Gold v. Gold Realty Co.

8 Cal. Rptr. 3d 118, 114 Cal. App. 4th 791
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 2003
DocketB169072
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 8 Cal. Rptr. 3d 118 (Gold v. Gold Realty Co.) 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
Gold v. Gold Realty Co., 8 Cal. Rptr. 3d 118, 114 Cal. App. 4th 791 (Cal. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Opinion

TURNER, P. J.

I. INTRODUCTION

Defendants Richard E. Gold, Emily Gold Mears, and Jean Gold Friedman, appeal from a July 28, 2003, order appointing a limited purpose receiver to market and sell real property which was the subject of a September 26, 1996, judgment entered by now retired Judge Richard G. Harris. We affirm the July 28, 2003, order because the trial court did not abuse its discretion in appointing a limited purpose receiver to enforce the terms of the September 26, 1996, judgment ordering the marketing and the sale of the property.

II. BACKGROUND

The parties in this action are relatives who own shares in three closely held real estate corporations: Gold Realty Company; Gold’s Incorporated; and Essex Corporation. The corporations were formed by the family patriarch, Morris Gold, who was the husband of Julia 1 and the father of Richard and Ruth. Ruth married Charles Gold. Prior to his marriage to Ruth, Charles was not a member of the Gold family. Ruth and Charles had two sons, Robert and David. Richard and his wife Harriet had two daughters, Jean Gold Friedman and Emily Gold Mears. Julia died on November 6, 1990. Morris died on April 2, 1992.

Morris was a highly successful businessperson, who started out in the furniture business in the 1920’s. He subsequently acquired considerable real *795 estate which composed the assets of the three corporations. Beginning in the 1940’s, Richard and Charles participated in the management of the corporations. In 1967, Richard decided to return to graduate school. Richard then stopped assisting Morris in running the corporations. In 1977, Charles stopped working for the family business and Richard returned. The family members were not allowed to draw salaries from the corporations. The profits were reinvested in the corporations. After Morris died, Richard ran the corporations with the assistance of an outside management company.

The family members owned all the shares of stock. Prior to Morris’s death, Richard’s family and Charles’s family owned equal shares of stock in the corporations. Morris died on April 2, 1992, and left a will. In the will, Morris left a larger portion of the estate to Richard’s family. As a result, Charles’s family owned 40 percent of the shares of the corporations. Richard’s family owned 60 percent of the shares. This uneven split was the result of Morris’s displeasure with some members of Charles’s family. Morris apparently felt that Charles did not work hard enough. Morris also did not approve of the woman a grandson, Robert, had chosen to marry. Morris also felt that Robert was “an unconcerned and unloving grandchild.” Morris disinherited Charles and Ruth. Robert was initially disinherited by Morris. But later, in 1986, Robert was reinstated as a beneficiary in Morris’s will.

In 1988, prior to Morris’s death, the stockholders (Morris, Richard, Harriet, Charles, Ruth, Jean, Emily, David and Robert) of Gold’s Incorporated executed voting trust agreements for the three corporations. As part of the agreements, the shareholders agreed that Richard had the exclusive right to vote all corporate shares for up to 10 years. In 1991, two of the corporations, Essex Corporation and Gold Realty Company, were converted from “sub-chapter C corporations” to “subchapter S corporations.” The conversions avoided double taxation of corporate earnings. In addition, the change resulted in the family shareholders’ receiving dividends for the first time.

After Morris died in 1992, Charles’s family refused to convert the third corporation, Gold’s Incorporated, to “subchapter S corporation” status. Richard’s family and Charles’s family become embroiled in litigation over the operation of the corporations. As noted previously, when Morris died in 1992, the corporations were being managed by Richard. On February 16, 1994, plaintiffs, Charles Gold, Ruth Gold, Charles I. Gold, the Ruth Gold Family Trust, Robert L. Gold, and David G. Gold, filed suit action against defendants for involuntary dissolution of the corporations and for damages based on numerous tort theories. It is this lawsuit nearly one decade later that is the subject of this appeal. Named as plaintiffs in the February 16, 1994, complaint were Charles, his spouse Ruth, and their sons Robert and David. Plaintiffs prevailed only on the cause of action for involuntary dissolution of *796 the corporations. Former Judge Harris found that the corporations had been adequately run and that Richard had not been guilty of fraud or mismanagement. However, former Judge Harris concluded that Richard had been operating a “one-man show” which had resulted in persistent unfairness to plaintiffs. In order to protect the rights and interests of plaintiffs, former Judge Harris ordered dissolution of the three corporations pursuant to Corporations Code section 1800, subdivision (b)(4) and (5). Former Judge Harris ordered that Gold’s Incorporated be dissolved within one year. However, to avoid adverse tax consequences, former Judge Harris ordered that dissolution of the two subchapter S corporations, Essex Corporation and Gold Realty Company, be delayed until January 1, 2003, and July 1, 2003, respectively. Former Judge Harris retained jurisdiction “until the dissolutions and liquidations contemplated herein have been fully consummated.”

Richard was allowed to remain as president of the corporations but each entity’s three-member board of directors would include one director to represent both plaintiffs and defendants. Under the terms of the September 26, 1996, judgment, an independent third director could be chosen by agreement or appointment of the trial court. The September 26, 1996, judgment provided in part: “During the period prior to the liquidation of Defendants Gold Realty Company, Gold’s [Incorporated] and Essex Corporation, the corporations shall be operated in the following manner: [][]... [f] (c) The Board of Directors of each corporation shall be comprised of three directors: Richard E. Gold, or one member from his family; Charles I. Gold, or one member from his family; and an individual who shall be agreed upon by both the Richard Gold family and the Charles Gold family. This individual shall serve as a director until the next annual shareholder/trust certificate holder meeting. If the Richard Gold family and the Charles Gold family at any time cannot agree upon the third director, such director shall be appointed by the Court upon application duly made and noticed; the above described procedure for the election of three directors for each of the corporations shall be repeated annually until the Board of Directors of that corporation is disbanded upon the conclusion of corporate dissolution and distribution of the proceeds to all shareholders/trust certificate holders . . . .”

At issue in this case is whether a subsequent appointment of a receiver to accomplish the dissolution of two of the corporations was appropriate. In that respect, the September 26, 1996, judgment itself does not appoint a receiver. However, in rendering the September 26, 1996, dissolution judgment, former Judge Harris adopted his findings and conclusions contained in a tentative decision dated May 1, 1996, which were adopted by him in his statement of decision on May 30, 1996.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Cal. Rptr. 3d 118, 114 Cal. App. 4th 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gold-v-gold-realty-co-calctapp-2003.