North Hollywood Mortgage Co. v. Henshey

14 P.2d 842, 126 Cal. App. 411, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 444
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 27, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4566.
StatusPublished

This text of 14 P.2d 842 (North Hollywood Mortgage Co. v. Henshey) 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
North Hollywood Mortgage Co. v. Henshey, 14 P.2d 842, 126 Cal. App. 411, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 444 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

The respondents’ demurrers to plaintiff’s second amended complaint were sustained without leave to amend, and thereafter the action was dismissed by the trial court of its own motion. The cause is here upon the plaintiff’s appeal.

The complaint sets forth eleven causes of action, and if any one of the causes of action set forth contains sufficient facts to require an order overruling respondents’ demurrers thereto, the judgment must be reversed. With this in view we will set forth herein in regular order all the allegations constituting the seventh cause of action, which in effect prays for a judgment quieting title to the lands and premises now owned by the plaintiff. The several causes of action set forth in the complaint detail the issuance of stock, the sale of stock, and the transfer of stock in violation of the order of the corporation commissioner of the state of California. That these violations may have taken place prior to the plaintiff having acquired title to the premises now owned by it does not estop the plaintiff from maintaining its action to quiet *413 title if the mortgages hereinafter referred to were executed without consideration.

On the part of the appellant it is argued that the plaintiff was not a party to the unlawful issue and transfer of stock. On the part of the respondents it is claimed that the plaintiff corporation necessarily participated in the unlawful issue of stock. However, it does appear from the complaint that if the plaintiff corporation did participate in the unlawful issue and transfer of stock, the participation was at a time when the defendant B. F. Tatem was the president and manager of the plaintiff corporation, and the plaintiff corporation did not derive any pecuniary benefit therefrom.

It is also contended by the respondents that whatever profit the defendant B. P. Tatem derived from the stock, issues and transfers, it was at a time when he was the president of the B. P. Tatem Finance Corporation, and that whatever moneys B. P. Tatem unlawfully acquired were taken from the assets of the B. P. Tatem Finance Corporation, and not from any property belonging to the plaintiff corporation.

On the part of the plaintiff it is contended further that the North Hollywood Mortgage Company, a corporation, is but a continuation of the B. P. Tatem Finance Corporation, and that the money so unlawfully obtained by B. P. Tatem really belongs to the plaintiff in this action.

If it be assumed that the plaintiff corporation is a separate and distinct corporation, and not a continuation of the B. P. Tatem Finance Corporation, as contended for by the respondents, the right of the plaintiff to have its title to the lands described in the complaint quieted as against fictitious mortgages is in nowise affected, as the illegal stock transfers do not trench upon or limit such right.

That the seventh cause of action set forth in the plaintiff’s complaint may clearly appear, we set forth herein in chronological order all of the complaint which by appropriate references is included within said cause of action, to wit: The complaint first alleges the corporate character of the plaintiff, and then that the B. P. Tatem Finance Corporation was a corporation organized under the laws of the state of California, on or about the eleventh *414 day of June, 1924, with an authorized capitalization of 50.000 shares of the par value of $10 per share, of which 20.000 shares were preferred and 30,000 shares were common; that thereafter the authorized capitalization was increased to 250,000 shares of the par value of $10 per share, 120.000 shares of which were preferred and 130,000 shares were common stock. The corporate character of the defendant Citizens National Trust & Savings Bank is then alleged, and also the corporate character of the Virginia Investment Corporation. The complaint next alleges that B. F. Tatem was the president and director and general manager of the B. P. Tatem Corporation, and that he drew a salary therefrom as such manager.

It further appears from the complaint that on or about the twenty-eighth day of December, 1928, the B. F. Tatem Finance Corporation was regularly dissolved. It is then alleged that the plaintiff was incorporated on or about the eighteenth day of July, 1927; that the defendant B. P. Tatem was one of the incorporators, and was a director of the Corporation, down to and including April 27, 1929; that the defendant B. P. Tatem was the president of the plaintiff corporation from the date of its incorporation down to and including May 23, 1928, and was the manager of the corporation during all of said period. The complaint further alleges that during the time B. P. Tatem was the manager of the plaintiff corporation he received a salary of $500 per month, and that during said time a contract, in form, was entered into between the plaintiff and the said B. P. Tatem, by which B. P. Tatem was to receive an additional compensation of thirty-five per cent of the selling price of certain lands belonging to the plaintiff. It is then set forth in the complaint that while B. P. Tatem was the manager of the B. P. Tatem Finance Corporation he caused the books and records of said corporation to be destroyed in order to prevent the plaintiff from acquiring information as to the acts of said corporation and B. P. Tatem as the manager thereof. The complaint then sets forth that the property of the North Hollywood Mortgage Company is property acquired from the B. P. Tatem Finance Corporation, and that upon this property B. P. Tatem claims to hold two mortgages, one in the sum of $40,000 and the other in the sum of $80,000, *415 as set forth in paragraphs contained in the fifth canse of action (which we will set forth in full hereafter). It is further alleged that under the plan in pursuance of which the North Hollywood Mortgage Company was organized, and the B. F. Tatem Finance Corporation dissolved, the said B. F. Tatem being manager of both of said corporations at the time, was that units of stock of the B. F. Tatem Finance Corporation were to be exchanged for a like number of shares of the North Hollywood Mortgage Company, the stock of the North Hollywood Mortgage Company to be distributed among the holders of stock of the B. F. Tatem Finance Corporation, and then the transaction to be completed by the transfer of all the assets of the B. F. Tatem Finance Corporation to the North Hollywood Mortgage Company, and that the said defendant B. F. Tatem was appointed to make the transfer of stock, as just set forth.

The complaint then sets forth a description of all and singular the real estate claimed to belong to the plaintiff, and for which it asks that its title be quieted, and then by appropriate references makes the following allegations a part of the seventh cause of action:

“That while said defendant was president and director of the plaintiff corporation he, as president of said corporation, executed in the name of said corporation a trust deed for the principal sum of eighty thousand dollars ($80,000.00), in which J. T. McElhaney was named as beneficiary and the North American Bond & Mortgage Company, a corporation, was named as trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 842, 126 Cal. App. 411, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-hollywood-mortgage-co-v-henshey-calctapp-1932.