Condor Corp. v. Cunningham

162 P.2d 21, 71 Cal. App. 2d 25, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 846
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 1945
DocketCiv. 14634
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 162 P.2d 21 (Condor Corp. v. Cunningham) 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
Condor Corp. v. Cunningham, 162 P.2d 21, 71 Cal. App. 2d 25, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 846 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

Plaintiff commenced this action to recover from defendants the sum of $29,350.87, allegedly due as the proceeds of certain checks, payable to plaintiff, and collected by defendant bank from the drawee bank upon the alleged unauthorized endorsement by defendant Cunningham, and to which endorsee the proceeds of said checks were paid.

We do not deem it necessary to a determination of the questions presented upon this appeal to set forth in minute detail the factual background upon which this litigation rests, and shall therefore epitomize from the record what we consider to be the salient facts necessary for consideration in the light of the questions of law with which we are here concerned. In that regard, it will suffice to say that plaintiff was a corporation, organized for the purpose of taking over the assets of another corporation which was in bankruptcy. Defendant Felix Cunningham was attorney for plaintiff corporation and, at the time of the transactions involved in this action, was also its secretary and treasurer. The office of plaintiff corporation was maintained at the law offices of defendant Cunningham, where the corporate seal and all records, books and files of the corporation were kept under the personal supervision and control of said Cunningham. The only other officer of the corporation was Simeon Aller, its president. In addition to the president, the corporate board of directors consisted of three other members. There were no permanent employees of plaintiff corporation, but from time to time the services of a bookkeeper in Cunningham’s office were engaged. Meetings of the directors were not held at any particular place and usually occurred at a luncheon in some restaurant, at which defendant Cunningham would from time to time report to the directors “the amount of money received from different sources. ’ ’

The assets of plaintiff corporation were interests in some *27 twenty motion pictures which were being distributed by other corporations, and also certain claims against several motion picture distributing companies. Plaintiff corporation was not engaged in the business of producing or distributing any motion pictures, and its sole business was to liquidate the foregoing assets and distribute the proceeds to its stockholders, who were of two classes. Class “A” stockholders were the unsecured creditors of the aforementioned bankrupt corporation whose assets were taken over by plaintiff corporation. Class “B” stockholders consisted of the former stockholders of the bankrupt corporation.

All checks payable to plaintiff corporation came to defendant Cunningham’s office and were received by him. As to the .preparation and control of the minutes of meetings of plaintiff corporation, Cunningham, when testifying as a witness, was asked “The minute book was kept entirely, was it, under your control and supervision?” to which he replied ‘ ‘ That is right. ’ ’

On March 1, 1940, plaintiff corporation by resolution established an account at the South Hollywood Branch of defendant bank, and such resolution provided for the withdrawal of corporate funds by checks signed jointly by President Aller and defendant Cunningham, as secretary and treasurer. Defendant Cunningham testified that, at the same meeting on March 1, 1940, he was “authorized and directed ... to collect corporate moneys and to put the same into the corporate bank account, and to carry on all the work necessary to maintain the Condor Corporation bank account and make it perform its functions. ’ ’

For some years prior to the organization of plaintiff corporation, defendant Cunningham, in his own name, maintained two accounts at the Melrose and Irving Branch of defendant bank, one of which he characterized as “a general law office trust account,” and which he used only “to deposit funds which came into my hands as trustee,” such as collections wherein the checks were made payable to him and “I would deduct a fee or something like that and forward the balance to the client.” The other was his personal account.

The confessed duplicity of defendant Cunningham commenced during February, 1940, and, up to the time his perfidy was discovered on Christmas Eve, 1941, he had misappropriated a total of $29,350.87 belonging to plaintiff corporation of which he was secretary and treasurer. This amount *28 was represented by over 100 checks, all of which were made payable to plaintiff corporation and were by Cunningham endorsed “Condor Corporation by Felix Cunningham, Secretary and Treasurer. ’ ’ Bearing such endorsements the checks were either cashed or presented by Cunningham to the Mel-rose and Irving Branch of defendant bank for deposit in his “trustee” or “personal” account, were received by defendant bank, credited to Cunningham’s account and disbursed through the medium of his personal checks drawn on the aforesaid accounts maintained by him personally. The proceeds from all of the checks deposited in his “trustee” or “personal” accounts were used by Cunningham for his personal benefit and none for the benefit of plaintiff corporation, except that, subsequent to the discovery of his defalcation, he did transfer from his two accounts by way of reimbursement the sum of $18,115.10, which leaves the amount sought to be recovered by plaintiff corporation in this action the sum of $11,235.77, with interest from December 24, 1941.

From the record it appears that from February, 1940, defendant bank continued to receive from defendant Cunningham the aforesaid checks payable to plaintiff corporation and endorsed as above set forth until some time in May, when he presented for deposit a check for $9,000.10, or in June, when he tendered one of the checks in an amount of $12,495.14. Upon that occasion, which was after Cunningham had deposited some 20 checks payable to plaintiff corporation in one or the other of his said accounts, when he presented the check for deposit, he was referred to Charles Griffiths, Manager of the Branch of defendant bank where Cunningham maintained his aforesaid accounts. Defendant Cunningham stated to the branch manager that it was his desire to deposit the check in his “trustee” account and that the teller desired a “clearance” from Manager Griffiths before he would accept the check for deposit to defendant Cunningham’s account. The bank manager informed defendant Cunningham that it would be necessary to have on file at the bank authority from plaintiff corporation empowering Cunningham to endorse checks made payable to the corporation and then deposit them in his account. Defendant Cunningham advised the bank manager that a resolution had been adopted authorizing him to do that very thing and that he would file a certified copy of such resolution with the bank. Following the aforesaid interview, defendant Cunningham, according to his testimony, “looked in the minutes and did not see such a resolution, so I prepared *29 or drafted a resolution which contained an authority to endorse, and certified it, and sent it down to the bank.” (Emphasis added.) The unauthorized resolution lodged with defendant bank reads as follows:

“Resolved Further that Felix M. Cunningham be, and he hereby is elected treasurer of this Corporation to hold office until the first meeting of the Board of Directors after the next annual meeting of the stockholders or until his successor shall have been elected and shall have qualified.

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Bluebook (online)
162 P.2d 21, 71 Cal. App. 2d 25, 1945 Cal. App. LEXIS 846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/condor-corp-v-cunningham-calctapp-1945.