Dulin v. Pacific Wood & Coal Co.

37 P. 207, 103 Cal. 357, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 778
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1894
DocketNo. 19251
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 37 P. 207 (Dulin v. Pacific Wood & Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dulin v. Pacific Wood & Coal Co., 37 P. 207, 103 Cal. 357, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 778 (Cal. 1894).

Opinion

The Court.

Upon further consideration of this case in Bank, we are satisfied with the opinion rendered in Department, and, with the conclusion therein reached, and for the reasons given in said opinion, the judgment is affirmed. Fitzgerald, J., McFarland, J., Van Fleet, J., Garoutte, J.

Beatty, C. J , dissented.

[360]*360The following is the opinion above referred to, rendered in Department One on the 27th of February, 1894.

Haynes, C.

Plaintiff had judgment, and the defendants appeal therefrom upon the judgment-roll.

This proceeding was brought under section 315 of the Civil Code, to set aside the election of B. D. Clugston, one of the defendants, as a director of the defendant corporation, and to confirm the election of plaintiff as such director. Clugston answered, and also filed a cross-complaint, to which plaintiff filed an answer.

The findings cover eight or nine -pages of the transcript, but may be summarized as follows:

The Pacific Wood and Coal Company is a corporation having a capital stock of $10,000, divided into 100 shares of $100 each. G. A. Garretson and the members of his family owned 69 shares of said stock, all of which he controlled. Defendant B. D. Clugston owned 25 shares, J. S. Akerman 4 shares, and plaintiff 2 shares. That on June 17, 1892, defendant B. D. Clugston agreed verbally with G. A. Garretson to purchase the 69 shares owned and controlled by him, and to pay therefor $140 per share, which agreement, if carried out, would have given Clugston all of the stock except 6 shares.

That on the following day, and before this sale was consummated, a verbal agreement was made between the defendant, Clugston, George G. Garretson, the son of G. A. Garretson, J. S. Akerman, and the plaintiff, with the consent of all the stockholders of the corporation, that defendant Clugston should retain 21 shares of the stock agreed to be purchased, making him the owner of 46 shares; that George G. Garretson and the plaintiff should each take and pay for enough of said stock to give each 25 shares, and that Akerman should retain the 4 shares then owned by him. It was further agreed that defendant Clugston should lend to George Garretson $2,400, to be used to pay in part for his stock, [361]*361to secure which loan he gave his note and pledged 10 shares of his stock; and it was also agreed that the corporation should mortgage its property and thereby raise the sum of $4,000 for the benefit of George G. Garretson and the plaintiff, to be used to pay for the stock purchased by them, $2,000 to each, and for which they gave their several notes. The defendant Clugston agreed to this division of the stock, loaned the $2,400 to George G. Garretson, and consented to the mortgaging of the property of the corporation, upon the verbal agreement of all the stockholders that defendant Clugston was to be president of the company for two years, at the expiration of which time the mortgage notes were to become due, and to receive a salary of $125 per month while he retained an interest in the corporation, the plaintiff to be treasurer at the same salary, and that Akerman should use his 4 shares to protect defendant Clugston; and on the same day the notes were executed, the stock delivered, and the salaries fixed as above stated, defendant Clugston being then president.

The election for directors here in question was held on November 17, 1892. Prior to this election B. D. Clugston transferred to his daughter L, Clugston, and to James Wells, each, one share of his stock.

The board consisted of five directors, and six candidates were nominated, viz: the plaintiff, Dulin, the defendant B. D. Clugston, L. Clugston, Wells, Akerman, and Garretson.

The plaintiff cumulated his votes for three candidates, viz: Akerman, Dulin, and Garretson, giving each 411-votes. Garretson cumulated his votes for the same candidates, giving each 41f votes. Akerman voted his 4 shares for five candidates, the three above named, and Wells . and L. Clugston, giving each 4 votes. Wells voted his one share cumulated for three candidates, viz: B. D. Clugston, L. Clugston, and himself, giving each If votes. L. Clugston voted her share for the same candidates, and gave each If votes. B. D. Clugston’s 44 shares were cumulated, and gave himself [362]*362734, to L. Clugston 734, and to Wells 73 votes. If these votes had been counted as cast, Dulin, Akerman, and Garretson would each have had 874 votes, B. D. Clugston 76 5-6 votes, L. Clugston 80 5-6, and Wells 801-votes.

The defendant B. D. Clugston, the president of the corporation, presided at the election, and L. Clugston was appointed teller. The president objected to counting the 10 shares belonging to Garretson which were pledged to him. These 10 shares cumulated, gave 50 votes, and were tendered in equal proportions to the three candidates, Dulin, Akerman, and Garretson, amounting to 16⅔ votes each, and if thrown out, as cast, would have left these three candidates each 70⅔ votes, and the result would have been the election of B. D. Clugston, L. Clugston, and James Wells, and the remaining three candidates tied. But in counting the votes, the 50 votes being the cumulation of the 10 shares of Garretson’s stock pledged to B. D. Clugston, were not counted, 84 votes thereof being deducted from Akerman, and 41⅔ from Dulin, thus defeating Dulin, and electing Akerman and Garretson.

Clugston, the pledgee of said 10 shares, did not claim the right to vote them, nor is it claimed or found that Garretson had agreed in any manner not to vote them, and if counted as they were cast, it is found by the court, Dulin would have been elected and Clugston defeated.

The cross-petition of B. D. Clugston, however, sets up the verbal agreement hereinbefore stated, to the effect that Clugston should be president for two years, and should receive a salary of $125 per month so long as he should retain an interest in the corporation, and that but for this agreement he would not have consented to part with a controlling interest in the stock, nor to the mortgage upon the company’s property to aid Dulin and Garretson to purchase their stock, nor have loaned Garretson the $2,400, and charges a conspiracy to defeat his election, and prays that it be adjudged and decreed that he and the said L. Clugston, James Wells, George G. [363]*363Garretson, and J. S. Akerman were duly elected directors, and that he is entitled to be elected president.

The court also found that said agreement was not reduced to writing; that it was material, important, and necessary to the protection of Clugston’s interests, but that neither Dulin, Garretson, or Akerman at any time agreed in express terms to elect Clugston as a director.

As conclusions of law the court found that said agreement was void, because not to be performed within a year, and not in writing, and that the votes cast for the plaintiff, including the 10 shares of pledged stock, should have been counted, and that Dulin was duly elected a director.

No different conclusion of law could possibly be reached, unless the verbal agreement found by the court to have been made can be specifically enforced, and this cannot be done.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 P. 207, 103 Cal. 357, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dulin-v-pacific-wood-coal-co-cal-1894.