MacDonald v. De Fremery

142 P. 73, 168 Cal. 189, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 305
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1914
DocketS.F. No. 6361.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 142 P. 73 (MacDonald v. De Fremery) 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
MacDonald v. De Fremery, 142 P. 73, 168 Cal. 189, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 305 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for deceit. The complaint charged that plaintiff was induced through the false representations of defendants to purchase stock of the Union National Bank of Oakland at a gross over-valuation, whereby plaintiff sustained damages in the sum of thirty-seven thousand four hundred dollars, alleged to be the difference between the price paid for the stock and its actual value at the times of purchase. The defendants were respectively president, first vice-president, and second vice-president of the Union National Bank. Defendant de Fremery died before the trial of the action, which as to him consequently abated and was dismissed. Upon the trial had against the remaining defendants the court made findings and gave judgment in favor of them. The plaintiff prosecutes this appeal under section 953a et seq., of the Code of Civil Procedure, contending that the findings and decision are not supported by the evidence.

The complaint charges upon three causes of action. In the first plaintiff seeks to recover damages in the sum of ten thousand four hundred dollars, the amount paid for fifty-four shares of stock bought from defendants, and fifty shares of a new issue of stock, for all of which stock plaintiff paid the par value of one hundred dollars per share. The second cause of action seeks damages in the same amount, growing out of the purchase of the same stock, but is founded on certain other allegations of fact and of fraudulent representations, which will hereinafter be set forth. In the third cause of action the allegations of the second are repeated, and it is charged that in reliance upon the alleged facts and the asserted fraudulent representations plaintiff purchased from a third person, one Perine, two hundred and seventy shares of the stock, paying therefor the par value.

*191 For the better understanding of the controversy a brief historical presentment of certain unquestioned facts becomes necessary. The Union National Bank of Oakland had been in existence for many years. In 1907 its stock had sold for two hundred and forty-three dollars per share. Defendants had purchased small amounts of this stock at that price. It became too closely affiliated in its banking business with the California Safe Deposit and Trust Company of San Francisco, which latter institution closed its doors and went into insolvency. The Oakland bank then took advantage of the so-called “panic holidays” of the autumn of 1907 and suspended business, not as an insolvent institution, but under the protection of. the Holiday Act. A committee of ways and means was appointed from the directorate of the bank to investigate its financial condition and formulate a plan for the resumption of business. The three defendants in this action, with three others, constituted this committee. It employed Mr. Kinght, an expert accountant, to make a complete examination of the assets of the bank and to report the result of this examination to the committee. Mr. Knight made this examination, placing specific valuations upon the bank’s notes, bonds, and other securities. In so doing he consulted with de Fremery, Roeth, and other members of the board. The result of his examination, after such consultations, was embodied in a report in which these various securities were classified under the designations of “Good,” “Not Valued,” “Doubtful” and “Bad.” By “Good” it was meant that the securities so classified were worth their face; by “Not Valued” that they were worth one-half of their face; by “Doubtful” that they were worth one-third of their face, and by “Bad” that they were valueless. Mr. Knight’s report was carefully examined and passed upon by this committee of ways and means and expressed the opinion of the committee as to the value of the assets. This report was completed and presented on November 26, 1907. The bank then effected an agreement with its depositors touching the amounts and times of the withdrawal of their deposits and opened its doors for business on January 2, 1908. The three defendants became actively 'interested in the management of the bank. Mr. de Fremery was elected president, with a salary of five hundred dollars per month; Mr. Gray first vice-president, with a salary of two hundred dollars per month, and Mr. Roeth second vice-president with *192 a salary of three hundred dollars per month, positions which they retained up to and including the times of their transactions with plaintiff. A plan was proposed and accepted by the stockholders of the bank to bring in new capital by increasing the capital stock from one hundred and fifty thousand dollars to three hundred thousand dollars, selling one thousand five hundred shares of the new issue at par. On January 24th the three defendant officers and directors, together with three other directors, passed a resolution at the directors’ meeting, awarding these three defendants each five thousand dollars in consideration of their services in selling the new issue, and conditioned upon their success in so doing. The bank did not prosper. Depositors withdrew their moneys, necessitating the sale of the bank’s securities and the calling in of its loans to meet their demands. Thus over four hundred thousand dollars of loans were called in, and salable securities to the extent of one hundred and forty-five thousand dollars were disposed of. No new loans were made. Hence the bank was not engaged in that essential part of a lucrative business, but was in fact in liquidation, meeting its creditors’ demands. In so doing its operating expenses exceeded its income, and such business as it was transacting was conducted at a loss of over one thousand six hundred dollars a month. In April, 1908, "defendant Roeth, by his own testimony, gave up his salary of three hundred dollars per month, “so that the bank might live. I did not want to see the bank fail if I could help it.” During this time defendant Gray, first vice-president, took an active interest in the bank’s collections. He used a classified list of the notes of the bank and upon this list made his own notations touching their value. He classified the notes as “N. G.” (meaning no good), “Good,” “Bad,” “Doubtful” and “Slow.” Upon this list the bad loans of the bank aggregated over two hundred and twenty-six thousand dollars; the doubtful loans over one hundred and forty-six thousand dollars, or a total of over three hundred and seventy-three thousand dollars, while the “N. G.” or worthless notes had an aggregate face value of over twenty-nine thousand dollars.

Such was the condition of affairs and such was the knowledge of the defendants of this condition of affairs when, on May 22, 1908, there was published in the Oakland Tribune in the city of Oakland, the following report, entitled: “Re *193 port of the Condition of the Union National Bank of Oakland at the close of business May 14, 1908”: This was an official report to the controller of the currency as required by the National Bank Act. It set forth:

“Resources:
Loans and Discounts Bonds, securities, etc.
Capital Stock:
Capital stock paid in Surplus Fund Undivided Profits Correct—Attest:
Geo. Roeth George D. Gray James L. de Fremery Directors.”
$675,587.45
303,346.67

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Bluebook (online)
142 P. 73, 168 Cal. 189, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-de-fremery-cal-1914.