J. F. Lucey Co. v. McMullen

173 P. 1000, 178 Cal. 425, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 493
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1918
DocketS. F. No. 7036. In Bank.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 173 P. 1000 (J. F. Lucey Co. v. McMullen) 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
J. F. Lucey Co. v. McMullen, 173 P. 1000, 178 Cal. 425, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 493 (Cal. 1918).

Opinion

*427 RICHARDS, J., pro tem.

T his is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff and also from an order refusing to set aside said judgment and enter a judgment for the defendant. As to this latter appeal it is unnecessary to consider it separately, since the same matters presented thereon arise upon the appeal from the judgment. (Hayne on New Trial and Appeal, sec. 199.) The action was one brought by the plaintiff as a judgment creditor of the OaklandMcKittrick Oil Company, a corporation, and also as the assignee of two other judgments against said corporation, and is one in which the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant an amount sufficient to satisfy these several judgments for which the said defendant is alleged to be liable by virtue of the fact that the defendant was, at the time the indebtedness represented by said judgments arose, a stockholder of the said Oakland-McKittrick Oil Company, holding twenty-five thousand shares of its capital stock of the par value of one dollar per share. The complaint proceeds to allege upon information and belief, “that the said defendant paid no sum of money or other thing of value, to said Oakland-McKittrick Oil Company, or to any other person, or at all, for said twenty-five thousand shares, or for any part thereof, and that all of said twenty-five thousand shares were issued directly to the said defendant by said Oakland-McKittrick Oil Company without the said defendant paying or the said OaklandMcKittrick Oil Company receiving any consideration therefor whatever. ■ That said defendant is still the owner and holder of said twenty-five thousand shares, and has never paid any consideration for the same, and that there is now due and owing from the said defendant to said OaklandMcKittrick Oil Company the full sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, the par value as aforesaid of said stock, for the same.” The complaint prays for the application of a sufficient portion of all defendant’s alleged unpaid subscription to pay his said judgments and for general relief. To this complaint the defendant presented a demurrer, which the court overruled, whereupon the defendant answered the several counts of the complaint, denying that he did not pay full consideration for said stock, and averring that said stock at the time of its transfer to him was fully paid-up stock of said corporation, and as a further and separate defense alleged that the said defendant received said *428 stock in the course of a certain transaction in which he had loaned to the said Oakland-McKittrick Oil Company the sum of three thousand five hundred dollars upon its promissory note secured by a chattel mortgage and assignment of lease, and that as part of the consideration for said loan, and as a bonus therefor, the said corporation had issued to the defendant and he had received the aforesaid shares of the fully paid-up stock of the corporation; that said stock at no time had any value whatsoever, and was finally sold for delinquent assessments levied thereon. Upon the trial of the cause the court made the following finding of fact: ‘ ‘ That on the thirtieth day of November, 1910, the defendant herein became the owner of twenty-five thousand shares of the capital stock of said Oakland-McKittrick Oil Company, of the par value of twenty-five thousand dollars; that said defendant paid no sum of money or other thing of value to said OaklandMcKittrick Oil Company, or to any other person, or at all, for said twenty-five thousand shares, or for any part thereof, and that all of said twenty-five thousand shares were issued directly to the said defendant by. said Oakland-McKittrick Oil Company without the said defendant paying or the said Oakland-McKittrick Oil Company receiving any consideration therefor whatever; that said twenty-five thousand shares were issued by said Oakland-McKittrick Oil Company to said defendant as a bonus to said defendant for making a loan of three thousand five hundred dollars to said Oakland-Mc-Kittrick Oil Company, to secure which loan, said OaklandMcKittrick Oil Company gave to said defendant a chattel mortgage upon its property and assets; that said defendant is still the owner and holder of said twenty-five thousand shares of stock, and has never paid any consideration for the same, and that there is now due and owing from said defendant to said Oakland-McKittrick Oil Company the full sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, the par value of said stock, for the same.” The court made no finding as to whether said" stock was ever of any value, nor did it find what, if any, was the value of the security pledged to the defendant for his said loan. As a conclusion of law, the court found that the defendant was indebted to the Oakland-McKittrick Oil Company in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, covering the entire par value of said stock, and hence was liable to the *429 plaintiff for the sum of $6,772.40, the full amount of its said claim, for which judgment was accordingly entered.

The first question presented • by the appellant upon this appeal is that his demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained.

This point we deem to be well taken. The unequivocal language of the plaintiff’s complaint above quoted is susceptible of no other construction consistent with the rules of pleading than that no consideration was either paid or received for or on account of the transfer of the stock in question to the defendant. If this be so, the case falls squarely within the reasoning and authority of Kellerman v. Maier, 116 Cal. 416, [48 Pac. 377], wherein it is decided that such a transfer of stock of a corporation is void, under section 359 of the Civil Code, which embodies the terms of article XII, section 11, of the state constitution, the court in that case holding that “certificates of shares of stock of a corporation issued in violation of this section of the code and provision of .the constitution are void, and that parties receiving them did not thereby become shareholders, nor make themselves liable to creditors as for an unpaid subscription.” The record, however, discloses that the defendant in his answer denied that said stock was issued to him without any consideration paid or received therefor, and in support of said denial sets up the actual transaction in the course of which he received said stock from the Oakland-McKittriek Oil Company, and affirmatively alleges that said stock was transferred to him as a bonus for making a loan of three thousand five hundred dollars to the corporation, and as a part of the consideration for said loan, and further avers that said stock was issued to him and received by him as fully paid-up stock of said corporation. In making these allegations the answer ekes out the insufficiency of the complaint in which it was assailed upon demurrer. This being so, the point is no longer available to the defendant upon appeal. (Cohen v. Know, 90 Cal. 266, [13 L. R. A. 71, 27 Pac. 215]; Kreling v. Kreling, 118 Cal. 421, [50 Pac. 549]; Savings Bank of San Diego County v. Barrett, 126 Cal. 413, [58 Pac. 914].) But if the respondent can escape the peril of this attack upon the insufficiency of its complaint, it is only to fall upon the horns of the dilemma presented by the findings of the court. The court found the fact to be as the plaintiff had alleged it to be, that *430

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Bluebook (online)
173 P. 1000, 178 Cal. 425, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-f-lucey-co-v-mcmullen-cal-1918.