In Re O'Brien MacHinery, Inc.

224 Cal. App. 2d 563, 36 Cal. Rptr. 782, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1502
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 1964
DocketCiv. 27474
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 224 Cal. App. 2d 563 (In Re O'Brien MacHinery, Inc.) 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
In Re O'Brien MacHinery, Inc., 224 Cal. App. 2d 563, 36 Cal. Rptr. 782, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1502 (Cal. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

FOURT, J.

This is an appeal from (1) an order wherein the court assumed jurisdiction over the voluntary winding up and dissolution of a California corporation and (2) an order appointing a provisional director and (3) an order (pending the adoption by the board of directors of a plan of liquidation and dissolution) restraining and enjoining the officers, directors, employees, agents and servants of the corporation from selling or otherwise disposing of the assets belonging to the corporation.

*565 The petition of Kermit R. Hillseth set forth among other things that: the petition was filed pursuant to the provisions of section 4607 and 4613 of the Corporations Code; the corporation (O’Brien Machinery, Inc.) was organized and existing under California law with the principal place of business thereof in Los Angeles County; the corporation voluntarily had elected to wind up its affairs and dissolve; such proceeding commenced October 31, 1962, when 50 per cent of the voting power of the corporation executed a written election and consent to voluntarily wind up and dissolve the corporation (a copy thereof is attached to the petition); on or about November 5, 1962, there was filed in the office of the Secretary of State of California a certificate stating that the corporation had elected to wind up and dissolve (a copy of said certificate is attached to the petition); the total number of issued and outstanding shares of the corporation is 2,000 shares and petitioner is the holder of record of 1,000 shares; all of the shares of the corporation are of the same class and petitioner is the owner of 50 per cent of said shares; court supervision is necessary because (a) petitioner and Daniel C. O’Brien are the only shareholders, (b) there are only two directors and the shareholders are unable to elect an unequal number of directors, (c) the shareholders are divided into two factions, the O’Briens and the Hillseths, and likewise the board of directors is divided and is so deadlocked that the business cannot be conducted with advantage to the stockholders; (d) in November 1961 O’Brien petitioned the superior court in Los Angeles County to appoint a provisional director in an attempt to break the deadlock, a provisional director was appointed by the court and acted as such until September 1962 when he was relieved by order of the court; since the provisional director was removed there have been no meetings of the board of directors, the commercial bank account has been closed and money received from sales of corporate assets has been held by the director making the sale to the exclusion of the other director; sales of corporate assets have been made by O’Brien of which neither the other director nor petitioner knows and attempts to secure information with reference thereto have been fruitless; unless a provisional director is appointed no plan of dissolution or liquidation will be agreed upon by reason of the dissension which exists and the inability of the parties to agree upon anything; the dispute between the shareholders has existed since the spring of 1960, the previous appointed provisional *566 director asked to be relieved because his usefulness was frustrated by his inability to effect a termination of the dissension: O’Brien has in his possession funds belonging to the corporation as a result of the sales of corporate assets.

A restraining order (restraining sales of corporate assets) was sought because petitioner was unable to state which of several methods of liquidation should be used, some of such possibilities being a sale of the business, a sale of the inventory and stock separate from the real property either by an auction or in one lot, a sale to an auctioneer or by holding an auction; the corporation was engaged in the purchase and sale of used machinery of all types. The petition was verified by Hillseth.

The record discloses that Hillseth previously filed an action against O’Brien on behalf of the corporation for damages for breach of fiduciary duty, competition with the corporation, diversion of corporate opportunities and wrongful use of confidential information (case number 758853). O’Brien filed an action against Hillseth for dissolution of a purported joint venture and for damages for breach of contract and declaratory relief with reference to the joint venture (ease numbered 793508). O’Brien also had filed as above indicated a petition for the appointment of a provisional director (case number 782120). In the last mentioned case O’Brien proceeded under the provisions of Corporations Code, section 819, and alleged in his petition among other things that he was one of only two directors of the corporation and was the holder of record of one-half of the issued and outstanding shares, that the holders of the voting shares were divided into two factions and could not agree, there was internal dissension, there were only two coequal shareholders, each owning one-half of the stock, that the factions were so deadlocked that business could no longer be conducted to advantage. As heretofore set forth the court appointed a provisional director pursuant to the O’Brien petition and such director served for almost a year and then sought to be relieved, such director alleging among other things that a provisional director was not an adequate remedy under the circumstances “and that something more drastic than merely breaking a deadlock on the board of directors is required, such as the appointment of a receiver or the voluntary or involuntary dissolution of the corporation. ’ ’

Daniel C. O’Brien filed what is denominated an answer to the petition wherein he set forth among other things that the *567 stock of the corporation “... is held in the name of... Hillseth as to one-half of all the outstanding and issued stock, and in the name of Daniel 0. O’Brien as to the other one-half...”; that there was a joint venture agreement between himself and Hillseth with reference to the ownership of the stock and which purportedly governed the conduct of the two men with reference to the corporation. The answer is in form and fact a statement of evidentiary facts as distinguished from a pleading of ultimate facts. The answer is verified. One thread which runs throughout the answer is the contention or assertion thá't the corporation stock is owned in the names of Hillseth and O’Brien, individually, with an underlying joint venture agreement, which agreement controls the activities of the stockholders as such. Further, there is the contention by O’Brien that Hillseth is guilty of bad faith in his attempt to dissolve the corporation.

Upon notice a hearing was had on the petition of Hillseth in the superior court on November 23, 1962. The minute entry of that session of the court indicates that the cause was submitted at that time. There is no reporter’s transcript before this court as to what was stated or done at that hearing. Neither side appeared at the oral argument before this court and as a consequence this court was not afforded an opportunity to question counsel as to what was said and done at such hearing. On November 29, 1962, Hillseth filed a memorandum of points and authorities, a declaration of Kermit R. Hillseth and a declaration of Isabel Hillseth in support of the petition. Copies of the last mentioned documents were served upon one of the attorneys for O’Brien, which attorney’s address was not the same as the address indicated on the previous pleadings filed by 0 ’Brien.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 Cal. App. 2d 563, 36 Cal. Rptr. 782, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-obrien-machinery-inc-calctapp-1964.