Oakland Scavenger Co. v. Gandi

124 P.2d 143, 51 Cal. App. 2d 69, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 576
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 2, 1942
DocketCiv. 11885
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 124 P.2d 143 (Oakland Scavenger Co. v. Gandi) 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
Oakland Scavenger Co. v. Gandi, 124 P.2d 143, 51 Cal. App. 2d 69, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 576 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

Plaintiff Oakland Scavenger Company brought this action for declaratory relief against John Gandi, executor of the estate of Giacomo Gandi, to obtain a determination of its rights in 100 shares of stock of the company issued in the name of deceased. Thomas Ferro, president of the company, joined as plaintiff, suing individually and on behalf of other stockholders. The defendant appeals from the judgment by which it was decreed that the company held the stock in trust, to sell it at the best price obtainable from a person qualified and capable of assuming the vacancy caused by the death of Gandi and to deliver the proceeds to defendant as executor. The judgment is based on a resolution adopted by the board of directors and thereafter by the stockholders. It further provided for payment to defendant executor of dividends and profits in the sum of $912, declared on the stock to August 31, 1939, and of dividends and profits which should be declared to the date of sale and transfer. Defendant executor claims the stock free of any rights in the corporation or stockholders. By answer and cross-complaint he prayed for a decree quieting title.

The company has 183 stockholders, each owning 100 shares. All stockholders work for the company. At the end of each month it is determined how much shall be paid to stockholders, each receiving the same amount, less individual deductions at a fixed rate per day for working days missed. The figure is such that a balance remains due notwithstanding a worker has been absent a full month, or has died, as in the case of defendant’s testate. The company is not incorporated under the provision for organization of cooperative corporations. (Section 653.1 et seq., Civil Code.) The articles of incorporation and by-laws did not provide that each stockholder should work for the company, nor for uniform stock holdings and payments. The practice apparently rests on long established custom.

*73 The contentions of appellant maybe divided into two groups. First, defendant contends that it is extremely doubtful whether any resolution of this character was passed at all; that if a resolution was passed it appears as a matter of law that it was not the resolution found by the court; that the resolution was not binding on defendant’s testate because it does not appear that he voted for it or endorsed and delivered his stock to the corporation pursuant to the resolution. A second group of contentions concerns the validity and effectiveness of the resolution found by the court, assuming that deceased endorsed his stock pursuant thereto. It is contended that the resolution is void as an unreasonable restraint on a stockholder’s right of alienation; that there was no intent to create a trust and that the resolution is too uncertain to create an enforceable trust. The basic question here presented is whether a trust was created. If no title to the stock vested in the corporation as trustee it was a mere agent whose rights would not survive death of the stockholder.

The company was incorporated in 1920. In 1926 it changed its name from United Oakland Garbage Company to Oakland Scavenger Company by court decree. Thereafter new certificates were issued to show the changed name. The stockholders left their new certificates in possession of the corporation to guard against loss. The resolution which gives rise to this action was passed by the board of directors on March 12, 1930, and by the stockholders on March 15, 1930. Thereafter all stockholders endorsed their certificates and the company continued in possession.

The complaint as originally filed set forth the resolution as follows:

“RESOLVED :—That, all stockholders endorse and return Certificate of stock to the Corporation and that in case one of the stockholders meets with an accident and death befalls him, the Heir of Stock transfers certificate of stock in name of son providing therefore that the Corporation find the son capable to fulfill the Vacancy of the Deceased member, and Whereby if heir of stock has no son then the Corporation has an authority to sell stock at valued price on the date of Deceased member, thereupon the corporation delivering money to the heir of Stock.”

The defendant’s testate died on May 7, 1938. He did not die an accidental death. He left a widow, but no sons, nor any daughters so far as the record shows. In terms the reso *74 lution set forth above applies only in ease a stockholder “meets with an accident and death befalls him.” In his opening statement counsel for plaintiffs stated that it had been discovered that the resolution as set forth in the complaint did not correctly portray the corporate action, that it was to apply in the event of death from any cause. Thereafter the complaint was amended to set forth the resolution as follows:

“RESOLVED: That each of the stockholders endorse and deliver to the Oakland Scavenger Company the Certificate of Stock owned by him, and that in case of the death of any stockholder the Oakland Scavenger Company, be and it is hereby authorized and directed to transfer said Certificate of Stock to the son of the deceased person, if in the opinion of the Board of Directors of said Oakland Scavenger Company, the said son is qualified and capable of assuming the vacancy created by the decease of the father, and if said deceased stockholder leaves no surviving son, or if the said son, in the opinion of the Board of Directors of the Oakland Scavenger Company be not qualified and capable of assuming said vacancy, then the Oakland Scavenger Company, be and it is hereby authorized and directed to sell the said Certificate of Stock, and the shares represented thereby, at the best price obtainable from a person qualified and capable of assuming said vacancy, delivering the money so received from such sale to the surviving wife of said deceased stockholder, or if he leaves no .surviving wife, to his heirs at law.”

The resolution as found by the court differs from that set forth in the amended complaint in that it provides for delivery of the proceeds of sale “to the duly appointed representative of the estate of the deceased stockholder. ’ ’ This is in accord with the allegations of defendant’s answer that if plaintiff corporation has the right to sell the stock it is required to pay proceeds to defendant to be administered in the estate of the deceased.

All proceedings of the company were conducted in Italian. There was introduced in evidence a minute book in English, showing minutes of the board of directors from December 26, 1925, to June 28, 1933. During this period until sometime in 1933 the witness D. Rossi was secretary. He testified that he took notes in Italian at the meetings and thereafter wrote up complete minutes in Italian. The English minute book was a translation of the Italian, made by the bookkeeper, Amelia Rettagliatta, who was with the company until May 1, 1935. She customarily wrote the translation in longhand in the *75 English minute book and Eossi signed the minutes of each meeting as thus translated. Rossi testified that she could read Italian “pretty well”, that when she didn’t understand she called him.

Attached by gem clip to page 84, on which appear minutes of a meeting of the board of directors held on March 26, 1930, is a sheet of paper with typewriting.

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Bluebook (online)
124 P.2d 143, 51 Cal. App. 2d 69, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakland-scavenger-co-v-gandi-calctapp-1942.