Gray v. Ellis

129 P. 791, 164 Cal. 481, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 495
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1913
DocketL.A. No. 2969.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 129 P. 791 (Gray v. Ellis) 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
Gray v. Ellis, 129 P. 791, 164 Cal. 481, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 495 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff, and from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial. The case was tried with a jury, which rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the full amount claimed.

*483 The action is one to recover $2,250 paid by plaintiff to Ellis & Church on account of a subscription for the purchase of certain corporate stock, which money, it is substantially alleged, was diverted by Ellis & Church to payment on account of a subscription for stock in another and a different corporation from the one for whose stock he had subscribed, viz., the defendant Northern Investment Company, which diversion he promptly repudiated. The memorandum of agreement for such purchase executed by plaintiff is set forth in the complaint, the same being as follows:

“We, the undersigned, hereby severally agree to pay to Ellis & Church, agents, the sums set after our names respectively, on the following terms and conditions:
“Fifteen per cent (15%) in cash, and the balance as called for, being payments on account of purchase of stock of the Northern or Western Trust Companies, said Northern or Western Trust Companies’ stock representing bonds and stock of the Home Telephone Company of San Francisco:
Names. Amounts to be paid. S. W. Clark......... .............$ 3,000 C. C. Ames......... ............. 15,000 F. C. Hornby....... ............. 35,000 H. H. Barstin...... .............10,000 Harry Gray........ ............. 15,000 By H. D. L. John T. Bill ...... ............ 5,000”

Treating this contract as giving the plaintiff the right to elect or direct to which of the two' corporations referred to his subscription should be made (the “Northern” or “Northern Trust Company” referred to therein being the defendant Northern Investment Company), it was alleged in the complaint that at the time of the payment of the money, plaintiff elected and directed that the same should be applied upon the purchase of stock in the Western Trust Company, and that said election and choice was agreed to and acquiesced in by said Ellis & Church, they so acknowledging in their receipt given for such money. It is further substantially alleged that Ellis & Church paid said money to the Northern Investment Company, on account of a subscription by plaintiff for stock of the last-named company, said company receiving the same and sending plaintiff a certificate for one hundred and fifty *484 shares therein, which he at once returned, repudiating the action of Ellis & Church in the matter, and declining to be considered a subscriber for any stock of said corporation. Defendant Northern Investment Company has ever since retained plaintiff’s money, insisting that it is entitled to retain the same as on account of a subscription for its stock. It is further alleged that Ellis & Church have steadily refused to apply said money on account of a subscription for Western Trust Company’s stock. We think the allegations of the complaint sufficiently show that Ellis & Church were the agents of both corporations in the matter. The answer clearly and definitely acknowledges that they were the agents of both corporations for the sale of the stock thereof, and that they were soliciting and receiving subscriptions from the public at large for the stock of both corporations, and for such subscription purposes were circulating agreements in the form set out in ■ the complaint. It further appears from the answer and from the evidence that said corporations were formed solely to purchase and hold certain stocks and bonds of the Home Telephone Company of San Francisco, and the stock of both was of precisely equal value, share for share, and was based upon the said assets, to wit, stocks and bonds of said Home Telephone Company, and nothing else, and each share of stock of the Northern Investment Company represented the same number of stocks and bonds of said telephone company, as did each share of stock of the Western Trust Company. The only differences appear from the evidence to have been that > the principal place of business of the Western Trust Company was the city of Los Angeles, while that of the Northern Investment Company was San Francisco, and that the officers of the two corporations, with the exception of the president, were different, the same person being president of each corporation.

The theory of plaintiff’s complaint may fairly be said to be that both defendants are liable to him as for money had and received to his use. The money paid by him for a subscription for stock in one corporation to the agents of such corporation having been diverted by such agents to another corporation of which they were also agents, and attempted to be applied by such other corporation for and on account of a subscription for its own stock, he seeks to recover the amount *485 thereof on the ground that the law implies a promise on the part of both Ellis and Church and the Northern Investment Company to refund it.

If there was an unauthorized diversion of this money to the Northern Investment Company by Ellis & Church, its agents, we see no reason to doubt the liability of such corporation on this theory, regardless of whether or not it had knowledge at the time it received the money of the terms on which Ellis & Church received the money from plaintiff. It cannot profit by reason of the unauthorized act of its own agents in the matter of obtaining subscriptions for its stock, and must be held to hold plaintiff’s money without right and under an implied promise to repay the same. And, of course, if Ellis & Church have devoted plaintiff’s money to a purpose not authorized by him, they are liable therefor upon the same theory. All this is certainly true if, as the evidence shows without conflict, it is no longer possible to apply the money on account of a subscription for stock of the Western Trust Company, all of the stock of said company having been subscribed for prior to the date of plaintiff’s subscription, and plaintiff’s subscription clearly being solely for original stock.

We think that the amended complaint sufficiently states 'a cause of action against both defendants on the theory we have stated, and that the demurrers thereto were properly overruled. The various counts in which plaintiff has attempted to state his case, there being four, are not materially different in their effect, the allegations of the first count being made a part of each of the others.

It is obvious that it is no answer to plaintiff’s claim, if in fact his contention as to an unauthorized application of his money is sustained, that there was no difference in the value of the stock of the two companies, and that the property of one corporation was the same in character and value as that of the other. Plaintiff had a perfect right to insist that his subscription, if he made one, should be for the stock of one corporation rather than the other, and that his money under no circumstances should be devoted to the purposes of a subscription for the stock of such other corporation. It may be that we can see no good reason why he should prefer one to the other, but that is no concern of the courts or of any one other than himself.

*486

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Bluebook (online)
129 P. 791, 164 Cal. 481, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-ellis-cal-1913.