California National Supply Co. (A Corporation) v. O'Brien

197 P. 414, 51 Cal. App. 606, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 713
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 1, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3240.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 197 P. 414 (California National Supply Co. (A Corporation) v. O'Brien) 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 National Supply Co. (A Corporation) v. O'Brien, 197 P. 414, 51 Cal. App. 606, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 713 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

Plaintiff, a judgment creditor of the Panama Oil Company, a California corporation, brought this action against certain of the stockholders of that company to collect what are claimed to be the unpaid balances on the par value of their shares. Plaintiff had judgment and defendants appeal.

In so far as is material to our inquiry, the ease, as disclosed by the findings of the trial court, is substantially this: The Panama Oil Company was incorporated with an authorized capital stock of $2,000,000, divided into 2,000,000 shares of the par value of one dollar each. At the first *609 meeting of the board of directors, held May 24, 1912, J. B. Hedrick, the president of the company and a leading spirit in its incorporation and organization, presented to the board a written offer to convey to the corporation certain properties, consisting of a lease of certain land supposed to be oil-bearing, certain shares of stock of the Daybreak Oil Company, and an option to purchase certain shares of stock of the Midnight Oil Company, for the sum of $2,000,000, to be paid by delivery of the company’s 2.000. 000 shares to Hedrick or his order—the shares to be issued as fully paid. This offer was accepted by the board and Hedrick thereupon transferred the properties to the corporation. Three days later, viz., May 27, 1912, Hedrick delivered to the company a written order wherein he directed the corporation to issue to himself 1,000,000 of its 2,000,000 shares of capital stock, and the remaining million to certain of these defendants. Thereupon a certificate for 1,000,000 shares was issued to Hedrick himself, and, at the same time, certificates were issued to such of these defendants as were designated by Hedrick in his order on the company. On the same day a written agreement was entered into between Hedrick and the corporation whereby the former agreed to return to the company, to be held by it in trust, the 1,000,000 shares that had been issued to him, to be disposed of by the corporation for the benefit of its stockholders “with a view to securing the necessary funds with which to carry on the business of said Panama Oil Company, and provide a working capital therefor.” Hedrick thereupon indorsed and surrendered the certificate for the 1,000,000 shares that had been issued to him, and a new certificate was issued certifying that the “treasury” of the corporation is the owner of the 1.000. 000 shares. The findings of the lower court refer to the 1,000,000 shares so returned by Hedrick to the corporation as “trust fund stock,” also as “treasury stock.” Subsequently shares of this “trust fund” or “treasury” stock were issued to certain of the defendants for sums considerably less than the par value.

The actual value of the properties transferred by Hedrick to the Panama Oil Company in exchange for all of its 2.000. 000 shares of capital stock was $500,000, and no more. The lower court found that Hedrick and the directors of *610 the Panama Oil Company knew that the properties received by the corporation in exchange for its 2,000,000 shares did not exceed $500,000 at the date of the exchange, and that they caused the 2,000,000 shares to be issued “with the intent to have them appear to have been fully paid for upon their being issued by said corporation.”

Thereafter plaintiff sold and delivered to the Panama Oil Company certain goods, wares, and merchandise, for the value whereof it subsequently obtained judgment against that corporation—a judgment for $8,050.56. The Daybreak Oil Company, all of whose issued capital stock was taken over by the Panama Oil Company shortly after the latter’s organization, was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $21,978.31. The Panama Oil Company assumed this indebtedness and gave to plaintiff its promissory notes therefor. These notes were not paid when they fell due, and plaintiff accordingly instituted an action thereon, obtaining a judgment against the Panama Oil Company for $26,561.53. Execution having been issued upon each of these two judgments and returned nulla bona, plaintiff brought this action against the stockholders of the Panama Oil Company to make good its two judgments out of what it claims to be the unpaid balances on the par value of their shares.

At each of the times when it extended credit to the Panama Oil Company, which was subsequent to the issuance of the 2,000,000 shares to Hedrick or his order, plaintiff had no actual knowledge of the facts and circumstances under which the 2,000,000 shares had been issued in exchange for properties of the value of $500,000. Neither the Panama Oil Company nor its officers nor any person made any actual disclosure to plaintiff of the difference between the par value of the 2,000,000 shares and the value of the properties received in exchange therefor; nor did plaintiff give credit to the Panama Oil Company with any actual knowledge of any such difference in valuation. So the trial court found. In addition to the findings, thus showing that plaintiff had no actual knowledge of the fraudulent transaction whereby shares of the par value of $2,000,000 were issued for properties worth but $500,000, the trial court further found that at the times when it extended credit to the Panama Oil Company plaintiff and *611 its officers and agents “had knowledge of facts and circumstances sufficient to put it and them upon inquiry as to conditions and circumstances attending the issuance of all of the capital stock of the Panama Oil Company on May 24, 1912, as in these findings hereinabove fully set forth, and the execution by J. B. Hedrick of the contract dated May 27, 1912, . . . ; and that had plaintiff and its officers and agents prosecuted such inquiry it and they would have learned all of the facts concerning the issuance of said stock and the acquisition of said properties by the Panama Oil Company, . . . and such knowledge would have been acquired by it prior to the time it advanced the aforesaid credit to the Panama Oil Company.” The four points made by appellants in their opening briefs are: 1. According to the trial court’s findings, plaintiff had constructive notice of all the facts and circumstances under which shares of the par value of $2,000,000 were issued as fully paid in exchange for properties of the value of $500,000; such constructive notice, so it is claimed, was equivalent to actual notice; therefore it must be held, as a matter of law, that plaintiff did not extend credit to the Panama Oil Company in reliance upon any presumption that the full par value of the 2,000,000 shares had been or would be received by the corporation. 2. Those defendants who hold shares issued from what the court in its findings denominated “trust fund” or “treasury” stock—the 1,000,000 shares that were redelivered to the coiporation by Hedrick and later issued as from its treasury—cannot be held liable because, so it is claimed, those shares were issued from the treasury of the corporation for their fair market value to enable the corporation to prosecute its business and develop its properties. Hence, it is argued, those shares are within the doctrine enunciated in such cases as Clark v. Bever, 139 U. S. 96, [35 L. Ed. 88, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 468, see, also, Rose's U. S. Notes], Fogg v. Blair, 139 U. S. 118, [35 L. Ed. 104, 11 Sup.

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Bluebook (online)
197 P. 414, 51 Cal. App. 606, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-national-supply-co-a-corporation-v-obrien-calctapp-1921.