Harrison v. Armour

147 P. 1166, 169 Cal. 787, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 573
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1915
DocketL.A. No. 3360.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 147 P. 1166 (Harrison v. Armour) 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
Harrison v. Armour, 147 P. 1166, 169 Cal. 787, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 573 (Cal. 1915).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

This is an action by a judgment creditor of a corporation, to subject to the payment of his claim the unpaid subscriptions of various stockholders.

The complaint alleged the incorporation, in June, 1907, of Marine Power and Electric Company, the recovery by the plaintiff on July 7, 1911, of a judgment against said corporation for $1,127.35 and costs, the return of the execution unsatisfied and the nonpayment of the judgment. It alleged further that the capital stock of the corporation was divided into shares of the par value of one dollar each and that the various defendants had subscribed for and were the owners of certain numbers of shares for which no more than twenty-five cents per share had been paid, the balance of seventy-five cents per share being still unpaid and subject to the payment of plaintiff’s judgment. Of the various defendants, R. M. Armour was alleged to be the owner of eleven thousand shares and R. W. Kemp of six thousand shares. The judgment went in favor of the plaintiff against all the defendants. Armour and Kemp appeal from the judgment. As they are the only appellants, the situation of the other defendants need not engage our further attention.

The two appellants answered jointly. They denied, among other things, that any sum remained unpaid on account of their stock. The court found in favor of the plaintiff on all the issues, the finding on the immediate point-just referred to being that Armour was the owner of eleven thousand shares of stock, for which no more than twenty-five cents per share had been paid, and upon which there was unpaid and subject to the payment of the corporate debts and of plaintiff’s judgment the sum of eight thousand two hundred and fifty dollars. With respect to Kemp the finding is similar except that the number of shares owned by him was *789 six thousand shares and the balance of the subscription price found to be unpaid was four thousand five hundred dollars. These findings, so far as they relate to the amount paid in on the stock, are attacked as unsustained by the evidence. We think the objection is well founded.

The Marine Power and Electric Company was organized in June, 1907, with a nominal capital stock of one million dollars, divided into one million shares of the par value of one dollar each. Some two months theretofore a corporation known as the Bancroft-Compton Realty Company had been organized. The last named corporation had secured from the government of the United States and other governments patents for a device to utilize the power of ocean waves. On June 8,1907, its directors, at a meeeting regularly held, adopted a resolution that the Bancroft-Compton Realty Company enter into negotiations with the Marine Power and Electric Company “whereby they receive sixty thousand shares of the Marine Power and Electric Company’s stock, in payment for the sole rights to use the said Bancroft-Compton Realty Company’s wave motor in the five counties, viz., Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, San Bernardino and Riverside, and furthermore that they receive five per cent of the gross income of all plants erected by the said Marine Power and Electric Company within the five above-named counties.” This proposal was made to the directors of the Marine Power and Electric Company, and was by them accepted. Pursuant thereto a written contract between the two corporations was executed on July 10, 1907. This agreement provides that Bancroft-Compton Realty Company “in consideration of the transfer to it of sixty thousand shares of the capital stock of the said Marine Power and Electric Company, and in consideration of the said Marine Power and Electric Company agreeing with the said Bancroft-Compton Realty Company to pay to the said Bancroft-Compton Realty Company five per cent of the gross income of any plant or plants that may be erected under the said patents by the said Marine Power and Electric Company” agrees to assign, sell and transfer to the Marine Power and Electric Company the exclusive right to use the said patents in the five counties above mentioned.

Pursuant to this contract certificates for sixty thousand shares were issued to the Bancroft-Compton Realty Company and that corporation divided up these shares among its own *790 stockholders in certain proportions. It was under this distribution that Armour received his eleven thousand shares and Kemp the six thousand owned by him. No evidence whatever was offered to show the value of the rights thus transferred in return for the sixty thousand shares of stock. It appeared, however, that at a meeting held on the eighth day of June, 1907, the board of directors of the Marine Power and Electric .Company had adopted a resolution providing that a block of one hundred thousand shares of the company’s stock be offered for sale at twenty-five cents per share “or increased in price at any time by direction of the board of directors” for the purpose of erecting a commercial plant. This was two days prior to the meeting at which the offer of the Bancroft-Compton Realty Company was accepted by the directors of the Marine Power and Electric Company. Pursuant to this authorization a number of sales of stock at twenty-five cents per share in cash were made to various persons.

It is thoroughly settled in this state and in other jurisdictions that “where the stock of a corporation is issued without being fully paid up, the amount remaining unpaid is, so far as its creditors are concerned, deemed to be money due to the corporation from its stockholders,” and resort to such fund may be had by such creditors. (Herron Co. v. Shaw, 165 Cal. 668, [Ann. Cas. 1915A, 1261, 133 Pac. 488].) The doctrine has been applied in two classes of cases. Where the stock was sold for money and the purchase price was less than the par value of the stock, the difference between the par value and the amount actually paid is the measure of the stockholder’s liability. A typical instance of this kind was presented in the leading case of Vermont Marble Co. v. Declez Granite Co., 135 Cal. 579, [87 Am. St. Rep. 143, 56 L. R. A. 728, 67 Pac. 1057], where twenty dollars per share, in cash, had been paid on shares of the par value of one hundred dollars. There are, however, many cases in which the stock is not sold for cash, but is issued in return for real or personal property having no defined value. In such cases the rule is that where the corporation and stockholder have agreed upon a given valuation for the property transferred, such valuation is binding and conclusive unless it is fraudulent in purpose or effect. But if the parties have put upon the property a valuation in excess of what they knew or be *791 Iieved to be its true value, this is a constructive fraud upon the creditors and the stock will be deemed paid only to the extent of the actual value of the property received in exchange for it. (Herron Co. v. Shaw, 165 Cal. 668, [Ann. Cas. 1915A, 1261, 133 Pac. 488].) In this case we think the plaintiff and the court below fell into error in confusing these two classes of cases. There was no attempt to show that the patent rights transferred to the corporation were over-valued, knowingly or otherwise. So far as appears they may, at the time of the transaction, have been worth sixty thousand dollars, the amount of the par value of the stock issued in exchange for them, or more.

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Bluebook (online)
147 P. 1166, 169 Cal. 787, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-armour-cal-1915.