Milton G. Cooper & Son, Inc. v. William R. Davis & Brother, Inc.

2 P.2d 823, 116 Cal. App. 468, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 463
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 2, 1931
DocketDocket No. 7540.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 P.2d 823 (Milton G. Cooper & Son, Inc. v. William R. Davis & Brother, Inc.) 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
Milton G. Cooper & Son, Inc. v. William R. Davis & Brother, Inc., 2 P.2d 823, 116 Cal. App. 468, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 463 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

THE COURT.

Plaintiff corporation, which has its principal place of business in Los Angeles, was at all times material to this case and until about January 25, 1926, a member of an unincorporated association of merchants known as the San Francisco Board of Trade (which will be hereinafter referred to as the board). For some time prior to the month of August, 1925, William E. Davis and Brother, Inc., a corporation (hereinafter called the defendant), had been engaged in the conduct of a department store on Mission Street in San Francisco. On August 5, 1925, a meeting of the creditors of the defendant was held at the office of the board at San Francisco for the purpose of considering defendant’s affairs. The creditors represented at the meeting consisted of both members and nonmembers of the board, and their claims comprised approximately eighty per cent of defendant’s indebtedness. At this meeting a committee, consisting of the representatives of both the members and • nonmembers was appointed. The committee proceeded to take an inventory of defendant’s property, and negotiations commenced which resulted in an offer of settlement being made to the committee by the defendant of a sum sufficient to pay forty per cent of the claims of all its creditors. A majority of the committee recommended that the offer be accepted; and following meetings of the creditors held on various dates between November 10, 1925, and January 14, 1926, inclusive, but at which plaintiff was not represented, it was resolved to accept the offer. These amounts were in January, 1926, paid to each of the creditors except the plaintiff, and a sum equal to forty per cent of the latter’s claim was deposited with the board. The plaintiff, whose claim amounted to $6,643.57, had on September 25, 1925, brought suit against defendant and attached. The attachment was later released upon security being given. On January 15, 1926, defendant answered plaintiff’s complaint, alleging payment, the facts constituting this defense being that the committee • had full power to bind the creditors and to enter into an agreement for a *470 composition; that defendant offered to pay to the committee forty per cent of its entire indebtedness in cash, this being in full payment of its entire indebtedness and in full satisfaction of any and all liability of any stockholder, officer- or director of defendant; that the committee accepted the offer in full payment of all claims, including that of the plaintiff, and that the agreed sums were paid to and accepted by the plaintiff and the other creditors in full satisfaction of their claims.

On February 19, 1926, a complaint in intervention was filed by J. H. Newbauer & Co., for whom J. H. Newbauer was afterwards substituted, and Levi Strauss & Co. This complaint was on behalf of other members of the board who were creditors of the defendant. It alleged that by the attachment suit plaintiff sought to obtain a preference over other members of the board, and that under the board’s constitution and by-laws members who were creditors were entitled to share ratably with plaintiff in any recovery effected in its action. Plaintiff’s answer to the intervener’s complaint denied the construction placed ■upon the constitution and by-laws of the board, or that plaintiff sought to obtain a preference. As a special defense thereto plaintiff alleged in substance the facts of the transaction above set forth, and that before the present action was brought plaintiff caused an investigation to be made, and found that defendant’s assets would yield a higher return to the creditors than the amount offered; that the committee was .proceeding without proper investigation ; that the proposed settlement was inequitable and fraudulent within the meaning of the constitution of the board and permitted a portion of defendant’s assets to' be reserved for distribution to its stockholders; that plaintiff conveyed this information to the board and protested the proposed settlement, but the latter and the creditors’ committee notwithstanding consummated the settlement; that the administration of the matter by the board was inefficient and uneconomical and was concluded without the fullest or proper investigation.

The cause was first tried on the issues between the plaintiff and the defendant by a jury, and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff. The action between plaintiff and the interveners was then tried by the court without a jury, and *471 was submitted and decided upon all the evidence adduced at the first trial with certain additional evidence. Thereafter the court, pursuant to its findings, rendered a judgment that interveners take nothing. No appeal was taken by the defendant, but the interveners have appealed from the judgment entered against them.

The court found in accordance with the allegations of plaintiff’s answer to the complaint in intervention, and also against interveners’ allegations that plaintiff sought to obtain a preference or advantage in the collection of its claim over other creditor members of the board, or that under the constitution or by-laws of the board the creditor members were entitled to share with plaintiff any sums recovered by it; also that assets of the defendant of the value of $112,000' were not applied on its indebtedness, but were distributed to its stockholders.

As grounds for the appeal it is contended that the trial court’s construction of the constitution and by-laws was erroneous, and that the findings are unsupported by the evidence.

The facts disclosed by the evidence are as follows: The defendant commenced business in 1924; 300,000 shares of its preferred and 350,000 shares of its common stock were issued, and all the common stock except the qualifying shares was held by William B: and Harry C. Davis. The company fell into financial difficulties in May, 1925, when it called upon the Mercantile Trust Company for assistance, and this concern ultimately became a creditor to the extent of over $100,000. During May, 1925, a representative of the trust company became a member of defendant’s board of directors and its treasurer, and continued his connection with defendant until July, 1925, when its affairs became so involved that he advised an application to the board for assistance. Certain of defendant’s creditors were members of the board', and as above stated the first meeting of creditors was held on August 5, 1925. Creditors holding about eighty per cent of the claims against defendant were represented at the meeting, and it was then resolved that representatives of a committee consisting of certain creditors be sent to defendant’s store “for the purpose of taking an inventory”, and a letter from the board to the creditors on August 8, 1925, after reciting the appointment of the committee, *472 stated that “representatives of this committee are taking inventory and preparing an accurate statement of the assets and liabilities”; also that “pending completion of this work and a definite arrangement with the creditors the net cash receipts are being impounded. This report when completed will be submitted to you together with its recommendations. ’ ’

According to plaintiff’s representative he was offered a position on the committee, and accepted, and was told that he would be notified of any further meetings of the committee.

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Bluebook (online)
2 P.2d 823, 116 Cal. App. 468, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milton-g-cooper-son-inc-v-william-r-davis-brother-inc-calctapp-1931.