McKinnie v. Guardian Holding Corp.

57 P.2d 209, 13 Cal. App. 2d 522, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 757
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1936
DocketCiv. No. 10149
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 P.2d 209 (McKinnie v. Guardian Holding Corp.) 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
McKinnie v. Guardian Holding Corp., 57 P.2d 209, 13 Cal. App. 2d 522, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 757 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

DESMOND, J., pro tem.

Appeal in his own behalf by defendant Hamburg, from a judgment rendered against Guardian Holding Corporation, Master Holding Corporation, and' three individuals, Johnston, Pratt and Hamburg, this appellant. He contends that the judgment is not supported by the evidence. The Guardian Holding Corporation, organized under the laws of California and dealing largely with building and loan securities, had been doing business very suecess[523]*523fully for some years prior to 1929, the value of its shares increasing steadily. Johnston and Hamburg served upon its board of directors, the former as president; Pratt acted as fiscal agent. Early in 1929, as appears from minutes of a special meeting of the board of directors held on March 4th, this California corporation took under consideration a plan to organize under the laws of Delaware a new company to do business on a large scale and to be known as “Master Guardian Holding Corporation”, also occasionally called the “Master Holding Corporation”. It was intended, with the consent of the “Guardian” stockholders, “to convey to the new corporation all the assets and liabilities of the Guardian Holding Corporation and receive therefor shares in the Master Holding Corporation so that each shareholder in the Master Holding Corporation shall receive one share at $25.00 par for each share of $10.00 par now held by him or her”. During the year 1929 various letters touching upon the proposed merger were mailed to ‘ ‘ Guardian ’ ’ shareholders by that corporation. The letter of December 29, 1929, recited reasons why some of the shareholders refused to send in their stock, thereby blocking the merger, and closed with the following words:

“In regard to the future your Board of Directors now recommends that on account of general conditions we adopt a policy that- is ultra-conservative. They cannot foretell the results of conditions caused by stock market deflation and they believe we should now await developments. They feel we should make no change in our policy and also undertake no expansion until conditions have returned to normal.
“Also they feel we should make no change in our corporate structure until such normal conditions have returned. They believe you will fully agree with them that this is the wise thing to do and they will bring this recommendation before you at our stockholders’ annual meeting in January.” (Italics ours.) So far as the evidence discloses this was the last letter sent the stockholders of Guardian Holding Corporation by the corporation or any of its officers with the exception of the letter of February 14, 1930, reporting upon the annual shareholders’ meeting held on January 29, 1930. In that letter we find the following recommendation by the board of directors:
“That on account of the present general financial conditions and the changes which have been made in the laws of [524]*524California (effective August 14th, 1929) that we defer further action for sixty days,' or until said general financial conditions again become normal. This recommendation was accepted by the stockholders and was adopted by unanimous vote.
“You may, therefore, expect to receive, in due time, a further recommendation from your Board of Directors and in such manner that we may obtain your opinion and approval at that time.”

It will be noted that these two letters were written after the financial depression broke upon this country in the fall of 1929, and we know definitely that Guardian Holding Corporation never did effect a merger of that company into the Master Holding Corporation or Master Guardian Holding Corporation, the normality of general financial conditions, mentioned in the final company letter of February 14, 1920, as a condition of further action, never returning. About ‘this time, however, the defendant Pratt, a shareholder in Guardian Holding Corporation, got busy on another plan not calling for a merger, and, on March 10, 1930, filed in Delaware a certificate organizing Master Holding Corporation, the cost of incorporating being met by Pratt personally, and none of it being contributed either by Guardian Holding Corporation, by Johnston, its president, or so far as appears, by any other person. Following this, Pratt undertook to dispose of “Master” stock under a permit issued by the corporation commissioner of this state, and, having served as fiscal- agent of the Guardian Holding Corporation for several years prior to 1930, and having formed acquaintance with many of its stockholders, he made a special canvass among them as likely prospective buyers of the new stock. He established offices of the “Master” company in the same suite with the “Guardian” company and there installed a broker named Kemp for the purpose of handling stock transactions. Kemp’s commission, as well as those of salesmen that he employed, were paid by Master Holding Corporation and all salesmen were furnished with a special cost list to be used in closing a deal with a “Guardian” stockholder.

Mrs. McKinnie, respondent in this case, several years previously had purchased stock in the “Guardian” company through Pratt and in June of 1930 was the owner of 4,228 of its shares. On a five-to-three basis of acquisition, adopted by [525]*525the organizers of Master Holding Corporation, this stock of the par value of $42,280 would produce, with the addition of $33.34 cash, the even amount of $70,500 worth of “Master” stock at par. Accordingly, on June 30, 1930, respondent furnished Kemp with “buying” and “selling” orders and $33.34 in cash by means of which, together with an exchange of checks between himself and Master Holding Corporation, Kemp secured issuance on August 12, 1930, to Mrs. Mc-Kinnie of “Master” stock of the par value of $70,500. A year and a half later Mrs. McKinnie, having received meanwhile certain dividends from Master Holding Corporation, filed this action for damages, claiming that she had been imposed upon by fraudulent representations chargeable to the defendants, and secured judgment in the sum of $42,280, equaling the alleged par value of her “Guardian” stock as of August 14, 1930, and interest from that date to the date of the judgment, February 10, 1933, amounting to $7,275.66. The court also decreed, upon the prayer of Mrs. McKinnie’s complaint, that the shares of stock of Master Holding Corporation that had been issued to her were null and void, finding that they had been issued in violation of the terms of the permit, in that no sale of “Master” stock had taken place, but merely a transfer for stock of Guardian Holding Corporation.

It did not appear at the trial whether the corporation commissioner took any steps to invalidate the issuance of “Master” stock, or whether the permit for selling stock was canceled. The invalidation in the instant case was decreed at the request of plaintiff, as has been said, and forms the basis of this action, grounded upon her receiving valueless stock through the fraud and manipulations of the defendants.

Up to the present moment Hamburg, the appealing defendant, has scarcely been mentioned in this recital, but, since there is a judgment now amounting to more than $50,000 entered against him in favor of Mrs. McKinnie, the interests of both these parties demand that we give their respective contentions most careful consideration. Hamburg never became a director of Master Holding Corporation and seems to have had nothing to do with the business of that corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
57 P.2d 209, 13 Cal. App. 2d 522, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinnie-v-guardian-holding-corp-calctapp-1936.