McTigue v. Arctic Ice Cream Supply Co.

130 P. 165, 20 Cal. App. 708, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 210
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 1103.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 130 P. 165 (McTigue v. Arctic Ice Cream Supply Co.) 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
McTigue v. Arctic Ice Cream Supply Co., 130 P. 165, 20 Cal. App. 708, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 210 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

Appeal from judgment and order denying motion for new trial.

In this action the plaintiff sought to recover from the defendants, Arctic Ice Cream Supply Company (a corporation) and George W. Morse, the sum of $921.35, claimed to be due to the plaintiff under the terms of an oral agreement alleged to have been entered into with the plaintiff, by the defendants Arctic Ice Cream Supply Company and Morse jointly, for the care, feed, and treatment of twelve horses belonging to the corporation, and which it was claimed were used by it in the transaction of its business at the time the indebtedness here sued on was incurred. Seven of the stockholders of the corporation defendant were joined as defendants in the action but the demurrers of five of them, viz., Eggers, Powers, Parker, Harbour, and Kellum were sustained by the lower court; and subsequently at the request of the plaintiff the action as to these particular defendants was dismissed. The record does not show that the defendants Binglay and Parry appeared in the action, or that any judgment was rendered for or against either of them. The defendant, Grace D. Ohnimus, sued as a stockholder, joined in the answer of the defendant corporation.

The trial was commenced March 30, 1910, and upon May 26th of the same year the defendant, George W. Morse, filed his consent to a judgment against him in the sum of $921.35. Judgment was rendered and entered accordingly, and after a trial of the action against the defendants Arctic Ice Cream Supply Company and Grace D. Ohnimus, judgment was rendered and entered on April 26, 1911, that the plaintiff take nothing by his action, and that the corporation defendant recover from the plaintiff on a counterclaim the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars.

Plaintiff’s complaint alleges that the plaintiff was a livery stable proprietor, and among other things “that on or about the 26th day of July, 1908, plaintiff made and entered into an agreement with the defendants Arctic Ice Cream Supply Co. (a corporation), and George W: Morse, wherein and whereby the plaintiff, as such livery stable proprietor, agreed with said defendants to keep, care for, feed, treat and generally *712 provide for all horses to he furnished by the defendants at the rate of $20 per month; that under and by virtue of the terms of said agreement, between the 25th day of April, 1908, and the 24th day of July, 1909, the defendants furnished and the plaintiff kept, cared for, fed, treated and generally provided for twelve horses”; and that for such services “there now remains due and unpaid from said defendants the sum of $921.35.”

The defendants Arctic Ice Cream Supply Co. and Grace D. Ohnimus by their answer denied these allegations and every other material allegation of the plaintiff’s complaint.

Upon the trial of the case it was not disputed that the plaintiff had rendered the services sued for relating to the care and keeping of the horses; and upon' this phase of the case the sole defense of the defendants, Arctic Ice Cream Supply Company and Grace D. Ohnimus, was framed upon the theory that the corporation was under no legal obligation to pay plaintiff’s claim, because the services sued for were rendered after the execution of a lease of the corporation’s business to the defendant Morse. In support of this defense there was offered and received in evidence a contract of lease made and entered into by the corporation defendant and the defendant George W. Morse, which lease it was shown was duly executed by the officers of the corporation, with the consent, expressed by vote at a stockholders’ meeting, of stockholders holding of record more than two-thirds of the issued corporate capital stock. By this lease the corporation demised and let unto the said George W. Morse for the term of five years the real and personal property and the ice cream business of the corporation. The lease provided that said George W. Morse should pay to the Arctic Ice Cream Supply Company as rental, on the first days of January, April, and October through each year of the life of the lease, a sum equal to twenty-five per cent of the profits of the business. Such profits were to be estimated by deducting from the gross returns of the business the necessary cost of manufacturing and marketing its products. Although there was no agreement, express or implied, that the corporation should share the losses, if any, of the business, the lease concluded with the clause that “Nothing herein shall be so construed as to constitute the business into a partnership - or tenancy in common of said business; but the division of the *713 profits hereinbefore provided shall be construed merely as the method of ascertaining the rental to be paid. ’ ’

The evidence adduced at the trial, in addition to the lease' above referred to, was practically without conflict, and fully supports the. findings of the court made upon the main issues, which were to the effect that the plaintiff did not at any time enter into an agreement with the corporation defendant, or with said defendant and defendant Morse jointly, for the care and keep of said corporation’s horses; that on or about the said twenty-fourth day of June, 1908, the corporation defendant leased its business and all of its personal property, including the horses mentioned in plaintiff’s complaint, to the defendant, George W. Morse, for the period of five years, who thereupon went into the possession, use, and occupation of said business and personal property, and continued in such possession, use and occupation until about the first day of February, 1909; that it was provided in said lease that said Morse would be responsible for all of the debts contracted by him in carrying on said business; that at no time did the defendant Morse, as such lessee, have any authority, under the terms of said lease or otherwise, to incur debts of any kind for and on behalf of the corporation defendant; that the plaintiff attended a meeting of the stockholders of the corporation defendant on the sixteenth day of June, 1908, and with other stockholders, representing more than two-thirds of the issued corporate capital stock, voted in favor of a resolution authorizing the directors of the corporation defendant to execute the lease in question to the defendant Morse; that the plaintiff at all times had full knowledge of the terms and conditions of said lease, and had full knowledge that the defendant Morse was in possession of said business and said personal property as lessee, pursuant to the terms and conditions of said lease, and had no authority whatsoever to incur debts of any kind for or on behalf of the defendant corporation.

No claim is made here that the evidence adduced at the trial does not support these findings. The only point relied upon by the plaintiff for a reversal of the judgment rendered in favor of the defendants upon the issues raised by the complaint and the answer involves the construction and validity of the contract entered into by the corporation defendant and the defendant Morse.

*714 It is the contention of the plaintiff that the contract in controversy, although designated a lease and containing covenants of forfeiture and re-entry and all of the usual covenants of a lease, was not in fact a lease, but was in its legal effect an agreement of copartnership.

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Bluebook (online)
130 P. 165, 20 Cal. App. 708, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mctigue-v-arctic-ice-cream-supply-co-calctapp-1912.