Lawrence v. Premier Indemnity Assurance Co.

182 P. 431, 180 Cal. 688, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 542
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1919
DocketL. A. No. 4918.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 182 P. 431 (Lawrence v. Premier Indemnity Assurance Co.) 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
Lawrence v. Premier Indemnity Assurance Co., 182 P. 431, 180 Cal. 688, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 542 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

OLNEY, J.

The Premier Indemnity Company and the San Diego Land and Mortgage Company are the same corporation. This action is against it and three of its five directors to recover for the alleged conversion by them of 175 shares of the corporation’s stock belonging to the plaintiff. The defendants had judgment in the lower court and the plaintiff appeals.

Two preliminary matters should be disposed of before considering the merits of the case. The first of these is the contention of the appellant that the lower court erred in overruling a special demurrer to an affirmative defense pleaded by the answers. The complaint alleged in brief that the plaintiff was the owner of the stock in question, and such ownership was evidenced by a stock certificate issued by the corporation in the name of the plaintiff, and that the defendants converted it to their own use on a certain day. The answers, *690 among other things, pleaded that the stock certificate had been made out under an agreement with the plaintiff that it was to be retained in the possession of the treasurer of the corporation until “said plaintiff should have performed certain'services that he had theretofore agreed to perform for said corporation,” and that he had not performed these services and had wrongfully secured possession of the certificate. The answers contained nothing showing what the “certain services” were which it was alleged the plaintiff was to perform and a special demurrer was directed to this point. Apparently the demurrer was good. Certainly respondent’s counsel in his brief before us makes no attempt to show the contrary, but relies upon the proposition that the plaintiff has not been prejudiced by the ruling, if erroneous. His position in this respect is sound. [1] The plaintiff was in nowise misled or prejudiced. He knew, in fact, exactly what services the defendants claimed he should have performed and had not. He had been president and a director of the corporation and as such had himself been present at the directors’ meeting, when the dispute between him and the three defendant directors came to a head and when the alleged act of conversion was committed by the passage of resolutions canceling his stock for the nonperformance by him of services called for by a previous contract in writing. At the trial it was these same services whose nonperformance was relied upon as justifying the action of the defendants. Under these circumstances the plaintiff was not taken by surprise and no prejudice was worked upon him by not requiring the answers to state with particularity the services in question, although as a matter of correct pleading this should have been done.

[2] The second preliminary matter to be considered is the contention on behalf of respondent that the reporter’s transcript—the record having been prepared under section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure—cannot be considered, because proper notice of its presentation to the judge of the trial court for certification was not given. The objections to the notice are.not that no notice was received, for it apparently was, and counsel appeared at the time specified, but are that it was given by mail and specified a time for presentation but two. days removed. The notice which is required is one by the clerk of the court and not by the parties. The sections of the code requiring notice to a party to be given by personal *691 service where the attorneys have their offices in the same city do not apply. There is no provision requiring notice by the clerk to- be given by personal service, and such requirement of a public official would be burdensome in a degree out of all proportion to any advantage and should not be exacted. It is enough for the clerk to give notice by mail. As to the objection to the time of notice, it is sufficient to point out that the requirement of the statute is simply that the time specified be within five days of the giving of the notice. If the time allowed be too,short for a sufficient examination of the transcript, a request should be made to the court for further time. No complaint is made in this case that the transcript is not correct or that sufficient time for its examination was not in fact allowed before its final certification.

Passing now to the merits, it appears that the defendant corporation was organized in San Diego in the spring of 1911 for the purpose of engaging in the business of accident insurance. The plaintiff was the primary organizer of the company and was its president and a director. On March 21, 1911, he made a contract in writing with the company-whereby he assigned to it certain manuscript books on insurance, and policy and other forms, for use in the company’s proposed business. He also agreed to devote his entire time to completing the organization of the company, to obtaining the requisite authorization to do business from the state insurance commissioner, and to securing subscriptions for its entire capital stock. In return for the things so assigned and the services to be performed by him, the contract provided that he was to receive twenty-five per cent of the cpmpany’s entire capital stock, or five hundred shares. Of these five hundred shares, a certificate for two hundred was to be made out practically at once, but to be held by the treasurer of the company until all of its capital stock had been paid up. The remaining three hundred shares were not to be issued until the agreement had been fully performed by the plaintiff.

The company could not write insurance until it had twenty-five per cent of its capital stock paid in and could not continue to write insurance unless all its capital stock was paid in within a year from the time of filing its articles (Pol. Code, sec. 584). About the 1st of October, 1911, the company made application to the state insurance commissioner for a permit to do business on the ground that twenty-five per cent of its

*692 stock had been paid in. The commissioner in reply wrote to the company, saying that the examination of his department showed that twenty-five per cent of the capital stock had been paid in and that he considered it his duty to issue the permit, that, however, the contract with the plaintiff was uncertain as to whether he was to be entitled to his twenty-five per cent of the stock when the company should receive its first permit or when all the capital stock was paid in, and suggesting that this uncertainty should be cleared up. To this the plaintiff replied by letter, saying, in effect, that the contract meant that he was to give his services to the company from January 23, 1911 (the date of filing of the company’s articles of incorporation), to January 23, 1912 (the date by which all the capital stock of the company had to be paid in), and that he was to receive his stock only when all of his services had been performed. The contract was in fact somewhat uncertain on its face in the particular pointed out by the commissioner and this letter of the plaintiff must be taken as removing the uncertainty and establishing the fact that he was to receive his stock only upon the company being completely organized and its capital stock fully paid in and that this was to be done by January 23, 1912.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 431, 180 Cal. 688, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-premier-indemnity-assurance-co-cal-1919.