Estate of Duncan

70 P.2d 174, 9 Cal. 2d 207, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 381
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1937
DocketS. F. 15607
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 70 P.2d 174 (Estate of Duncan) 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
Estate of Duncan, 70 P.2d 174, 9 Cal. 2d 207, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 381 (Cal. 1937).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

Appellant, hereinafter referred to as contestant, filed four notices of appeal from various orders and decrees made and entered during the probate of the estate of Ernest C. Duncan, deceased. These appeals involve the question of the correctness of the decree of final distribution by which the whole estate was distributed to the respondent, the surviving wife of said deceased, as community property, and objections to 'the final account of the administratrix and to the supplemental account of the administratrix. The parties herein have heretofore been before this court on matters pertaining to the estate. (Duncan v. Superior Court, 3 Cal. (2d) 143 [44 Pac. (2d) 365].)

The decedent, Ernest C. Duncan, died intestate on January 11, 1933. His only heirs at law were his widow, Lucy Nicolai Duncan, who became the administratrix of his estate, and his mother, Emma C. Duncan, contestant herein. The bulk of his estate consisted of shares of common stock of Crown Cork & Seal Company. The estate was appraised at over $44,000. The surviving widow claimed the entire estate as community property. The contestant, his mother, claimed half of it, contending that it was all his separate property. On November 19, 1934, the court made its decree settling the final account. On April 23, 1935, the court made its decree settling the supplemental account of administratrix and ordering distribution of the entire estate to the surviving widow of said decedent as community property of herself and decedent. Contestant appeals.

*210 Obviously the main question herein involved is the propriety of the decree of final distribution by which the whole estate of decedent was distributed to the surviving widow as community property. The decedent and respondent were married on September 8, 1914, and lived together as husband and wife until his death on January 11, 1933, a period of eighteen years and four months. If the whole estate was community property, it goes to the surviving widow. (Sec. 201, Probate Code.) If, however, any part of the estate was his separate property, that part goes (there being no issue, and decedent’s father having predeceased him) one-half to the surviving widow and one-half to his mother, the contestant. (See. 223, Probate Code.)

Appellant contends that decedent before his marriage to respondent owned at least one-half of the stock of Western Stopper Company with the right to acquire the other half by paying to Jones, the owner of the other half of the stock, $500 per month out of the profits of the business until paid for, and that decedent used this original ownership of Western Stopper Company stock,' as a nucleus which he expanded and which he developed until he owned all of the capital stock of The Western Stopper Company, a subsequently organized successor of Western Stopper Company, which stock ownership was transmuted into 2,500 shares of common stock of Crown Cork & Seal Company, of which 2,000 shares remained in his estate at the time of his death.

A brief synopsis of the various business transactions which resulted in the acquisition by decedent of 2,500 shares of Crown Cork & Seal Company stock will be helpful to an understanding of the claims of each of the parties.

In 1912, decedent was president and general manager of a corporation known as Western Stopper Company, which was engaged in the business of manufacturing crown corks or machine-crimped, tin bottle stoppers lined with a cork disc. Associated with him in this business was one G. H. Jones. All of the stock of the corporation stood in the name of the decedent. (It is the claim of contestant that decedent owned one-half of this stock which had been given to him by Jones for his knowledge and ability in the stopper business, and that upon the payment by him to Jones at the rate of $500 per month of the purchase price of the other half of the stock, he was to become the sole owner.) This company had been *211 partly financed by funds taken out of the Jones-Duncan Paint Company, another company of which decedent was manager, and in which he was also associated with Mr. Jones. It had also been partly financed by cash furnished by Jones and also by some money furnished, by contestant. At the time decedent was married to respondent on September 8, 1914, he was receiving a salary from both of these companies. (There is some dispute as to whether his total salary for both positions was $300 per month, or $300 from the Jones-Duncan Paint Company and $350 from Western Stopper Company, but this is unimportant.)

In 1919, friction developed between Jones and the decedent, and Jones brought suit claiming that he owned all of the stock of Western Stopper Company and that decedent had no interest in any of the stock. A deal was worked out whereby a new corporation was organized to acquire all the assets of the old corporation and to wipe out entirely the old corporation. The name of the new corporation, which was incorporated in April, 1919, was The Western Stopper Company. The deal took the following form: The assets of the old Western Stopper Company were sold to one Benton W. Brown, a mere nominee of Jones, for $20,000. The assets were then sold by Benton W. Brown to the new corporation, The Western Stopper Company, for $70,000 which was paid ■ to Mr. Jones. The suits were dismissed. It is conceded that decedent received no part of this purchase price. The $70,-000 was raised through cash contributions of $6,000 from Comyn, $6,000 from Maekall, $1500 from Fleishhaeker, $1500 from Humphrey, and a loan of $55,000 from the Anglo London & Paris National Bank, procured through the endorsement by Comyn and Maekall of the note of the new corporation, The Western Stopper Company. Thus the new corporation, The Western Stopper Company, became the owner of all the assets of the old Western Stopper Company, and any claim of Jones was wholly wiped out. The mechanics of the organization of The Western Stopper Company, as indicated by the records of that company, were as follows: The corporation was organized in the office of William F. Humphrey, attorney at law. Five young men in his office were selected as the first board of directors of the organization. Later Comyn and Maekall, copartners, made an offer to purchase $99,500 of its capital stock out of a total authorized *212 capital of $100,000. According lo the minutes of the organization, this offer was accepted. Thereafter Fleishhacker and Humphrey and Duncan acquired shares in the corporation. Comyn gave his promissory note to The Western Stopper Company for $24,000 for 300 shares; Mackall gave his promissory note for $24,000 for 300 shares; Fleishhacker gave his note for $8,500 for 100 shares, Humphrey gave his note for $8,000 for 100 shares, these amounts being the difference between the par value of the stock and the cash already paid in. (The discrepancy of $500 between the $8,000 note and the $1500 paid in by Humphrey on the purchase price of his shares which was $10,000, is possibly explained by a probable charge of $500 for legal services.) Decedent gave his promissory note for $20,000 for 200 shares. Eventually all of these notes were paid for out of dividends of the corporation. It was understood at the time of the organization of the new corporation that decedent should continue as manager. He was undoubtedly a business man of considerable ability and under his management the corporation prospered.

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Bluebook (online)
70 P.2d 174, 9 Cal. 2d 207, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-duncan-cal-1937.