Nannizzi v. Caprile
This text of 185 P. 673 (Nannizzi v. Caprile) 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.
Opinion
In a suit for partnership accounting, dissolution, sale, and distribution of the assets, it was adjudged there had been full accounting and dissolution. The appellants are satisfied with that portion of the judgment. Upon findings, supported by evidence, that the plaintiff partners had agreed with the defendant partners that the partnership should be dissolved and its property merged with that of other partnerships engaged in the same line of business, in a consolidation under a corporation to be formed, and that the partners should receive respectively stock in the corporation at par, equivalent to their respective interests in the partnership, the members of each partnership as a group *500 to receive such stock of equivalent value to the respective partnership contributions of property to the corporation assets, and the further finding, that application had been made in good faith to the commissioner of corporations for permission to issue the stock in accordance with this agreement, though the permit had not been granted at the time of the judgment, the court determined that if the permit should be granted the appellants would be entitled to their respective portions of the corporation stock. This part of the judgment only is attacked by the plaintiffs on this appeal.
The portion of the judgment appealed from simply determines that the plaintiffs shall receive stock in the corporation if the commissioner of corporations issues his permit. This was exactly what the appellants agreed they should have. It is contended that the judgment is informal in that it fails to determine what the appellants shall have in the event the commissioner of corporations shall refuse to issue the permit. There is no question in regard to the validity of the organization of the corporation. It cannot be presumed that the incorporators have been guilty of an overvaluation of the partnership assets transferred to the corporation, or of a violation of the law in any other respect. If they have obeyed the law, they will be entitled to the permit from the commissioner of corporations, and in that event the appellants will receive under the judgment what they agreed with their partners they should receive.
The judgment is affirmed.
Nourse, J., and Langdon, P. J., concurred.
*502 A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on December 9, 1919. ■
All the Justices concurred, except Melvin, J., who was absent.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
185 P. 673, 43 Cal. App. 498, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nannizzi-v-caprile-calctapp-1919.