Kleinsasser v. McNamara

18 P.2d 423, 129 Cal. App. 49, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1014
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 20, 1933
DocketDocket No. 8301.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 P.2d 423 (Kleinsasser v. McNamara) 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
Kleinsasser v. McNamara, 18 P.2d 423, 129 Cal. App. 49, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1014 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

TUTTLE, J., pro tem.

This is an action brought by cer tain stockholders of Elberta Oil Company, a corporation, to enjoin that corporation and the directors thereof from, entering into a proposed contract. Plaintiffs also pray that the board of directors be removed, and for other relief. The court found in favor of defendants, and judgment was entered accordingly. This appeal is taken from said judgment.

The trial of the action occupied some twelve days, and the record is quite voluminous, taking up several thousand pages. The principal attack of appellants is based upon the insufficiency of the findings to support the judgment.

At the time the proposed contract was entered into, and for several years prior thereto, defendant Elberta Oil Company (hereinafter referred to as defendant company) was *51 in possession, under lease, of certain potential oil properties in San Luis Obispo County, known as the Johns lease, the Elberta lease and the Leach lease. In the month of October, 1927, drilling operations disclosed live oil sands in a well upon the Elberta lease. Drilling operations were immediately suspended, and were not resumed until December 24, 1927, and were thereafter continued until the pumping of oil was commenced on January 8, 192-8. Between the dates of October 27, 1927, and January 8, 1928, defendant directors personally acquired certain lands, options and leases in the vicinity. of the Elberta oil-well and one of which properties adjoined the Elberta lease. Thereupon, certain stockholders of defendant Elberta Oil Company commenced an action to compel defendant directors to account for the properties so acquired and to turn them over to the company, upon the theory that these directors had acquired confidential knowledge of the discovery of oil by virtue of their position as directors, and have used this information to benefit themselves. In respect to the latter phase of the matter, the trial court expressly finds that it does not intend to pass upon the merits and issues embraced in said action, which was, at the time of this trial, pending in the Superior Court of Kings County.

About the first day of February, 1928, respondent directors began to negotiate with a representative of Delaney Petroleum Corporation for the purpose of selling the said properties of Elberta Oil Company and the personal properties of said directors in the vicinity thereof. A preliminary agreement was entered into, whereby said corporation defendant and directors agreed to transfer said properties for certain considerations. Thereupon, this action was filed, and an order was secured from the Superior Court of Fresno County, temporarily restraining defendant directors from executing said contract. At the conclusion of this trial said order was dissolved, and the agreement was executed upon the furnishing of a bond in the sum of $400,000.

The complaint occupies some thirty-five pages of the transcript. After reciting the facts heretofore set forth, and making numerous allegations which are evidentiary in character, we find the gist of the action to be embodied in the following paragraphs:

*52 “XII.
“That said defendant directors in order that they might relieve themselves from the burden and expense of paying the rentals and royalties on the properties they had acquired for their sole benefit, in direct violation of their fiduciary relationship, and contrary to the interests of the said Elberta Oil Company, and in order that they might be relieved from the drilling provisions on the said properties which they had acquired, and further, in order that they might be relieved from the burden and expense brought upon themselves by the aforesaid conspiracy and the acquisition of properties thereunder, as aforesaid, did, commencing on or about the 1st day of February, 1928, further conspire and agree together that they would combine all of their said properties so involved in litigation and legal entanglements with the said clear and marketable properties of the said Elberta Oil Company, including the valuable Elberta, oil well, and make one combined sale of all of said properties, comprising approximately 1400 acres, more or less; and that said defendant directors by selling said valuable and uninvolved properties of said Elberta Oil Company would procure large sums of money, and would distribute said sums of money to themselves in proportion to their holdings so involved, and would thereby sacrifice the said properties of the Elberta Oil Company for their own personal gain and to relieve themselves from the involvements and complications in which by reason of their violation of duty and conspiracy, as aforesaid, they found themselves then in.
“That thereupon said defendant directors did agree, and particularly said Fred Nelson, president of said Elberta Oil Company, did agree that they would only pay to said Elberta Oil Company, such portion of the consideration to be received from the sale of the valuable properties of said Elberta Oil Company and their own properties so involved in litigation as they, the directors, and particularly said Fred Nelson, president, saw fit, and that said Elberta Oil Company would have to take and receive such payment as he, said Fred Nelson, as president of said Elberta Oil Company, saw fit to allow; and in this connection, plaintiffs are informed and believe and upon information and belief allege *53 that said directors did agree among themselves that they would make and enter into such sale and would prorate to said Siberia Oil Company for all of its said property and said oil well, a sum proportionate to its said acreage.”

The trial court found that each and all of the foregoing allegations were untrue, “except that the court finds that the oil properties owned by Siberia Oil Company were sold jointly with certain oil properties purchased by defendant directors and their associates, being the same properties hereinbefore referred to as being claimed by certain stockholders of Siberia Oil Company to be the property of Siberia Oil Company”.

As a conclusion of law the trial court found that “the agreements made and proposed to be made by Siberia Oil Company and said several defendants with the Delaney Petroleum Corporation hereinbefore referred to are, and each of them is, fair, honest and for the benefit of said corporation”:

Judgment was accordingly entered that plaintiffs take nothing by the action.

Practically all of the five hundred pages of appellants’ briefs are devoted to an attack upon the findings and judgment. Their position is indicated by the following language :

“First: That the findings of fact and conclusions of law do not support the judgment in this case. The judgment for the defendants is obviously based upon the conclusions of law of the court to the effect that the Delaney deal was a fair, honest and beneficial transaction for the Siberia Oil Company; in other words, the judgment rests upon the theory that the transaction is invulnerable if fair, honest and beneficial to the corporation, notwithstanding that the Siberia directors were directly interested as individuals in said transaction in a financial way and had an interest therein adverse to that of the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.2d 423, 129 Cal. App. 49, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kleinsasser-v-mcnamara-calctapp-1933.