Gillis v. Pan American Western Petroleum Co.

44 P.2d 311, 3 Cal. 2d 249, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 424
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1935
DocketL. A. 14975
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 44 P.2d 311 (Gillis v. Pan American Western Petroleum 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
Gillis v. Pan American Western Petroleum Co., 44 P.2d 311, 3 Cal. 2d 249, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 424 (Cal. 1935).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The plaintiffs commenced this action against the defendant corporation and its directors to recover from them the amounts paid by them for capital stock of the corporation, it being alleged that no permit had been issued authorizing issuance of stock in California. Demurrers to the complaint and amended complaint having been sustained, with leave to amend, plaintiffs filed their second amended complaint, to which the individual defendants interposed a demurrer, which was sustained without leave to amend. This appeal is from the judgment of dismissal in favor of the demurring defendants rendered pursuant to the foregoing order.

The allegations of the second amended complaint, to which we shall refer hereafter as the complaint, may be briefly summarized as follows: The individual defendants were the incorporators and at all the times mentioned the directors of the defendant corporation. They organized it under the laws of Delaware for the purpose and with the plan of taking title to certain California property, and of conducting its business and maintaining its principal place of business at Los Angeles, California, and since its incorporation the company has maintained its principal place of business at Los Angeles, and has transacted all of its business there, including the holding of its meetings of directors. It is alleged that the plan of incorporating under the laws of Delaware was designedly and purposely followed for the purpose of evading the Corporate Securities Act of this state. It is then set forth that subsequent to the establishment of its principal place of business the individual defendants as directors and at meetings of the board in California, ordered issued certain of its capital stock, including that sold to appellants, and did order issued and did issue to appellants in California twenty-two hundred shares, for which appellants paid the sum of $63,357.50. Allegations then follow to the effect that the defendant corporation had not applied for a permit authorizing it to issue its capital stock, and had wholly failed to comply with the provisions of the Corporate Securities Act; that the certificates issued to appellants were void and worthless; that all *252 of the defendants knowingly directed and aided and assisted in the issuance of the stock; that appellants, although they commenced their purchases on December 16, 1925, and ended them on April 3, 1928, did not nor did either of them know that the corporation had not complied with the provisions of the Corporate Securities Act until the 10th of October, 1930, at which time an article was published in a Los Angeles newspaper to the effect that the corporation had sold its stock without a permit; that plaintiffs relied implicitly upon the genuineness of the stock issued to them and believing that the corporation had complied with all the provisions of the Corporate Securities Act; and finally that appellants were damaged in the sum paid for the stock which has been lost to them by the issuance of said stock.

We are concerned, of course, with whether the demurrer was properly sustained and must of necessity examine the contentions of respondents to determine the question. They assert that the issuance of capital stock is an internal affair of a corporation governed by the law of the state where it was incorporated, and rely upon such authorities as Southern Sierras Power Co. v. Railroad Commission, 205 Cal. 479 [271 Pac. 747], In re Fryeburg Water Co., 79 N. H. 123 [106 Atl. 225, 18 A. L. R. 1373], and Mau v. Montana Pacific Oil Co., 16 Del. Ch. 114 [141 Atl. 828]. An examination of the cited authorities demonstrates that they are not persuasive of the point that the state lacks the power to declare void the issuance of stock in this state by a foreign corporation. The Southern Sierras case was one where a Wyoming corporation, engaged in this state in the generation and sale of electrical energy, sought to compel the Railroad Commission to grant it permission to issue $2,000,000 of its preferred stock for the purpose of refunding or paying its outstanding obligations. The court held that the commission was without jurisdiction, for the reason that it was never intended by the Public Utilities Act of this state “to subject foreign corporations to regulation concerning the exercise of the inherent corporate powers conferred upon them by the legislative power of the incorporating state”. It was largely grounded upon the Fryeburg case, which was very similar in character. The Fryeburg Water Company was a Maine corporation doing business in both Maine and New Hampshire. It sought to

*253 compel the public service commission to approve that portion of a stock dividend which was represented by its capital investment in New Hampshire. The court refused the writ upon the statement that while the language of the act conferring authority upon the commission was quite broad it would not be “presumed that the legislature intended to give the commission power to regulate the internal affairs of such corporations”. 'We have no criticism of these authorities. Indeed, in Commonwealth Acceptance Corp. v. Jordan, 198 Cal. 618 [246 Pac. 796], this court called attention to the well-known fact that the laws of the several states authorize different capital stock structures for corporations, and under the doctrine of comity they are allowed, in the absence of express constitutional or statutory inhibitions, to enter other states for the purpose of doing business, regardless of whether a corporation with like structure is permitted to be formed in the latter states. However, these authorities are far from holding that the issuance and sale of the stock in a state other than that in which the corporation is formed is not a proper subject for legislative action. A number of authorities by their conclusions confirm the right of the state to protect its citizens, by legislative interposition, against the issuance or sale of stock in the state. Among these we cite, Hohn v. Peters, 216 Cal. 406 [14 Pac. (2d) 519] ; Hayden Plan Co. v. Friedlander, 97 Cal. App. 12-16 [275 Pac. 248, 253]; In re Flesher, 81 Cal. App. 128 [252 Pac. 1057], In the case of London, Parris & American Bank v. Aronstein, 117 Fed. 601-609, it is said: “It is true that the courts in California cannot control the internal affairs of any foreign corporation. Such matters are to be conducted in pursuance of and in compliance with the provisions of the charter of the foreign corporation, and the laws of the country where it was created; but in the management and method of its business affairs in California with the citizens and residents thereof, in the sale or disposition or transfer of the shares of stock, it must conform to the laws of California in relation to such matters, and is bound thereby. In the recent case of Williams v. Gaylord, supra, 186 U. S. 157 [22 Sup. Ct. 798, 46 L. Ed. 1102], the Supreme Court of the United States said: ‘When a corporation sells or encumbers its property, incurs debts, or gives securities, it does business; and a statute regulating such transactions does not regulate *254

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Bluebook (online)
44 P.2d 311, 3 Cal. 2d 249, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillis-v-pan-american-western-petroleum-co-cal-1935.