Colich v. United Concrete Pipe Corp.

302 P.2d 445, 145 Cal. App. 2d 102, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1306
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 15, 1956
DocketCiv. No. 21458
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 302 P.2d 445 (Colich v. United Concrete Pipe 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
Colich v. United Concrete Pipe Corp., 302 P.2d 445, 145 Cal. App. 2d 102, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1306 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

DORAN, J.

Plaintiffs’ fifth and sixth amended complaints, substantially identical, seek to establish a trust in 1,465% shares of common stock of United Concrete Pipe Corporation, or the recovery of damages for fraud. The plaintiffs are the four children of Veda and John L. Milich who were married in 1927. John L. Milich died intestate on April 12, 1943; the widow, now Veda Milich Nikevich, is joined as a plaintiff herein for the purpose of submitting to jurisdiction and seeks no relief. The four children were all minors at the time of Mr. Milich’s death.

John L. Milich was employed by the defendant United Concrete Pipe Corporation at its Modesto, California, plant, and previous to the marriage with Veda, had purchased from the defendants Krai, Ukropina and Polich, 2,198 shares of common stock in United. The defendants Krai, Ukropina and Polich were, until 1952, directors and officers in charge of United, and owned more than 90 per cent of the stock. In 1950 all outstanding stock was sold to unnamed third persons, not parties herein.

According to the complaint, shortly after the death of John L. Milich in 1943, Veda, “his widow, retained a local attorney (in Modesto) to handle the probate,” but before such attorney “could file a petition for letters of administration, defendant Steve Krai, a cousin of John L. Milich, was sent by defendants . . . from Los Angeles for the purpose of taking charge of the probate of the Estate of John L. Milich.” It is alleged that Krai represented to Veda “that the defendants would take care of everything,” and that if United’s attorneys handled the probate, “no attorneys fees would be charged against the Estate”; that Veda, without business experience, relied on Krai’s representations, and agreed to have Krai appointed administrator, whereupon the latter dismissed the Modesto attorney, and retained Stephen Monteleone, Krai’s attorney in Los Angeles, who proceeded to have Krai appointed administrator of the Milich estate.

It is further alleged that on September 30, 1943, Krai, as administrator, filed in Stanislaus County, California, verified inventory and appraisement listing as assets in the Milich Estate,

8 shares of Bolsa Chica Oil Corp. stock.... $ 8.00
2,198 shares, United Concrete Pipe Corp. .. 24,596.94
1937 Dodge Sedan...................... 290.00
Total ............................ $24,894.94

[104]*104and that the appraisal of the United stock “was made by the inheritance tax appraiser upon the basis of a balance sheet furnished ... by the defendants; that the said balance sheet did not reflect the true financial condition of United,” and that the stock was “worth greatly in excess of the sum . . . and said fact was known to the defendants.”

The complaint then alleges that “Steve Krai was familiar with the financial affairs of John L. Milich for over 30 years, and represented to the probate court “that all the property listed was the community property of the decedent and his widow,” knowing that the United stock had been acquired from the individual defendants “prior to the time of his marriage and was his separate property,” which representations were made “on behalf of all of the defendants, in furtherance of said plan to prevent” the United stock “from becoming the property of his minor children and to permit defendants to acquire the stock at a sum greatly below its true value. ’ ’

It is then alleged that sometime prior to July 31, 1945, defendants requested Attorney Monteleone to prepare an agreement whereby Veda agreed to sell to United the entire 2,198 shares of United stock at a price of $14 per share, or a total of $30,772, which agreement was duly executed by Veda and United. A copy of this agreement was attached to the complaint as Exhibit A. In this agreement it is stated that when the stock was sold to Milich, “said company, by an oral agreement, reserved the option to repurchase said shares,” and that Veda, “as his widow, succeeded to all the right, title and interest of said John L. Milich in and to said shares of stock,” which representations were false, and known by the defendants to be false at the time the said agreement was executed. It is alleged that Veda, “by virtue of the trust and confidence she had in the defendants,” believed that the statements in the agreement were true and relied thereon, in executing the agreement.

There are allegations to the effect that Steve Krai, as administrator, in the first and final account, heard and approved on October 1, 1945, made false statements “intended to deceive and did deceive the court so that the court would approve the same,” in failing to advise the court of the existence of the agreement whereby Krai’s company, United, would purchase the stock; in stating that the stock was in the hands of the administrator, “whereas, the stock had actually been purchased by the defendant United . . . and [105]*105was in the hands of said defendant” under said agreement with Veda; in stating that all claims against the estate had been paid, whereas the administrator claimed an indebtedness of $7,100.36 upon a promissory note which had never been presented to the court for approval, and “payment thereof having been obtained by Steve Krai pursuant to an authorization procured from Veda ... to United . . . authorizing immediate payment of said sum together with other claims against Veda . . . and the Estate . . . out of the proceeds payable under the agreement” with Veda; that the statement that the stock was community property was false and since it was the separate property of Mr. Milieh, “was required by law to be distributed one-third to Veda . . . and one-sixth to each of his four surviving children.”

The complaint also alleges that neither Krai, as administrator, nor Attorney Monteleone, advised the plaintiffs that the stock was separate property in which the children were entitled to share, nor were the minor children advised of the agreement made with Veda, nor of the true value of the stock. It is also charged that the individual defendants conducted the United business “as though it were a partnership or family corporation wholly owned and controlled by said defendants,” treated the earnings of United “as their own personal earnings,” and “so dominated and controlled the operations . . . that the said corporation constituted a mere conduit whereby . . . defendants carried on their own personal business affairs; that in order to prevent fraud or injustice the separate entity of United Concrete Pipe Corporation should be disregarded.”

It is further alleged that in July, 1950, the defendants negotiated a sale of all outstanding stock in United, approximately 60,000 shares, for the sum of $6,287,800. Upon learning of this sale, Veda caused inquiry to be made, and “after failure of extended negotiations to settle her claim against the defendants arising from the said sale of stock to United, “instituted an action on the ground of fraud of Steve Krai, seeking relief from the sale agreement, which action is still pending. It is also alleged that Steve Krai, in a deposition taken in that action, stated that the indebtedness of $7,100.36 on a promissory note of John L. Milieh, hereinbefore referred to, “arose by reason of the purchase of stock from said defendants by John L. Milieh prior to the “marriage with Veda”; that until such admission by Krai, Veda “believed that the said stock was the community property” of John [106]*106and Veda.

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Bluebook (online)
302 P.2d 445, 145 Cal. App. 2d 102, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colich-v-united-concrete-pipe-corp-calctapp-1956.