Everts v. Sunset Farms, Inc.

72 P.2d 543, 9 Cal. 2d 691, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 444
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1937
DocketL. A. 16276
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 72 P.2d 543 (Everts v. Sunset Farms, Inc.) 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
Everts v. Sunset Farms, Inc., 72 P.2d 543, 9 Cal. 2d 691, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 444 (Cal. 1937).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J., pro tem.

In an action in the nature of a creditor’s bill the trial court caused a judgment to be entered in favor of the plaintiff as assignee of the Bank of America. The defendants appealed and have brought up typewritten transcripts. After all briefs had been filed the plaintiff served and filed a notice of motion to dismiss or affirm. His motion was duly presented and it was submitted together with the appeal oh its merits. The motion so made was prepared with much care and skill and it should have been granted because the record on appeal was, by the defendants, made in violation of the provisions of certain statutes and .of several rules of this court of long standing governing the preparation of records on appeal. But, in view of the conclusion we have reached as to the appeal on its merits, we will not have occasion to consider the motion.

• The complaint was very full and complete. The answers put in issue nearly all the allegations contained in the complaint and set forth several separate and additional defenses. The trial court with meticulous care found on each and all *694 of the issues. All of the allegations contained in the complaint were found in favor of the plaintiff. The points made by the defendants include many attacks on those findings claiming they are not sustained by the evidence. Before taking up each one of the points made by the defendants we will state a general outline of the controversy. Some years prior to the commencement of this action Will S. Fawcett, hereinafter referred to as Fawcett, commenced farming operations in the Imperial Valley. Later he caused a corporation, the Will S. Fawcett Co., hereinafter referred to as the Fawcett Co., to be formed and transferred to it many of his assets and thereafter he did business through said corporation. He was the president thereof. The Fawcett Co. was a stock corporation and nearly all of the stock was held and controlled by Fawcett. Affairs so progressed that on December 31,1930, Fawcett held assets which he valued at $972,-522.68. The Fawcett Co. held assets which Fawcett valued at $691,887.45. The said assets of Fawcett included his holdings in the Fawcett Co. Fawcett and the Fawcett Co. each held a large block of stock in the Transamerica Corporation. At the same time Fawcett owed the Bank of America, the assignor of this plaintiff, on several notes $250,000 and the Fawcett Co. owed sums aggregating over $690,000. Later matters so developed that Fawcett and the Fawcett Co. became aggrieved of and concerning certain financial transactions had with the Bank of America over and concerning the purchase by the former of shares of stock in the Transamerica Corporation and formed the opinion that they had a cause or causes of action against the Bank of America. At about the same time the Bank of America was demanding that the notes it held should be taken up. When affairs so stood Fawcett and the Fawcett Co. caused to be formed Sunset Farms, Inc., and conveyed to the latter some of their assets, and conveyed or assigned to others nearly all of the rest of their assets. The Bank of America assigned to plaintiff its notes. He sued thereon in actions 15387 and 15388 and recovered judgment against the makers. He then took out writs of execution, caused them to be levied on the assets of Fawcett and the Fawcett Co. Having applied the proceeds obtained from such levies the plaintiff took out alias writs of execution, caused them to be levied, and they were returned endorsed nulla bona. There was then owing by the Fawcett Co. $135,116.23 and by Fawcett $266,527.87. The *695 plaintiff then commenced this action against the Sunset Farms, Inc., Will S. Fawcett, Warren Currier, and Don C. Bitler. Said individuals constitute the board of directors of said corporation.

In what follows we have not attempted to set forth all of the evidence in a transcript containing 1500 typewritten pages. But, in support of the judgment, we have set forth some of the salient facts contained in the record and we may add there are other facts reinforcing the facts we have set forth.

1. The trial court made findings that the Fawcett Co. was the alter ego of Fawcett, and that the Sunset Farms, Inc., was the alter ego of the Fawcett Co. and of Fawcett. The defendants claim those findings are not supported by the evidence. They quote no evidence, cite no authority, and make no argument in support of the point. An examination of the record discloses there was ample evidence to support said findings, and if the findings had been otherwise they would have been against the clear weight of the evidence.

2. The plaintiff alleged and the trial court found that the transfers made by the defendants were not followed by an immediate and continued change of possession, were made to delay and to defraud their creditors, and were made when the defendants were insolvent and in contemplation of insolvency. He pleaded, not a part of, but all of the provisions of sections 3439, 3442, and the first paragraph of section 3440 of the Civil Code. Conservatively he claims his complaint pleaded four different causes of action. We think it pleaded more. He proved each element of each of the several causes of action so alleged. The defendants contend that he did not prove some of those causes of action. That claim is not well founded. On the evidence quoted by the defendants, their claim has some support. But they do not set forth the evidence which is against them.

3. The plaintiff alleged and the trial court found that the conveyances and transfers to the defendants were made to delay and to defraud the creditors of Fawcett and the Fawcett Co. and the defendants attack those findings as not being supported by the evidence. We find no merit in the attack. The plaintiff alleged that the transfers were made with intent to delay the creditors of the transferors. (Civ. Code, sec. 3439.) When Fawcett was examined as a witness *696 he, in effect, testified that such was the fact. Furthermore, there were numerous facts developed which clearly showed such to he the truth.

4. That the transfers were made to defraud the creditors of the defendants is shown by the record. The defendants do not set up all of the evidence and they cannot expect this court to do so. We think it is sufficient to state that a most complete camouflage was set up. That was done by creating the Sunset Farms, Inc. It was so created, organized, and operated that no one who did not hold common stock could see inside. Inside, all was under cover. Even its cash was not banked, but certificates of deposit were bought and held for surrender at such times and for such purposes as the owner saw fit. Holdings were misnamed. Holdings in the Transamerica Corporation (itself solely a holding corporation),'were entered on the records of Sunset Farms, Inc., ás “Street stock”. The facts recited in this paragraph, read in connection with the other facts resited by us in this opinion, clearly show the transfers were made with the intent to defraud the creditors of the transferors, and, in particular, to defraud this plaintiff and his assignor.

5. The plaintiff alleged and the trial court found that the transfers to the defendants were not accompanied by an immediate delivery and followed by an actual and continued change of possession.

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Bluebook (online)
72 P.2d 543, 9 Cal. 2d 691, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everts-v-sunset-farms-inc-cal-1937.