Finnell v. Jas. H. Goodman & Co. Bank

103 P. 483, 156 Cal. 18, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 275
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1909
DocketS.F. No. 4696.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 103 P. 483 (Finnell v. Jas. H. Goodman & Co. Bank) 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
Finnell v. Jas. H. Goodman & Co. Bank, 103 P. 483, 156 Cal. 18, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 275 (Cal. 1909).

Opinions

The defendant, a banking corporation, appeals from the judgment and from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

The object of the action, as shown by the complaint, is to have the plaintiff adjudged to be the owner of 3241 shares of the capital stock of the Finnell Land Company, standing in the name of the defendant, and to compel the defendant to transfer and deliver the said shares to plaintiff. The court below gave judgment directing the defendant to deliver to the plaintiff 2717 of the said shares. The transactions out of *Page 20 which the claim of the plaintiff arises occurred between the defendant and George E. Goodman. The plaintiff has succeeded to the rights of George E. Goodman by assignment. In our consideration of the case we will refer only to the actions and rights of Goodman. The facts upon which the judgment was based are stated in the findings and will now, in substance, be stated.

The defendant was incorporated as a banking corporation on June 11, 1889, and ever since July 1, 1889, has been engaged in the banking business. We shall hereafter designate it as the bank. Goodman was its president during all the period involved except from March 22, 1895, to July 9, 1896. During that period, however, no important transactions occurred. The Finnell Land Company was incorporated on May 24, 1900, with a capital stock declared in its articles to be of the value of six hundred and fifty thousand dollars, divided into six thousand five hundred shares of the par value of one hundred dollars each, all of which were owned by John Finnell.

On October 26, 1900, John Finnell was indebted to the bank in the sum of $447,742.80, of which $275,559.87 was evidenced by notes secured by deeds of trust covering 12,221.87 acres of land belonging to the Finnell Land Company, and $172,182.93 was due for overdrafts on open account and unsecured.

Of this sum of $447,742.80 due from Finnell to the bank, $267,372 was on account of money of the bank which had been loaned to Finnell by George E. Goodman, to be used to pay debts from Finnell to Goodman. This money was loaned by Goodman for that purpose at divers times while he was president of the bank and was so used and applied.

On that day, October 26, 1900, Goodman being then president of the bank, Finnell made a settlement of his aforesaid debt to the bank. This settlement was made with the knowledge and consent of Goodman. The evidence shows further that he negotiated the settlement, but this is not stated in the findings. By this settlement Finnell sold and transferred to the bank forty-five hundred shares of the capital stock of the Finnell Land Company and certain wheat, barley, and wool, in consideration whereof the bank discharged Finnell's said debt. The wheat, barley, and wool taken by the bank *Page 21 were of the value of $21,477.80 and that sum was credited by the bank on its account against Finnell, which account included the secured notes aforesaid as well as the overdrafts.

The findings show that at the same time Finnell transferred to Goodman the remaining two thousand shares of stock in the Finnell Land Company in consideration of the discharge by Goodman of a debt of some $352,238.27 and accrued interest due from Finnell to said Goodman. We do not think these facts are material to the case, except, perhaps, as matters of evidence.

On August 21, 1903, the bank demanded of Goodman the sum of $323,970, on account of the said $267,377 of the bank's funds previously loaned as aforesaid by Goodman, as president, to Finnell and used to pay his debts to Goodman. This demand included seven per cent interest from October 26, 1900, to August 21, 1903, on the sum so used by Goodman. After some negotiation with Goodman the interest was reduced to five per cent and Goodman thereupon paid the bank three hundred and seven thousand dollars in satisfaction of the demand.

On account of this payment the court below held that Goodman was entitled to a proportional part of the forty-five hundred shares of the Finnell Land Company stock which the bank had received from Finnell in satisfaction of the debt of which the $267,372 was a part. It also found that the bank had expended ten thousand dollars in obtaining necessary advice and services of an attorney in enforcing its demand against Goodman for said sum, and that, on that account, in estimating the proportion of the stock due to Goodman, the sum of $257,372 only, should be taken as the numerator. The $21,477.80 credited on account of the wheat, barley, and wool was taken from the total debt, leaving a balance of $426,265, for which balance the bank, as the court concluded, had received the forty-five hundred shares of stock. The theory was that each share of stock represented a due proportion of the debt and that when Goodman was forced to repay to the bank $267,372 of the same debt, he became equitably entitled to receive from the bank a number of shares of the stock bearing the same proportion to the forty-five hundred shares as the sum of $257,372 (being the sum he paid, less the ten thousand dollars, and without interest) *Page 22 bears to $426,265. This proportion would amount to 2717 shares, for which judgment was given.

The original complaint alleged that when Goodman paid the $267,372 and interest in August, 1903, in liquidation of the demand then made upon him, it was agreed between him and the bank, that the bank in consideration thereof, would transfer to him a proportionate part of the forty-five hundred shares of the stock. In the amended complaint it was alleged that the bank agreed to transfer to him, in consideration of said payment, 3241 shares of said stock. The court found that no such agreement was made and that no agreement to transfer any shares to Goodman was made in connection with that transaction.

The complaint alleges that the shares of stock of said company have no market value. The answer alleged that on October 26, 1900, when it was taken by the bank in discharge of Finnell's debt, each share of the stock "was of the value of $30," and that it has greatly depreciated in value since that date. The court found that the stock has no market value. It also found as follows: "It is not true that on the 26th day of October, 1900, each share of the said Finnell Land Company stock was of the value of but $30." The complaint contained no allegation as to its actual, or intrinsic value, as distinguished from its market value.

The suit of the plaintiff was manifestly founded upon the alleged agreement that upon payment by Goodman to the bank the bank would transfer to him a proportionate part of the stock. The court, as stated, found that this allegation was wholly untrue. The plaintiff is therefore forced to rely on other propositions in order to sustain the judgment.

We know of no principle of law or equity by which the plaintiff can claim a right to a proportion of the stock, upon the facts found.

The claim of the plaintiff is that when the funds of the bank were improperly loaned by Goodman to Finnell, it then had two remedies whereby to obtain reimbursement of the $267,372 thus loaned, one to pursue Finnell, the debtor, the other to compel payment from Goodman, its unfaithful president; that it elected to pursue Finnell and accepted property from him in satisfaction of the entire debt of $447,772.80, including the $267,372 for which Goodman also was liable; *Page 23

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Bluebook (online)
103 P. 483, 156 Cal. 18, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finnell-v-jas-h-goodman-co-bank-cal-1909.