. We will assume, without deciding, that they were sufficient as allegations of fact rather than conclusions of law, and we will further assume, without deciding, that said allegations were not pregnant with the admission that Marino Lima had been a partner prior to the incorporation and a stockholder and director following the incorporation. It is obvious, however, that defendants were seeking, upon the hearing of the motion for change of venue, to have the cause determined upon the merits insofar as it concerned the defendant Marino Lima. In opposition to the motion, plaintiff relied upon the allegations of the verified complaint and similar allegations contained in counteraffidavits together with the further allegations hereinafter mentioned. Plaintiff included in the affidavits photostatic copies of the above mentioned journal and ledger entries for the purpose of showing that plaintiff had reasonable grounds for the belief in good faith that it had a cause of action against all defendants including defendant Marino Lima. Plaintiff further alleged in the affidavits that Marino Lima was joined “in good faith” as a defendant and was not joined solely for *652 the purpose of having the action tried in San Francisco. The showing made by plaintiff concerning the reasonable grounds for its belief was not controverted except that defendants filed an affidavit claiming to show “the error and mistake on the part of said entries” in the journal and ledger.

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143 P.2d 507, 61 Cal. App. 2d 648, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-collection-agency-inc-v-fontana-calctapp-1943.