Excelsior Water & Mining Co. v. Pierce

27 P. 44, 90 Cal. 131, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 896
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1891
DocketNo. 12973
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 27 P. 44 (Excelsior Water & Mining Co. v. Pierce) 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
Excelsior Water & Mining Co. v. Pierce, 27 P. 44, 90 Cal. 131, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 896 (Cal. 1891).

Opinion

Beatty, C. J.

— This is an action by a California corporation against one of its former directors to recover the amount of certain dividends declared and paid to its stockholders with the concurrence of the defendant while a director. It is alleged by the plaintiff that such dividends were not paid out of the surplus profits of its business, and the action is based upon the provisions of section 309 of the Civil Code, which reads as follows: —

[136]*136“Sec. 309. The directors of corporations must not make dividends, except from the surplus profits arising from the business thereof; nor must they divide, withdraw, or pay to the stockholders, or any of them, any part of the capital stock; nor must they create debts beyond their subscribed capital stock, or reduce or increase the capital stock, except as hereinafter specially provided. For a violation of the provisions of this section, the directors under whose administration the same may have happened (except those who may have caused their dissent therefrom to be entered at large on the minutes of the directors at the time, or were not present when the same did happen) are in their individual and private capacity jointly and severally liable to the corporation, and to the creditors thereof, in the event of its dissolution, to the full amount of the capital stock so divided, withdrawn, paid out, or reduced, or debt contracted; and no statute of limitations is a bar to any suit against such directors for any sums for which they are made liable by this section. There may, however, be a division and distribution of the capital stock of any corporation which remains after the payment of all its debts, upon its dissolution, or the expiration of its term of existence.”

The complaint counts upon nineteen separate dividends, aggregating about two hundred and sixty-six thousand dollars, but it appearing that the defendant had ceased to be a director before the last dividend was paid, plaintiff limits its claim to the first eighteen.

As to these there is but one question to be decided here: Were they, or were they not, paid out of the surplus profits of the plaintiff’s business? To this issue the attention of the superior court seems to have been confined, and in reviewing its decision it will not be necessary for us to consider any question relating to the special defense interposed by defendant to some of the separate counts upon particular dividends. Aside from this special defense, the only matter put in issue by the [137]*137pleadings of the parties was that above stated; and the superior court having found that all the dividends were in fact paid out of surplus profits, its judgment was given in.favor of the defendant upon that ground alone. The plaintiff appeals from the judgment, and from an order denying its motion for a new trial. The record upon which the decision of the superior court is to be reviewed is exceedingly voluminous, and consists in great part of tabulated statements and accounts intended to show the gross earnings, the current and other expenses, of the plaintiff, the amount and nature of its assets and indebtedness, and, in short, the exact condition of its affairs at the date of each of the eighteen dividends in question. We are, however, spared the labor of deducing for ourselves the results of these- involved and conflicting statements by reason of the fact that counsel for both parties have agreed to accept the results stated by the learned judge of the superior court in an opinion filed by him in connection with his decision of the cause, and which has been included in the transcript of the record.

It appears therefrom that the plaintiff was incorporated in March, 1877, with a nominal or share capital of five million dollars, divided into fifty thousand shares of one hundred dollars each. The object of the incorporation was to carry on hydraulic mining, etc., and the defendant was, from the beginning down to September, 1879, a stockholder and director in the company. In April, 1877, plaintiff acquired all the property of the Excelsior Water Company, consisting of mining-ground, farm, ditches, flumes, store and merchandise, stock in other mining companies, bills, notes, bullion in flumes, ■ etc., giving in exchange 36,732 shares of stock, and shortly afterwards it obtained a like conveyance and transfer of all the property of the Pactolus Mining Company in exchange for 3,000 shares of its stock. These, [138]*138with a few others, amounting in all to 39,809 shares, were the only shares ever issued by plaintiff.

The Excelsior Water Company and Pactolus Mining Company were largely indebted at the time they transferred their property to plaintiff, and this indebtedness was assumed by plaintiff as a part of the purchase price of the property. Its net amount, over and above the solvent credits transferred by the two companies, was $173.710.80. which was paid during the directorship of the defendant. During the same time the sum of $233,-723.60 was expended by plaintiff in the purchase of other mining property, the construction of ditches, tunnels, permanent improvements on farm, machinery on mine, procuring United States patents for mining-ground, and in assessments on stock in other companies.

During the same time the plaintiff was carrying on its mining and other multifarious business, and it received from sale of bullion and water, and as profits of its store and farm and other investments, the gross sum of $1,095,719, while its outlay for operating its mines, salaries, taxes, interest, and other strictly current expenses was $638,303, leaving a balance of earnings of $457,416. The amount of the eighteen dividends declared and paid during this time was only $241,629, or $215,724 less than the net earnings.

But the plaintiff contends that the surplus profits were only about ninety-eight thousand dollars, and that about one hundred and forty-three thousand dollars over and above the surplus profits were divided, while the defendant claims that much less than the surplus profits was divided.

This difference betwen counsel for plaintiff on the one side, and the superior court and counsel for the defendant on the other, arises out of a difference of theory as to what constitutes surplus profits of a mining corporation.

Counsel for plaintiff contends that the payment of the [139]*139debts which plaintiff assumed as part of the price of the property acquired from the Excelsior Water Company and the Pactolus Mining Company, as well as most of the items of expenditure for construction of tunnels, levees, ditches, etc., should be rated as current expenses and charged against its gross earnings, in order to ascertain the actual surplus profits of its business; while counsel for defendant contends, on the contrary, that the payments of the principal of its indebtedness, and its investments in what are called betterments of its property, should not be charged to current expenses of the business. As to the payment of the debt assumed by the plaintiff when it commenced business, or that incurred in making improvements, we do not understand its counsel to contend that it was necessary to pay them off before any dividends could be declared, but merely that whenever any part of its gross earnings was applied to the payment of a debt it was unlawful thereafter to replace such sum with the proceeds of a loan, and thereupon declare a dividend.

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Bluebook (online)
27 P. 44, 90 Cal. 131, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/excelsior-water-mining-co-v-pierce-cal-1891.