Guaranty Loan Co. v. Fontanel

190 P. 177, 183 Cal. 1, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 365
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 9238.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 190 P. 177 (Guaranty Loan Co. v. Fontanel) 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
Guaranty Loan Co. v. Fontanel, 190 P. 177, 183 Cal. 1, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 365 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

*3 THE COURT.

Application, for a writ of mandate directed to respondent, Louis Fontanel, commanding him to deliver to petitioners the seal, books, records, and other personal property pertaining to the office of the secretary of the Guaranty Loan Company, a corporation, of which Bernard E. Tormey is alleged in the petition here to be the secretary.

The parties to this proceeding have stipulated as to the main facts of the case, and, so far as they are essential to a determination of the questions herein involved, they may be summarized as follows:

The Guaranty Loan Company is a corporation having an issued and outstanding capital stock of 324 shares. The Goewey Estate Company is also a corporation with an outstanding capital stock of one thousand shares,' one-fifth of which is owned by Charles Goewey. The Estate Company is what is commonly called a holding company, owning and holding all of the stock of the Guaranty Company with the exception of three shares which stand of record, one in the name of Charles H. Goewey, one in the name of Louis Fontanel, and the remaining share in that of Richard P. Roberts. These last-mentioned shares were also actually owned by the Estate Company, but had been placed of record in the names of the persons mentioned for the purpose of qualifying them to hold office as directors of the Guaranty Company. The certificates of these three shares had prior to May 26, 1919, been indorsed by their respective holders and delivered to the Goewey Estate Company.

The by-laws of the Estate Company provide that the annual meeting of the stockholders shall be held upon a given day in April of each year for the election of directors and such other business as may come before it. They also provide that no notice of such meeting need be given.

The annual meeting for the year 1919 was convened upon April 14th without any notice to the stockholders by publication or otherwise, and six hundred of the one thousand outstanding shares were represented thereat. The meeting, however, was adjourned to April 17, 1919, at which time all of the stock of the corporation was represented either by the presence of its owner or by proxy. Upon the announcement by the presiding officer that the next business before the meeting was the election of directors to serve for the *4 ensuing year, the proxy for Charles H. Goewey entered a protest against the holding of the meeting upon the ground that no notice thereof by publication had been given. This protest being disregarded, said proxy withdrew from the meeting. The stockholders remaining in attendance thereupon unanimously elected Walter H. White, R M. Briare, and B. E. Tormey as directors to succeed Charles H. Goewey, Herbert S. Goewey, and Ansen Herrick, directors at that time. There was also adopted a resolution ordering the newly elected directors to cause to be transferred on the books of the Guaranty Company the three shares of stock formerly held by and still standing on the books of the corporation in the names of Goewey, Fontanel and Boberts, to White, Briare, and Tormey, one share to each. In accordance with this resolution the new directors of the estate company did on April 20, 1919, demand of Louis Fontanel, as secretary of the Guaranty Company, that he make said transfer, but this Fontanel then and ever since has refused to do. On said seventeenth day of April, 1919, the new directors of the Estate Company having organized by the election of B. M. Briare as president and Walter H. White as secretary, also adopted a resolution directing its president and secretary, on behalf of said corporation, as a stockholder of the Guaranty Company, to call a meeting of the last-named corporation for the purpose of removing from office its board of directors and electing new directors in the event the old board was so removed. Thereupon, and in pursuance of said resolution, said officers of the Goewey Estate Company, acting on behalf of the corporation as a stockholder of the Guaranty Company, prepared a call for a meeting of the stockholders of the Guaranty Company to be held on May 26, 1919, for such purpose, addressed it to Louis Fontanel, as secretary of the Guaranty Company, requesting that he give notice of such a meeting and of its purpose as required by law, with which request or demand Fontanel refused to comply. On the twenty-third day. of May, 1919, the office of the Guaranty Company being at that time at room 606 Bank of Italy Building, San Francisco, its directors, consisting of Messrs. Goewey, Boberts, and Fontanel, passed a resolution changing its meeting place to an office at No. 809 Kearny Street.

*5 The meeting of the stockholders of the Guaranty Company for the purpose of removing its directors was held without published notice thereof in the office of the company in the Bank of Italy Building, and Charles H. Goewey had no notice thereof. The 321 shares owned by the Estate Company were represented thereat; and Briare, White, and Tormey, claiming to represent the remaining three shares of the outstanding stock of the company—the transfer of which to their names from the names of Goewey, Roberts, and Fontanel had been refused by the respondent—were also present. At this meeting a resolution was adopted removing the board of directors, and thereupon White, Briare, and Tormey were elected as directors in their place. Immediately afterward the new board of directors proceeded to organize by the election of Briare as president and Tormey as secretary. Three days thereafter, at a meeting of the new board of directors, held, however, at a place other than the Bank of Italy Building or 809 Kearny Street, White resigned as director, and J. W. Treadwell was appointed by the other two directors to fill the vacancy. On June 25, 1919, the board of directors as thus constituted adopted a resolution changing the office of the company back to the old location in the Bank of Italy Building.

Under the by-laws of the Guaranty Company the date for holding the annual meeting of stockholders fell on July 10, 1919, and a notice of this meeting was published by both the old and the new board of directors, the former designating 809 Kearny Street as the meeting place, and the latter stating that it would be held at room 607 Bank of Italy Building. A meeting was in fact held at each of these places. The one called by Fontanel lacked a quorum and adjourned for that reason. The meeting called by Tormey was attended by the proxy of the Estate Company appointed by its new board of directors, and there was thus represented at that meeting the 321 shares of stock standing of record on the books of the Guaranty Company in the name of the Estate Company. There were also present at the meeting Treadwell, Briare, and Tormey, and they were elected directors. Thereupon they organized, and the petitioner Tormey was chosen as secretary. Shortly thereafter Tormey made demand on Fontanel for the books and records of the Guaranty Company in his custody. Wit *6 h this demand Fontanel refused to comply, claiming that the property thus demanded was properly in his custody and control as secretary of the company.

The by-laws of the Guaranty Company provide that no transfer of stock shall be valid until recorded in the books of the corporation. They also provide that each director shall hold one or more shares of stock of record in his name on the books of the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
190 P. 177, 183 Cal. 1, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guaranty-loan-co-v-fontanel-cal-1920.