Feisthamel v. Campbell

205 P. 25, 55 Cal. App. 774, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 125
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 28, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3741.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 205 P. 25 (Feisthamel v. Campbell) 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
Feisthamel v. Campbell, 205 P. 25, 55 Cal. App. 774, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 125 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Plaintiff was awarded judgment, for the recovery of a stock certificate representing certain corporate-shares, and defendant has appealed therefrom.

On the 13th of May, 1918, R. A. Moore was the owner of 1,900 shares of the capital stock of the Grant Tool Company. On that day he deposited a certificate representing the full number of shares mentioned with a banking corporation, for the purpose of having the same held in escrow subject to conditions which he stated in writing. These instructions so addressed to the bank directed- that the escrow-holder deliver the certificate to M. M. Gilchrist, William J. Coady, John Grant, and A. J. Campbell, or their assigns, “or to any or either of them for the other or others,” upon the payment to the bank for the vendor, within two years from the date of the instructions, the sum of $2,000, payable, as the document recited: “Five hundred dollars any time within one year from the date hereof, and the sum of five hundred dollars every six months thereafter until said sum of two thousand dollars shall have been paid. After the payment of said first installment deferred payments are to bear interest at the rate of 6% per annum.” The writing concluded with the following paragraph: “These instructions are given in recognition of an option granted by me *776 for a valuable consideration in an agreement with, the parties herein mentioned contemporaneously herewith.” At the time the certificate was deposited and the escrow completed all of the persons named in whose interest the option to buy had been given were the owners of a large amount of stock in the same corporation. On the 18th of March, 1919, the plaintiff purchased from Gilchrist 6,365 shares of Grant Tool Company stock, and from Coady 8,112 shares, at two dollars per share. The agreement of purchase covering both of these interests was in writing and contained in one document. On the same day the plaintiff purchased from Grant 10,700 shares of the same stock and from A. J. Campbell 1,700, also the interest of both of these parties in a certain block consisting of 1,500 shares of the same stock then being held as collateral security for payment of a debt theretofore incurred by the vendors. This purchase from Campbell and Grant was also evidenced by a writing expressed in a single document and the purchase price therein agreed upon was the sum of one dollar per share. Each of the documents hereinbefore referred to contained a clause expressing an assignment of the interest of the vendors in the option to purchase the Moore stock which had been, as before stated, made the subject of the escrow deposit. The assignment was expressed in the following language: “First party . . . does sell and assign to the third party all his right, title and interest in and to a certain option to purchase 1,900 shares of the capital stock of said Grant Tool Company for the sum of $2,000, which said option is given by one Moore to the first party.” On the twenty-sixth day of March, 1919, the plaintiff here, the holder of the assignment in the option rights from Gilchrist, Coady, Grant, and A. J. Campbell, presented the written assignment to the trust officer of the bank in charge of the escrow of the Moore stock, made tender of $2,000 and requested that the stock be delivered to him. The trust officer declined to deliver the stock, stating that he did not deem the assignment sufficient, and demanded that plaintiff secure a power of attorney from the four persons who had assigned their interest. Plaintiff at a later date, through his attorney, made another tender and a more formal demand upon the bank, but at that time the stock had already been delivered, under circumstances which we will now state:

*777 The evidence shows that one Dent had for several years been a friend and acquaintance of Grant and A. J. Campbell. He was not an attorney at law, but had been consulted by Grant and had advised the latter in a business way respecting transactions affecting the stock of the Grant Tool Company, and particularly during the transaction which resulted in the sale by Grant and Campbell of their stock to plaintiff. It will be noted that while Coady and Gilchrist received two dollars per share for their stock, Grant and Campbell secured but one dollar, that being the price also, approximately, of the stock held in escrow under the Moore option. We gather from the record that when Grant and A. J. Campbell concluded the sale of their stock to plaintiff, they had not learned that plaintiff was paying Coady and Gilchrist a higher price, and that, when they did learn of this, they became dissatisfied, with the result that certain action was taken which is now narrated: A few days after the making of the sale by Grant and A. J. Campbell to plaintiff, a power of attorney signed by the two persons named was executed in favor of Dent. This power of attorney authorized Dent particularly to “demand, receive receipt and cause to be paid for 1900 shares of capital stock of the Grant Tool Company, a corporation, evidenced by Certificate Number 34, and now in the custody of the Citizens Trust and Savings Bank, under its escrow No. 1180, or make any and all demands necessary or proper to be made to recover any and all corporate stocks or stock, moneys or money, to which we, or either of us, may be entitled by reason of our relationship as stockholders in the Grant Tool Company, a corporation. ...” The inference is plainly indicated that Dent had learned from the bank that it would act upon a power of attorney from the parties mentioned in the escrow instructions. Dent, armed with this power of attorney, proceeded to look up Moore, the owner of the es-crowed stock, and the latter, after some consultation with counsel as to his rights, went to the bank and accepted payment for the stock. The bank determined that the power of attorney presented by Dent authorized it to release the stock from escrow, and delivered it over. In view of the fact that one of the contentions of appellant is that the evidence was insufficient to show that defendant Campbell was not an innocent purchaser, without notice of any *778 rights of the plaintiff, we shall pay particular attention to the evidence as it disclosed the conduct of Dent in connection with the acts of the defendant. Defendant Campbell was the father of A. J. Campbell and the father-in-law of Grant. As soon as Dent had secured the power of attorney mentioned, he wrote a letter, stating in effect that he believed he could secure 1,900 shares of stock of the Grant Tool Company at the same price mentioned in the escrow instructions to- Moore, and offered to sell the same to defendant. This letter he took to defendant’s place of business in the city of,Los Angeles where, although he stated that he was well acquainted with defendant, he entered into no conversation respecting the stock at all, but delivered to him the letter, saying that he would return after a while. Dent insisted that he at no time disclosed to the defendant the situation respecting the sale of the Grant-Campbell interests, or respecting any assignment having been made of the option rights (although he admitted that he had seen and read that assignment). According to the testimony of both Dent and the defendant, Dent returned to the defendant’s place in about an hour and the defendant told him that he would take the stock.

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Bluebook (online)
205 P. 25, 55 Cal. App. 774, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feisthamel-v-campbell-calctapp-1921.