Harvey v. Meigs

119 P. 941, 17 Cal. App. 353, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 73
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 850.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 119 P. 941 (Harvey v. Meigs) 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
Harvey v. Meigs, 119 P. 941, 17 Cal. App. 353, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 73 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

*356 CHIPMAN, P. J.

A general and special demurrer to the fourth amended complaint was sustained without leave to amend, and defendants had judgment that plaintiffs take nothing by the action. The appeal is from the judgment.

In their said amended complaint the plaintiffs allege that they bring the action “on behalf of the said Carisa Chemical Company, and on behalf of themselves and all other stockholders of said Carisa Chemical Company; that the said company had been a corporation ever since the month of August, 1904, with a capital of one million shares of the actual value of one dollar each at the time of issue and that the number of directors is and at all times has been five; that plaintiff Harvey is and ever since a date prior to the commencement of the action has been a bona fide owner and holder of one hundred shares of the stock of said corporation, and plaintiff Benedict is and ever since the month of February, 1906, has been the owner and holder of nineteen hundred shares of the capital stock of said corporation; that defendants F. M. Meigs and A. W. Meigs are and at all times mentioned in the complaint have been copartners under the name of Meigs & Company.” (The original complaint was filed November 7, 1908.) It is then alleged that the individual defendants named" “acquired and at all times since the organization of the defendant corporation have controlled, and are controlling, and have, and have had, standing in their names on the books of said corporation, a majority of the outstanding stock of said corporation, and said defendants at all said times have combined and conspired together to accomplish the unlawful and fraudulent acts and purposes herein alleged, and to that end to elect the directors and dictate the acts of the directors of said corporation and the acts of said corporation, and said defendants have at all said times, for the purpose of consummating the ends of said conspiracy, caused to be elected men constituting a majority of the board of directors of said corporation, in every way subservient to the wishes and will of said defendants, and men who had no interest in the management and conduct of the affairs of said corporation except as the implements and representatives of the interests and will of said defendants, and at all said times defendants dictated, and do now die *357 tate, all the acts of the directors of said corporation and all of the acts of said corporation.”

It is then averred that by reason of the foregoing facts it “has been futile and useless for plaintiffs to make any demand upon the said corporation or its directors to commence this, or any, action against defendants,” and that during the times mentioned in the complaint over $135,000 came into the ownership and possession of the corporation and the defendants “have, by virtue of their control of said corporation and its board of directors, fraudulently and wrongfully taken and withdrawn from said corporation, and have appropriated and converted to their own use and benefit, without any consideration or benefit to the said corporation, in excess of ninety-four thousand dollars ($94,000) of said money of said corporation, which said money said defendants now retain and claim as their own property and deny that said corporation has any interest in or right thereto.”

It is further averred that defendants, “as part of said conspiracy and with intent to defraud said corporation and its board of directors, have sought and endeavored to create an indebtedness, and have created a fictitious and fraudulent indebtedness against said corporation and in favor of defendants [other than defendant Upham], That said defendants have caused such fictitious indebtedness to be inscribed on the books of the defendant corporation as an indebtedness of said corporation under and as of date August 31, 1908, and as on said day pretended balances appear on said books to the credit of the following named firm and persons, and the amount to the credit of any firm or person immediately follows the name of the firm or person in whose favor said credit appears, as follows, to wit: [Then follow the items aggregating over $49,000.] That the fact is, there is not due, owing and unpaid to F. M. Meigs, A. W. Meigs, R. L. Meigs, Meigs & Company, E. C. Dudley, L. Raymond Dudley, W. I. Wilcox, Charles L. Morgan, or any of them, from said corporation, nor was there due, owing or unpaid at such date as said balances appear, or at any prior date or at all, to said persons or any of them, any sum of money whatsoever from said corporation; and any indebtedness ap *358 pe&ring upon the books of said corporation as due from said corporation to said persons, or either of them, is and has been at all times, fictitious, fraudulent and void, and without consideration, and has been created by said defendants for the purpose of transferring the assets of the corporation from the defendant corporation to themselves, with the purpose of enriching themselves, and that said defendants threaten to, and will, unless restrained, withdraw such sums appearing in said credits, and cause same to be paid to themselves, and will thereby injure the defendant corporation to an amount exceeding forty-nine thousand dollars ($49,000).

“VII. That said defendants, other than defendant corporation, with intent to defraud the defendant corporation, have claimed, and do now claim, to be the owners of, and have, by virtue of their said control of said corporation, caused themselves to appear upon the books of said corporation as the owners of, more than four hundred thousand (400,000) shares of the subscribed arid outstanding stock of the defendant corporation, and they do now appear as such owners, whereas the total subscribed and outstanding stock of said corporation does not exceed six hundred and eighty-two thousand and fifty-five (682,055) shares; that of said-four hundred thousand, more than three hundred and fifty thousand (350,000) shares have been issued fraudulently and without any consideration whatsoever to said corporation. That such improper issues of stock were made directly to these defendants, and were so made as to enable, and did enable, these defendants to control and manage the affairs and business of said corporation, and to continue in such control and management for the purpose of carrying out the fraudulent acts and the conspiracy herein alleged to the grievous injury of these plaintiffs and of the defendant corporation. That the value of said three hundred and fifty thousand (350,000) shares of stock fraudulently appropriated by said defendants and their agents was at the time of said appropriation three hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($350,000).”

It is then alleged that “plaintiffs herein and their transferrers, until within one month prior to the time of commencing this action, had no knowledge, nor ever had knowl *359 edge, of the acts, transactions and attempted transactions herein complained of. That they never authorized them or any part of them; that they never consented to them or any part of them; . . . that they have no redress through the corporate management, and that they are without any plain, adequate, certain and speedy remedy at law.”

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Bluebook (online)
119 P. 941, 17 Cal. App. 353, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-v-meigs-calctapp-1911.