Dandini v. Dandini

186 P.2d 41, 82 Cal. App. 2d 263, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1198
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 5, 1947
DocketCiv. 13366
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 186 P.2d 41 (Dandini v. Dandini) 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
Dandini v. Dandini, 186 P.2d 41, 82 Cal. App. 2d 263, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1198 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

FINLEY, J. pro tem.

At the time of the filing of this action plaintiff Lillian Eemillard Dandini and defendant A. 0. Dandini were husband- and wife. Plaintiff sought and was awarded judgment against said defendant for permanent support and maintenance. She also sought but was denied judgment setting aside and annulling the assignment and transfer by said A. 0. Dandini of 253 shares of stock of defendant Eemillard-Dandini Company, a corporation, to the defendants Sesenna.

*265 The trial court found said stock to be the property of 0. Creste Sesenna and Rose Cungi Sesenna, husband and wife (also known as 0. Mario Sesenna and Rose Cungi), as trustees for their son Manlio Sesenna and their daughter Julianna Se-senna, and that A. 0. Dandini has no right, title, claim or interest therein. From this finding and that part of the judgment predicated thereon plaintiff appeals.

Appellant’s maiden name was Lillian Remillard. In 1860, her father and a partner established the Remillard Brick Company which was turned into a California corporation in 1879. It will.be referred to herein as the Remillard Company. The stock of this corporation all came to be owned by the Remillard family. Appellant’s father died first and subsequently upon the death of her mother in 1934, the stock all became vested in appellant, partly in her own right and the balance in trust for Emma Remillard, her sister.

Appellant married respondent A. 0. Dandini on August 23, 1932. They separated June 1, 1938. In the summer of 1934, just after the death of appellant’s mother the Remillard-Dandini Company, also a California corporation, was organized. It will hereafter be referred to as the Dandini Company. To this newly formed corporation the Remillard Company conveyed 60 acres of land including two factories, which constituted all of its operating business, together with its accounts receivable. In exchange it received 300 shares of stock in the Dandini Company, 150 shares of which were transferred by the 'Remillard Company to respondent A. 0. Dandini and the remaining 150 shares retained.

The 150 shares of stock were transferred to respondent A. 0. Dandini pursuant to a triparty preorganization agreement entered into by the Remillard Company, the Dandini Company and A. 0. Dandini. This agreement provided among other things that A. 0. Dandini was to be president and manager of the Dandini Company for a period of five years at a compensation of $300 per month plus a commission of 75 cents per thousand bricks manufactured, the payment of this commission to be contingent upon the company being out of debt to outside parties and having the necessary funds available with which to pay the bonus.

On August 18, 1939, the Remillard Company individually and in the name and on behalf of the Dandini Company filed action No. 154,456 in the Superior Court of Alameda County against A. 0. Dandini and the four other directors of the Dandini Company, other than appellant Lillian Dandini. An *266 accounting and other relief were sought. An injunction was issued therein on September 11, 1939, restraining A. 0. Dandini from disposing of all property coming into his hands through use of funds or property of the Dandini Company. .The matter came to trial and on October 14, 1943, the court ruled that respondent A. 0. Dandini had misappropriated from the Dandini Company the sum of $51,404.04 and gave judgment for $43,399.55. The remaining $8,044.89 was found to be barred by the four-year statute of limitations. The findings also show that late in 1938, and early in 1939, the then directors of the Dandini Company passed a resolution and took all steps necessary to have issued to respondent A. 0. Dandini 100 shares of stock in the Dandini Company valued at $10,000 in return for cancellation of his accrued commissions on the sale of brick in the sum of $38,000. The court found the transaction to be fraudulent; that respondent Dandini was, on account of the financial condition of the Dandini Company, not then entitled to receive payment although his accrued commission actually amounted to $38,000. It was adjudged that respondent Dandini should return the 100 shares of stock to the Dandini Company within 30 days or in lieu thereof the company was to recover $10,000.

As above stated the action in the Alameda County court was commenced August 18, 1939, the injunction was issued on September 11, 1939, and the court made its ruling on October 14, 1943. On October 19, 1939, the block of 100 shares just referred to above, together with an additional 151 shares standing in the name of respondent A. O. Dandini were transferred by him to the respondents Sesenna. This was followed on May 18, 1942, by transfer of two additional shares for $100 each, making 253 shares in all. Appellant in her brief treated these two latter shares separately explaining that “the evidence of fraud primarily concerns the transfer of the 251 shares.” The trial court’s finding that Dandini paid $100 each for the two shares and that said sum was their fair and reasonable value is supported by the evidence.

At the trial of the present action the transferees admitted knowledge that Dandini was having trouble with his wife and was involved in litigation, but denied that they knew that this trouble or litigation had anything to do with any of the stock. The trial court found that it was not true that the Sesennas “accepted and received said conveyance and transfers of all or any part of said stock with knowledge of any fraudulent intent on the part of A. O. Dandini and/or with *267 knowledge that 104 or any other part of said shares had been fraudulently issued to A. O. Dandini and/or with full or any knowledge of the facts alleged in the complaint against A. O. Dandini filed in said action No. 154,456 in the superior court of the State of California in and for the County of Alameda.” (Emphasis added.)

In her opening brief appellant outlines the main point raised on appeal as follows: “Was there substantial evidence supporting the decision of the lower court holding that the transfer by A. 0. Dandini to the Sesennas of the Remillard-Dandini Company stock was made for consideration and not with intent to defraud his wife, Lillian R. Dandini ? ’ ’

In order to resolve the appeal in favor of appellant on the point as stated, it would be necessary for this court after appraising all evidence favorable to respondents in any degree to hold as a matter of law that it is so inherently improbable or so devoid of substantiality that the trial judge could not have believed it, or within the realm of reason could not have found therein any substantial support for its finding that the transfer of stock was made without any guilty knowledge on the part of the Sesennas and for consideration and not with intent to defraud.

Disregarding all conflicts, evidence favorable to the finding that there was consideration for the transfer of the 251 shares may be summarized as follows: Respondent Dandini owned patent rights on a marine device referred to as a hydrosphere. He wanted to display this device at the World’s Fair on Treasure Island in 1939. He lacked the funds with which to construct the hydrosphere and a suitable building in which to display it on the fair grounds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 P.2d 41, 82 Cal. App. 2d 263, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dandini-v-dandini-calctapp-1947.