Chase v. Super-Cold Corp.

328 P.2d 812, 163 Cal. App. 2d 83, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1469
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 21, 1958
DocketCiv. 22906
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 328 P.2d 812 (Chase v. Super-Cold Corp.) 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
Chase v. Super-Cold Corp., 328 P.2d 812, 163 Cal. App. 2d 83, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1469 (Cal. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

FOURT, J.

This is an appeal from a £< judgment of dis missal” due to the failure of plaintiffs to comply with an order requiring plaintiffs to furnish security for the reasonable expenses which might be incurred by the defendants in said action, pursuant to section 834, Corporations Code. The plaintiffs, as shareholders of The Super-Cold Corporation (hereinafter referred to as Super-Cold) instituted a derivative action against Super-Cold; Nicholas A. Kessler, an officer and director of Super-Cold; U.S. Industrial Tool Company, a corporation substantially owned by Kessler; Frederick R. Waingrow, an officer and director of Super-Cold; and Union Enterprises, Inc., a corporation substantially owned by Wain-grow. By their action, plaintiffs sought to impose a trust on all of the assets of Super-Cold which were held in the names of the individual defendants or of their substantially owned corporations, and to recover certain of the assets of Super-Cold which were alleged to have been improperly distributed to the individual defendants.

Each of the defendants separately moved the court for an order requiring plaintiffs to furnish security for costs under the provisions of section 834, Corporations Code, upon the basis that there was no reasonable probability that the prosecution of the cause of action would benefit Super-Cold or its security holders; and on March 28, 1957, after a full hearing, the court ordered security for the probable reasonable expenses, including attorneys’ fees, to be incurred in the defense of the action in the sum of $7,000 as to defendant Super-Cold, in the sum of $35,000 as to defendants Nicholas A. Kessler and *85 U.S. Industrial Tool Company, and in the sum of $15,000 as to defendants Frederick B. Waingrow and Union Enterprises, Inc.

It was ordered that said security be furnished by plaintiffs within sixty days after service upon plaintiffs of written notice of the signing of the order. Written notice of the signing and entry of the order was served on plaintiffs on April 1, 1957, and the plaintiffs having failed to furnish security as ordered, the court dismissed the above-entitled action on June 14, 1957.

The constitutionality of section 834 of the Corporations Code was determined by the Supreme Court in Beyerbach v. Juno Oil Co., 42 Cal.2d 11 [265 P.2d 1], the court stating (at p. 21) that “every stockholder who, like plaintiff, is unable to induce the corporation, through its board of directors, to institute a particular action on its own behalf, and who undertakes as its volunteer representative to sue on the cause asserted by him, may be required to furnish security.” The court further stated (at pp. 23-24): “In these circumstances the Legislature, for the protection of third persons who have dealt with the corporation, as well as for the protection of the corporation and its officers and employees, can constitutionally require the stockholder who would act as in the nature of a guardian ad litem must, as a condition of prosecuting the action on behalf of the corporation, either show a reasonable probability that the suit will be successful or secure the payment of the defendants’ expenses should they prevail. The Legislature, of course, can attribute some weight to the fact that the corporation has not seen fit to institute action on a cause which either belongs to it or to no one.”

It was further emphasized in Melancon v. Superior Court, 42 Cal.2d 698, 708 [268 P.2d 1050], that in actions where the shareholder is required to post security pursuant to the provisions of section 834 of the Corporations Code, the cause of action, if any, belongs to the corporation and not to the plaintiff. (See California Corporation Laws, 1950 Supplement (by Ballantine, Sterling & Harriet B. Buhler), § 98.5, Derivative Actions by Shareholders—Comment on Section 834; § 98.6, Qualifications of Plaintiff; demand and disclosure —Comment on Subdivision (a) of Section 834.)

In this appeal it is contended that the requirements for. the granting of. a motion for security for costs as set forth in section 834 of the Corporations Code have not been satisfied *86 in that, as a matter of law, the finding of the trial court that there was no reasonable probability that there would be a benefit to the “plaintiff-stockholders” was erroneous. Actually, the finding of the court was “there is no_ reasonable probability that the prosecution of the causes of action, or any of the causes of action, alleged in the Complaint against the moving parties, or any of them, will benefit the corporation or its security holders.” (Emphasis added.) Appellant contends that at the time the decision to liquidate Super-Cold was reached on September 27, 1954, the defendants Kessler and Waingrow became and at all times thereafter were trustees of an express trust, the trust res consisting of all of the assets of Super-Cold. The record before us clearly indicates, however, that the liquidation was conducted under the direct supervision of the Board of Directors, of which Kessler and Waingrow were members. Under the circumstances the proper standard of conduct required of said defendants in the discharge of their fiduciary responsibilities is that of corporate officers and directors.

Appellants have cited many cases pertaining to different types of trustees, such as trustees of a testamentary trust, executors and others, but they have not directed us to any authority on the subject with which we are immediately concerned, namely whether a director, since the enactment of Corporations Code, section 820, is a trustee as that term is used, for example, in a testamentary trust.

. This court, in the case of Crespinel v. Color Corporation of America, 160 Cal.App.2d 386 [325 P.2d 565], had occasion to comment upon the fiduciary obligation owed by corporate directors to the corporation, and stated, among other things (at page 390) : “The former rule of disqualification of a director to deal in any way with the corporation was found by a State Bar Committee in 1930 to be unreasonably severe and unduly to hamper legitimate business; and this led to the adoption of Civil Code, section 311, in 1931, which in amended'' form is now Corporations Code, section 820. This section is commented on in Ballantine and Sterling, California Corporation Laws, 1949 edition (at pp. 103-104), as follows: ‘Directors are no longer subject to the disqualification and disabilities of a trustee when contracting with or on behalf of the corporation as declared in various cases heretofore. Directors are fiduciaries, but are not strictly trustees(Emphasis added.) It is further stated (at p. 106), ‘The general fiduciary rule is that . the burden of proof ás to reasonableness and fairness is on the' *87 fiduciary, but this is to be regarded as an elastic rule of common law rather than of statute.

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Bluebook (online)
328 P.2d 812, 163 Cal. App. 2d 83, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-super-cold-corp-calctapp-1958.