Mancini v. Setaro

232 P. 495, 69 Cal. App. 748, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 241
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 22, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4440.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 232 P. 495 (Mancini v. Setaro) 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
Mancini v. Setaro, 232 P. 495, 69 Cal. App. 748, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 241 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

ST. SURE, J.

Appeal by defendant Patrizi from a judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $400, with costs, under section 324 of the Civil Code, providing in part: “Whenever any officer of any corporation shall refuse to make entries upon the books thereof, or to transfer stock therein, or to issue a certificate or certificates therefor to the transferee as provided by this and the next preceding section, such officer shall be subject to a penalty of four hundred dollars, to be recovered as liquidated damages, in an action brought against him by the person aggrieved. ’ ’

The complaint alleges that defendants Setaro and Patrizi are secretary and president, respectively, of L’Italia Press Company, a California corporation with a capital stock of $100,000 divided' into 4,000 shares of $25 each; that in August, 1908, one Emilio Chirone was the owner and holder of eight shares of said stock, represented by certificate number 19; that Chirone afterward sold the shares and indorsed the certificate to- Buffalo Brewing Company, a corporation; that thereafter the latter company, by L. C. Brandt, its agent, again sold the shares and indorsed the certificate to one V. Savio; that in 1912 the stock was sold and the certificate indorsed by Savio to Gaetano Mancini, this plaintiff, and that he has ever since been the owner thereof and entitled to have the stock transferred on the books of the corporation and a new certificate issued to him therefor. Presentation to the defendants as officers of certificate 19, and demand for a new certificate, with consequent refusal, is alleged to have been made in August, 1920, and the charge made that defendants still refuse to issue such .certificate.

Defendants answered, denying the sales alleged to have been made by the Buffalo Brewing Company and Y. Savio, *751 the agency of Brandt for the brewing company, the ownership of the stock by plaintiff. They also denied that Setaro was secretary, denied that presentation of the certificate-and demand for transfer was made of both defendants, denied their refusal to issue such new certificate, and alleged that plaintiff never delivered or presented certificate 19 or demanded a new certificate. The further defense is made that no presentation or demand was ever made; that even though such were the case, defendants were in no position to issue a new certificate without evidence that the indorsements on certificate 19 were genuine and made for a valuable consideration, and that Brandt was the agent of the Buffalo Brewing Company and authorized to transfer the stock on behalf of said corporation; none of which evidence was presented or offered by plaintiff. Further defense is made that neither the original holder nor his alleged assignees ever offered the stock for sale to the company in compliance with an existing by-law providing “ ... no share of stock of this corporation is transferable without the holder thereof first presenting same at the office of this corporation and offering same for sale to said corporation. ”

An amendment to the special defense of the answer was filed, affirmatively alleging that the indorsements were not genuine and made for valuable consideration, and that Brandt was not the agent, nor authorized by the Buffalo Brewing Company to transfer the stock on its behalf.

Trial was had before the court, which found that all the material allegations of the complaint, excepting the secretaryship of Setaro, were true; that plaintiff, in August, 1920, was the owner of the stock and entitled to the issuance of a certificate showing such fact, that he has been damaged in the sum prescribed by section 324 of the Civil Code, because of Patrizi’s refusal to issue such certificate, and that all of the affirmative allegations of the answer are untrue.

Defendant contends that the ownership of the shares of stock still remains in Chirone, because the evidence shows that the certificate was indorsed and delivered prior to 1909, to the agent of the brewing company merely as security for a loan. That the stock was never sold and passed into the brewery agent’s hands only as a pledge. The money borrowed was never repaid, Chirone later failing in business. *752 Apparently Chirone lost all interest in the stock after his failure and has abandoned same. The agent of the brewing company transferred the stock for a valuable consideration to Savio on October 26, 1909. He testified, according to his best recollection, that this transfer was made after a meeting of Chirone’s creditors and with the latter’s knowledge. Chirone, who appeared as a witness in the case, did not deny the agent’s testimony, made no claim to the stock, and is now asserting none. At a later date Savio sold the stock to plaintiff. The law governing a situation such as the one here presented is settled in this state. The owner of stock who voluntarily delivers the indorsed certificate to a third person, thereby allowing him to assume the apparent ownership of the stock, cannot r.ecover the same from a bona ficle pledgee or transferee of the apparent owner without payment of the debt for which the pledge was made. ,The pledgee has a special property in the stock and not a mere lien upon it, and does not lose all rights and interest fin the stock by an invalid private sale thereof, without com-I plying with the requirements of the code. (Brittan v. Oakland Bank of Savings, 124 Cal. 282 [71 Am. St. Rep. 58, 57 Pac. 84].) Where the true owner of the property I clothes another with the apparent title to or power of disposition over it, and an innocent third party has thereby ■been induced to deal with the apparent owner in reference thereto, the true owner is in such case estopped from afterward asserting his title (Fowles v. National Bank of California, 167 Cal. 653, 656 [140 Pac. 271]). These views are declared in Arnold v. Johnson, 66 Cal. 502 [5 Pac. 796], and have never been receded from. The facts of the instant case differ materially from those in the eases cited by defendant where there was mere naked possession or the securities were taken from the true owner by fraud or theft.

Defendant’s next point relates to the following provision of the by-laws of the corporation: “No share of stock of this corporation is transferable without the holder thereof first presenting same at the office of this corporation and offering the same for sale to said corporation. ’ ’

It is claimed that plaintiff is not entitled to a judgment because the evidence shows that when the demand for a transfer was made plaintiff failed to present and deliver *753 the certificate to the corporation for cancellation. Upon this point there is a sharp conflict in the evidence, and under the familiar rule that the finding of the trial court as to a fact decided upon the weight of the evidence will not be reviewed, we are precluded from further examination or discussion of the subject.

An interesting question is presented, however, by that phase of the case inherent in the by-law provision requiring the holder of the stock to not only present but also to offer the same for sale to said corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
232 P. 495, 69 Cal. App. 748, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mancini-v-setaro-calctapp-1924.