McDougal v. Fuller

83 P. 701, 148 Cal. 521, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 330
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1906
DocketL.A. No. 1447.
StatusPublished

This text of 83 P. 701 (McDougal v. Fuller) 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
McDougal v. Fuller, 83 P. 701, 148 Cal. 521, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 330 (Cal. 1906).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This action was brought by plaintiffs to obtain a decree settling their final accounts as trustees for the benefit of the creditors of the Golden Cross Mining and Milling Company, a corporation, awarding them compensation for their services, and distributing the trust property to those entitled thereto. The defendants are the many creditors of said corporation. The lower court made the desired decree, distributing the residue of property, consisting of $37,785.73 in money, to the parties deemed entitled thereto. This is an appeal from the judgment upon the judgment-roll, defendant Johnson being the sole appellant. Johnson filed his written appearance in the court below, and therein stated that he submitted “to the court, without further answer, all questions relating to the allowance of the account of the plaintiffs, all questions relating to the allowance of attorney’s fees, and all questions relating to the compensation of the trustees.” He denied none of the allegations of the complaint, and set up no new matter, resting entirely upon the allegations of the complaint. As to him, therefore, the only question is as to whether the complaint warrants the decree, so far as it affects him.

From the complaint the following facts substantially appear, viz.: On January 4 and 9, 1896, the corporation made deeds of its mining property to the trustees, in trust for the benefit of all its creditors, both those named in a schedule annexed thereto and such others as might be found to be credit *523 ors and whose claims were duly approved. Under the terms of the deeds of trust the trustees were to superintend the working of the property, receive all money accruing from the same, and pay all expenses, and from the net proceeds make equal pro rata distributions to the claimants. By the terms of the deeds the trust was to continue for fifteen months, unless the claims were paid in full before, or the profitable working of the mine found to be impracticable. If at the end of fifteen months any part of the indebtedness remained unpaid, or sooner if it was found impracticable to work the mine at a profit, the trustees were empowered to sell the property at public auction, after notice, and devote the proceeds, first, to “the expenses of executing this trust, if any portion of the expense may then remain unpaid, including reasonable counsel fees, and also, the sum of five hundred dollars to the trustees collectively, in full for all services”; second, the remaining indebtedness; and third, the surplus to the grantor. It was provided that all claims against the corporation not bearing interest by agreement should bear interest from April 1,1896, at the rate of seven per cent per annum, “and all claims and demands secured hereby that bear interest by agreement shall continue to bear the same rate of interest as may have been, agreed upon by the grantor.” Upon the execution of these deeds the trustees entered into possession and operation of said mining property, and continued therein until they were compelled to deliver such possession to a receiver appointed by the superior court of San Diego County, in an action brought by the Free Gold Mining Company against them and others, the names of the persons other than the trustees, who were parties defendant, not appearing in the action. It is alleged in the complaint herein “that numerous clauses, terms, conditions and provisions of the several trust-deeds hereinbefore set forth were modified, superseded, and in whole or in part abrogated in and by those certain orders, judgments, or decrees, duly given and made in and by the superior court of the county of San Diego, state of California, in an- action pending therein, entitled ‘No. 10,215, Free Gold Mining Company, Plaintiff, v. James Spiers et al., Defendants,’ of date November 28, 1897, and also the 13th day of April, 1898, of which the following are *524 copies, respectively, to wit.” Then follow copies of the stipulations and orders referred to.

This allegation must of course be here taken as admitted, and it must be assumed in support thereof that the creditors were parties defendant in that action, such assumption being the only one consistent with the allegation, and there being absolutely nothing in the record inconsistent therewith. Terms, conditions, and provisions of the trust-deeds affecting the rights of the creditors among themselves and against the trustees could not be changed in an action to which the creditors were not parties, and the allegation that such terms, etc., were changed in certain respects by orders, etc., duly given and made in a certain proceeding, necessarily implies a proceeding in which such changes could be made,—viz., one to which they were parties,-—where there is nothing to indicate that they were not parties. Appellant’s assumption that the creditors were not parties to the San Diego action finds absolutely no support in the complaint, upon which ' alone the questions here must be determined. So far, therefore, as the stipulations and orders purport to change the conditions and provisions of the trust-deeds as to the relative rights of the creditors as against the trustees and among themselves, such stipulations and orders must here be taken as binding on the creditors. The exact nature of the San Diego action is not shown, except so far as it appears that it was effectual to prevent the further working of the mine by the trustees, and of the receipt of any proceeds therefrom for the benefit of the creditors of their grantor, except to such extent as allowance might be made therefor by the courts in that action.

It is apparent that the trustees claimed in such action that the rights of such creditors were paramount to those of the plaintiff in that action, and that, as a result of their efforts, there was ordered to be paid by the receiver from the proceeds of the mine obtained by him such amounts as would, in the judgment of the court, pay the creditors in full; the amount of such total indebtedness being determined for the purposes of that action by the court in that action. Under the authorization of the superior court large amounts of money were paid by the receiver to the trustees, *525 and by them distributed to the creditors, until at the commencement of the action the great bulk of the creditors had received the full face amounts of their claims exclusive of interest, and the remainder had received eighty per cent of their claims exclusive of interest. Over five hundred thousand dollars had been received and disbursed by the trustees. At that time the trustees had on hand certain money and a claim against the receiver adjudged by the superior court in the hereinbefore referred to action to amount to $19,800, which was subsequently paid, the two aggregating $37,785.73, and this constituted all of the trust property.

Defendant Johnson was one of the creditors of the corporation, holding its note for seven thousand dollars, dated June 18, 1894, bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum from February 15, 1894, on which there had been paid, prior to the execution of the deed of trust, the sum of $2,785, leaving a balance of $4,215, bearing interest. The company was further indebted to him in the sum of seventy-five dollars on an open account. At the time of the commencement of this action he had been paid the full amount of his claims exeulsive of any interest.

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Bluebook (online)
83 P. 701, 148 Cal. 521, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdougal-v-fuller-cal-1906.