Fuhrman v. American National Building & Loan Ass'n

14 P.2d 601, 126 Cal. App. 202, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 475
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 23, 1932
DocketDocket No. 8535.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 601 (Fuhrman v. American National Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Fuhrman v. American National Building & Loan Ass'n, 14 P.2d 601, 126 Cal. App. 202, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 475 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

LAMBERSON, J., pro tem.

The respondent brought action against the appellant, American National Building and Loan Association, a corporation, and the other appellants as directors thereof, to recover the sum of $2,500, being the amount of a first payment made by respondent on a subscription for 100 shares of the “guarantee capital stock” of the appellant corporation, and prayed for the cancellation of the subscription agreement upon the ground that he had been induced by fraudulent representations of the appellants and their agents to sign the subscription agreement. Judgment was entered in favor of respondent for the sum of $2,500, with interest thereon at the legal rate from June 4, 1929, and it was decreed that the subscription agreement be canceled and surrendered to the respondent.

The defendant corporation was organized as a building and loan corporation under the laws of California, on *206 February 28, 1929, with an authorized “guarantee capital stock” of $5,000,000 divided into 50,000. shares of the par value of $100 each. For the purposes of the organization, there were seven directors, to each of whom there were ostensibly allotted ten shares of the capital stock, none of which, however, were ever issued or paid for, or have been outstanding at any time. It is admitted in appellants’ brief that three of the seven so-called original incorporators were merely dummy directors, in the sense that their names were used as a matter of convenience in incorporating the company, “as indeed were the names of the other four directors, in so far as their subscription to ten shares each of the capital stock of said corporation were concerned”. The last four, however, did thereafter subscribe for shares of stock in the company at $125 per share.

On March 8, 1929, the defendant corporation entered into an agreement with one V. M. Price, who was neither a director nor one of the original incorporators, wherein it was recited that the original incorporators of the appellant corporation had theretofore subscribed for seventy shares of the guarantee capital stock, thereby leaving in the treasury, unsold and not subscribed for, 49,930 shares; that the board of directors had offered said 49,930 shares for sale, and the said V. M>. Price had offered the sum of $105 per share for the same, which offer had been accepted by the board. It was then agreed that the corporation sold, and the said Price bought, said shares of stock, the seller to issue certificates therefor at any time prior to March 8, 1939, for lots of one share or more, upon the payment of the purchase price of $105 per share, no dividends to accrue until such purchase price for each share had been paid, and no interest to be paid by the buyer. It appears that Price thereafter began a selling and advertising campaign, in the course of which there appeared a double page advertisement in the San Francisco “Examiner”, and a large advertisement in the San Francisco “Chronicle”, in the name of the defendant corporation, Price’s name not being mentioned therein. In the “Examiner” advertisement appear, among others, the following representations: “Subscriptions for a limited amount of the guarantee capital can be made through any of our State agency offices listed herewith or at the main San *207 Francisco office by mail or wire. In view of the fact that guarantee capital has been tightly held by a few of the original incorporators and directors, the management believes that this opportunity for public participation is a forward step in the policy of building and loan finance, in that it allows a large number of small investors to enjoy initial opportunity with the incorporators, instead of a limited privilege to make interest deposits or purchase investment certificates. Guarantee capital will participate in earnings”. The “Examiner” advertisement also set forth a list of ten directors, among whom one J. C. Berendsen, a business man of San Francisco, was named. In the “Chronicle” advertisement, the statement was repeated that Berendsen was a director, and this was accompanied by a laudatory recital of his experience in the business affairs of San Francisco, together with his photograph, all of which was published without his knowledge or consent.

Within a few days after the publication of these advertisements, respondent was visited by representatives of the appellant corporation or its sales agent, and was furnished with literature apparently issued and distributed in the name of such appellant, in which the following statement was made: “A substantial part of the original authorized issue has been subscribed for and the offering, herewith, is presented as an opportunity to the public to participate by direct investment in the guarantee capital, instead of being confined to interest on deposit monies”. The representation was also made in the “Examiner” advertisement that the Crocker First Federal Trust Company was the registrar of the defendant corporation, and that Anglo-California Trust Company was the transfer agent. The advertisements did not state the number of shares into which the capital stock was divided, or their par value, but stated that shares of appellant corporation would be available at $125 per share.

On May 23, 1929, in response to invitations from representatives of appellants or their ' sales agent, respondent visited the offices of the appellant corporation where he was handed an envelope which contained copies of the advertisements published in the “Examiner” and “Chronicle,” and was told by a person who gave them to him that the *208 two advertisements contained all of the facts regarding the company. He had previously been ashed to subscribe for stock, and was again solicited on May 23d. After looking around the offices, examining the subscription book which was shown to him, and talking with one of the persons there who was described as a director and chief counsel of the corporation, he signed the subscription agreement for the purchase of 100 shares at a price of $125 per share, and at that time gave the agents of appellants a check for $2,500 drawn in favor of the corporation as an initial payment on his subscription, final payment to be made July 2, 1929. It later developed that of the amount paid by respondent, $2,000 was immediately paid to Price as his commission on the entire sale, .the $500 remaining with the corporation. Up to and including May 21, 1929, a total of 1573 shares had been subscribed for, and during the following week subscriptions for an additional 436 shares had been offered. Respondent alleges that about June 3d he discovered the falsity of the statements which had been made to him, and learned for the first time of the contract with Price, and that about June 4th he gave notice of rescission to the appellant corporation, and about June 5th, in a letter addressed to one Thomas E. Hayden, who had been represented to respondent as a director, and chief counsel of appellant corporation, stated in detail his reasons for believing ■ that fraud had been practiced upon him in securing his subscription.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 601, 126 Cal. App. 202, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuhrman-v-american-national-building-loan-assn-calctapp-1932.