Geary St., Park & Ocean R.R. v. Bradbury Estate Co.

175 P. 457, 179 Cal. 46, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 695
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1918
DocketS. F. No. 8731.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 175 P. 457 (Geary St., Park & Ocean R.R. v. Bradbury Estate Co.) 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
Geary St., Park & Ocean R.R. v. Bradbury Estate Co., 175 P. 457, 179 Cal. 46, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 695 (Cal. 1918).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Defendant appeals from an adverse judgment.

By this action the plaintiff sought to recover the amount of a call upon the original subscription to thirty shares of the capital stock of plaintiff owned at the date of the commencement of the action by the defendant. The court found defendant liable for the payment of the amount of the levied assessment.

The facts are as follows: In 1915 plaintiff, being indebted in the' sum of about three hundred thousand dollars, issued a call upon the unpaid subscriptions to its capital stock for $34 a share. This stock involved in the appeal before us had *48 been bought in the open market by Simona M. Bradbury some time prior to December 10, 1902. The purchase was made from a registered holder and a new certificate representing her thirty shares was issued to said Simona M. Bradbury. This writing upon its face showed no indebtedness and contained no information regarding the matter of its being fully or partially paid. While holder of the stock Simona M. Bradbury died testate on the tenth day of December, 1902. Her estate, which was of a value in excess of ten thousand dollars, was regularly distributed after probate proceedings in due form in the county of Los Angeles, where she had resided up to the time of her death. The distributees under the will of Simona M1. Bradbury held the original certificate without registration on the books of the company from January 2, 1904, the date of final distribution, until May 3, 1904, when they duly sold and transferred title by bill of sale to the defendant, and within a few days a new certificate was issued, to that corporation. Defendant, at the time of the sale and assignment of the stock, had not any actual knowledge or information of any unpaid balance due i upon the stock by reason of the original subscription, and believed that said stock was fully paid, and knew that no claim for any unpaid balance of the subscription price had been presented against the estate of Simona M. Bradbury, deceased.

At the time of the issuance of the new certificate section 17 of the by-laws of the plaintiff corporation provided that 1 ‘ The stock of the company shall after payment of all calls or installments thereon be transferable on the books of the company by endorsement on the certificate by the signature of the proprietor or his attorney or legal representative, and delivery of the certificate of stock. The surrendered certificate shall in all cases be cancelled by the secretary before issuing a new one in lieu thereof. ’ ’

Appellant contends that plaintiff’s claim for the unpaid balance due on the original subscription, if assumed by Simona M. Bradbury as transferee during her life, is ‘1 barred forever,” under the law as found in section 1493 of the Code of Civil Procedure, by plaintiff’s failure to present its claim to the executors of her estate, and that this defense is available to the purchaser from the distributees under her will and to their transferee; that by its conduct plaintiff is estopped, in view of its by-law 17, from asserting that a part of the *49 subscription price is still due; and that in view of that same section of the by-laws plaintiff’s claim is barred by its own laches.

The personal obligation or promise of Simona M. Bradbury to pay calls upon these shares in the plaintiff company, whatever its origin or nature, whether it was merely “not due” or was contingent, became forever barred by the failure of the plaintiff to file or present a claim therefor within the time limited in the notice to creditors given by the executrix of her estate after her death. Such is the express language of section 1493 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and it is further said in section 1500 that no holder of such claim shall thereafter maintain any action thereon. This does not bar him from maintaining an action against a third person, if there were any such, who was jointly or severally liable with the decedent upon the obligation, but there was no such person. The defendant had not then even come into existence.

It cannot be held liable upon the theory that it had assumed the obligation of the original subscriber for the stock; that obligation ceased to exist when Simona M. Bradbury bought the stock and had it transferred to herself on the corporate books. “Where a stockholder makes an absolute transfer of his stock in good faith, and the transfer is duly recorded on the corporate books, the transferrer is thereby wholly discharged from all further liability upon the uncalled subscription price of the stock.” (1 Cook on Corporations, 7th ed., sec. 255.) By that transaction Simona M. Bradbury became the obligor. The defendant cannot be held liable for the obligation which she then assumed, for that obligation, as we have shown, was forever barred before the defendant became the owner of the shares.

It cannot be held liable on the ground that its purchase of the shares (prior to transfer on the books) rendered it personally liable to calls thereon. This is settled by the decision in People’s Home Sav. Bank v. Stadtmuller, 150 Cal. 106-109, [88 Pac. 280]. In that case the registered owner of the stock died and the stock was distributed to his widow as his heir. She continued to hold the stock, but did not have it transferred to her on the corporate books. A call for the unpaid balance of the subscription was thereafter made and the corporation began suit against her to recover the same. It was held that the suit would not Jie; that her ownership of the *50 stock did not make her liable for the unpaid balance of the subscription price thereof, and that where stock has passed from a registered holder to a third person, whether by purchase or descent, the corporation “has no right of action against the transferee, because, as between him and the corporation, the contractual relation of stockholder has not been created.” The opinion quotes with approval the following passage from section 258 of Cook on Corporations, fourth edition: “Until a transfer is recorded in the transfer-book of the corporation, the transferee, not being duly recognized as a stockholder, is not chargeable . . . with . . . unpaid balances óf the subscription.” It is obvious from this decision that if the defendant corporation, after having received this stock from the legatees of Simona M. Bradbury had retained it without having it transferred upon the books, no right of action for calls would ever have existed against it, personally, in favor of the plaintiff corporation. In that event the plaintiff’s only means of enforcing calls would have been to sell the stock as provided in the Civil Code.

The result is that the present action can be maintained only upon the theory that by having the stock transferred to itself upon the stock books, a personal liability was thereby created against the defendant in favor of the plaintiff to pay calls upon the subscription price. This does not mean that the defendant then assumed the obligation of the original subscriber. The liability arises out of the transaction at the time of the application for the transfer on the corporation books. “If the law implies a promise by the original holders or subscribers to pay the full par value when it may be called, it follows that an assignee of stock, when he has come into privity with the company by having stock transferred to him on the company’s books, is equally liable. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
175 P. 457, 179 Cal. 46, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geary-st-park-ocean-rr-v-bradbury-estate-co-cal-1918.