MacDonald v. Rosenfeld

188 P.2d 519, 83 Cal. App. 2d 221, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1071
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 1948
DocketCiv. 13491
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 188 P.2d 519 (MacDonald v. Rosenfeld) 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
MacDonald v. Rosenfeld, 188 P.2d 519, 83 Cal. App. 2d 221, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1071 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

WARD, J.

There appears in the clerk’s record of this action for accounting and an injunction, two notices of appeal filed by plaintiffs W. W. MacDonald and John R. Pom-fret: the first from an interlocutory decree, and the second from the whole of the final judgment. There also appears a notice of appeal by defendant Max Rosenfeld setting forth five designated grounds of appeal.

Plaintiffs’ opening brief states as grounds of appeal that the whole of the judgment is erroneous and in defendant’s brief it is contended that the court ‘1 erred in allowing plaintiffs a credit of $30,734.13.” The latter statement is condensed but sufficiently definite to guide this court in determining the contention of the respective parties and the merit of each appeal.

*223 The complaint sets forth that plaintiffs are copartners doing business under the name of MacDonald Truck and Manufacturing Company, as sole owners, and that plaintiffs and defendant entered into an agreement in 1934 whereby defendant was to act as managing trustee of the business, advance money thereto, and receive for his services $300 per month. For the purpose of security plaintiffs’ assets were assigned to defendant. It then alleges that prior to September 2, 1944, all indebtedness owing to defendant on account of loans and salary were paid, and that plaintiffs gave defendant notice that they were exercising their right to take over the entire management and demanded that he turn over to them all assets and render a statement of all transactions conducted by him as managing trustee. The complaint further alleges that the demands were not complied with and that defendant is conducting the business in a manner that is not conducive to its best' interests. The complaint alleges generally acts performed by defendant upholding the previous allegation. Plaintiffs prayed for an order restraining defendant from further participating in the business. A temporary restraining order was issued.

Defendant’s answer, filed September 29, 1944, not only referred to the allegations of the plaintiffs’ complaint—denying that all indebtedness owing to him had been paid, but set forth the following history of the parties’ business relations; “. . . during the year 1932 defendant Rosenfeld loaned to plaintiffs herein small sums of money; that plaintiffs were then operating under the name of MacDonald Motors, Inc., but failed in business and were adjudged bankrupt in the year 1933. Prior to said bankruptcy plaintiffs had borrowed about $2200.00 from the Advance Company and had given ... a chattel mortgage . . . defendant did buy said mortgage from said Advance Company . . . Thereafter all of the right, title and interest of said MacDonald Motors, Inc. was sold by the Trustee in Bankruptcy thereof and was purchased by one Richard F. Guggenheim . . . said Guggenheim in connection with plaintiffs and Tevis Jacobs, started the business under the name of MacDonald Truck & Manufacturing Co. . . . Plaintiffs and said Guggenheim and Jacobs then stated and represented to defendant Rosenfeld that said Guggenheim and Jacobs could no longer provide any additional money for said business . . . and requested defendant . . . to purchase said machinery and other assets . . . That in *224 this situation of the business, the agreement dated May 29, 1934, . . . was executed and defendant Rosenfeld started the operation of said business as his own and granted to plaintiffs the right to acquire an interest therein as specified in . . . [the 1934 agreement].’’ The answer further alleged: “The condition of said business continued unprofitable until about January 31, 1936, at which time said business owed to defendant Rosenfeld for money advanced, salary which he had not drawn and interest on advances, the total sum of which was about. $18,000.00, at which time the agreement of January 31, 1936, which is attached hereto as ‘Exhibit B.’ was executed . . . That more recently said business has operated at a profit and defendant Rosenfeld has drawn therefrom all salaries due to him up to August 31, 1944, almost all sums advanced by him for the operation of said business and interest thereon, and $15,000.00 profit, but has not received any portion of the 60% of the profit of said business to which he is entitled by the terms of the agreement of January 31, 1936, which is ‘Exhibit B’ attached hereto.” By defendant’s amendment and supplement to his answer, he alleged that a partial audit had been made of the business which showed that he had not withdrawn any portion of said $15,000.

At the trial the agreement dated May 29, 1934, which was referred to in the pleadings heretofore set forth, was admitted. Certain correspondence between the parties which was produced at the trial will be related herein to show the relationship of the parties.

On December 15, 1935, defendant sent the following communication : “Messrs. Richard F. Guggenheim, W. W. MacDonald & John R. Pomfret, The MacDonald Truck & Mfg. Co., San Francisco, Cal. Gentlemen: This will refer to the agreement under which I have been financing this organization and our various talks and my expressions of dissatisfaction. No need to list them all, such as the Dock Truck orders patents, the greater indebtedness, the ownership of the Essex car, etc., as both Messrs. Guggenheim and Mr. Tevis Jacobs have acknowledged to me that I have found matters considerably different from what was represented to me to get me in here, and I have given you notice time and again and do hereby that I would like to sell out, and, while I do not wish to be abrupt, I will give you much more than ten days time in which to pay me or consider that the business has fully reverted to me and that I shall sell it. Here’s the rub with *225 me,—I find that, through Mr. Richard F. Guggenheim not putting in the time he agreed to here at your office, I have been compelled to spend more time and put in more money than at first anticipated and as Mr. Henry Block wisely puts an old expression I cannot be true to two masters at once; I will have to either give up being with you or give up my work at John Rosenfeld’s Sons, which is more secure and takes less of my time than I have given you. Because of Dick’s desertion and you other two gentlemen living down the Peninsula, I have put in more hours than expected with you. As stated above, I will not be harsh or abrupt, and am open for a proposition where I will be encouraged to continue the management and financing, something along the following lines, that until I am paid in full, salary and interest, I to draw the greater part of the Net Profits, and if I remain over a period of years after I have been paid off with interest the table will be reversed so that you will get the greater share and I the lesser but that I will always have control until I am ready to sell out. Unless I get a proposition that I consider equable I will sell the business out within the next 30 to 40 days. I cannot afford to continue otherwise. The agreement would have to be signed by all four of you as I understand Mr. Jacobs has some interest in the way of money loaned. Please bear in mind that while I only purchased the complete mortgage from the Advance Company in November, ’32 to save you from losing your machinery, I had previous to that time advanced some money in 1932, and put in considerable time and some money before May 1934,—none of which has been as yet made good to me. Meanwhile, I wish you all a Very Merry Xmas and a Happy and Prosperous New Tear.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 P.2d 519, 83 Cal. App. 2d 221, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-rosenfeld-calctapp-1948.