McKee v. Title Insurance Etc. Co.

113 P. 140, 159 Cal. 206, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 314
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1911
DocketL.A. No. 2571.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 113 P. 140 (McKee v. Title Insurance Etc. 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
McKee v. Title Insurance Etc. Co., 113 P. 140, 159 Cal. 206, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 314 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

Appeals are presented from the judgment and from an order denying the appellants’ motion for a new trial. So far as the judgment is in favor of the Oak Knoll Company, there is no appeal and, as that part of it was not attacked by the motion for a new trial, it has become final, as to that defendant.

The Wentworth Hotel Company claims to be a corporation organized under the laws pf Arizona. It was adjudged an insolvent under the Insolvency Law of California on July 12, 1907, upon a petition by certain creditors filed on May 24, 1907. Henry S. McKee was duly appointed as the assignee in insolvency of said company. It was incorporated in April, 1906, with a capital stock of three hundred and fifty thousand *209 dollars in shares of one hundred dollars each. Its articles empowered it to build and operate hotels. Its principal business was the erection and operation of a large hotel at Oak Knoll, near Pasadena. Stock was issued and fully paid up to the amount of $320,120. The hotel was begun and in November, 1906, was not yet completed. Its first estimated cost was six hundred thousand dollars. Its actual cost when completed in February, 1907, including furnishings, was near one million dollars. It had in November, 1906, expended all its funds and had incurred debts to the amount, as was supposed, of three hundred and twenty-six thousand dollars, afterwards found to be three hundred and fifty thousand dollars. The debts were pressing and further expense was necessary to.complete the hotel and put it in operation. Some of the creditors had consented .to an extension, and with this relief it was estimated that two hundred and sixty thousand dollars would suffice to pay the pressing claims and complete and furnish the hotel. To obtain this sum the hotel company increased its authorized capital stock to six hundred thousand dollars and authorized a bonded debt of three hundred and fifty thousand dollars, to be evidenced by three hundred and fifty bonds of one thousand dollars each. This was done on December 7, 1906. The bonds were secured by a mortgage on all of its property, executed to the Title Insurance and Trust Company, as trustee. Two hundred and seventy-five of them, amounting to two hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars, were issued and are now held by the appellants, other than Rogers, Macomber, May, and said trustee. ' The object of this action is to cancel said two hundred and seventy-five bonds and declare said mortgage, to that extent, void. The court below gave judgment for the plaintiff.

The plaintiff bases his claim that the bonds are invalid upon the following grounds: 1. That they were issued and delivered to said appellants as a gift, and without consideration; 2. That the transaction whereby they were issued and delivered to said appellants was fraudulent and void as to creditors; 3. That the bonds were not issued in compliance with section 359 of the Civil Code of this state; and 4. That they were not issued in compliance with the laws of Arizona.

It is unnecessary to consider the sufficiency of the complaint on these points. The facts are set forth in more detail in the *210 findings. Many of them are admitted to be correct, and all the important points are involved in the consideration of the sufficiency of the findings to support the judgment and the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings challenged.

1. Assuming, for the present, that the officers of the Went-worth Hotel Company were empowered to execute the mortgage and bonds, we take up the question of their consideration. The following facts show upon what consideration the appellants obtained the bonds. The hotel company made a written agreement with the William R Staats Company, a corporation, to the effect that the Staats Company, as agent for the hotel company, should sell twenty-six hundred shares-of .the capital stock of the hotel company of the par value of two hundred and sixty thousand dollars, at par,'to be issued to the purchasers as full paid stock, when sold and paid for, for which services as its agent the hotel company agreed to issue and deliver to the Staats Company bonds of the hotel company of the face value of two hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars and fifteen thousand dollars in its full paid capital stock. Bonds were issued, the stock sold, and the two hundred and sixty thousand dollars was received and used by the hotel company. The Staats Company itself subscribed and paid fifteen thousand dollars of the two hundred and sixty thousand dollars, receiving therefor the agreed amount of stock and bonds. As the stock was sold, the Staats Company delivered therewith to each purchaser bonds to the amount of 105 per cent upon the par value of the stock sold to him, and stock to the amount of 105 per cent of the quantity subscribed, making in all two hundred and seventy-three-thousand dollars in bonds at face value and two hundred and seventy-three thousand dollars of stock at par. The court found, in effect, that it was never intended that the aforesaid written agreement should be the real agreement, that it was understood between the hotel company and the Staats Company that the latter should receive the bonds and the fifteen thousand dollars of stock mentioned therein, to be used in-securing the sale of the two hundred and sixty thousand dollars of stock and that the stock “was to be subscribed for and paid for at its par value,” that the Staats Company never expected to receive the bonds and the fifteen thousand dollars *211 of stock for its own use or as compensation for its services in selling the stock, that the agreement was made for the purpose of selling the stock and having it paid for in full, so that the buyers might avoid assessments and receive the bonds without any consideration, that the buyers paid for the stock in full and received the bonds “without any consideration being paid therefor at all, as shown by their subscription” that it was agreed by the hotel company and the Staats Company that the Staats Company never had and never was intended to have any interest in or claim to any of said bonds on its own account, but was to act merely as agent or intermediary for the transfer of said bonds by the hotel company to the purchasers of said two hundred and sixty thousand dollars of stock, that it was this actual agreement that was actually performed and carried out, and that the Staats Company never acquired any interest on its own account in any of said bonds, except such as it obtained by becoming a buyer of a part of said stock. As between the hotel company and the buyers of said stock the court found that the understanding was that all the money and consideration paid by the buyers to or for the use of the hotel company was to be paid and applied exclusively in payment for said stock, and it was so exclusively paid and applied, the purpose being to make it fully paid-up stock. Although not expressly so stated, the necessary conclusion from the findings is that the Staats Company, notwithstanding the written agreement, did not in fact charge anything for its services in selling the stock, but performed that service gratuitously.

It is claimed by the appellants that these findings are contrary to the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
113 P. 140, 159 Cal. 206, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckee-v-title-insurance-etc-co-cal-1911.