O'Dea v. Hollywood Cemetery Assoc.

97 P. 1, 154 Cal. 53, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 298
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1908
DocketL.A. No. 1948.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 97 P. 1 (O'Dea v. Hollywood Cemetery Assoc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Dea v. Hollywood Cemetery Assoc., 97 P. 1, 154 Cal. 53, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 298 (Cal. 1908).

Opinions

LORIGAN, J.

This action was brought by four stockholders of the defendant corporation against it, and its board of directors, to enjoin the sale by them of 7690 shares of stoek of said corporation, owned by plaintiffs, for a delinquent assessment of four dollars a share levied on said stock.

The corporation was organized October 25, 1899, with a capital stock of two hundred thousand dollars, divided into *56 twenty thousand shares of the par value of ten dollars a share.

All the stock of the corporation was issued. The seven directors of the company subscribed for, and there was issued to them, ten shares each, and the remaining 19,930 shares were issued in two certificates, one certificate numbered 8 being for 7680 shares, and another certificate numbered 9 being for 12.250 shares. Certificate number 8 was issued to F. W. Samuelson individually, and number 9 to F. W. Samuelson, as trustee.

The assessment in question was levied on 7750 shares of the corporate stock, which embraced the 70 shares originally issued to the directors of the corporation, and the 7680 shares issued to Samuelson individually, represented by certificate number 8, and to which particular shares the plaintiffs had succeeded as purchasers. This assessment, levied upon the 7750 shares only, was levied upon the theory that these shares were not fully paid up shares, and was levied as a call for an unpaid portion of the subscription price thereof. No assessment was levied upon the remainder of the shares of the capital stock, being the 12,250 shares issued to Samuelson, as trustee, and represented by certificate number 9, upon the theory that said stock was fully paid up, and not subject to said assessment or call. The assessment on sixty of the shares originally issued to the directors was paid. The other ten shares so issued to the directors were acquired by plaintiffs, and upon these shares and the 7680 acquired by them, and represented by certificate number 8 issued to Samuelson individually, they refused to pay, contending that the assessment was invalid, and it is the validity of such assessment that is involved in this action.

The complaint was framed upon the theories, 1. That the 12.250 shares represented by certificate number 9 were not fully paid up and stood upon the same plane as to assessments as the balance of the stock of the corporation, and that the assessment should have been levied upon them, as well as upon the 7750 shares; and 2. That if the 12,250 shares were fully paid up, the shares held by the plaintiffs were equally so; that they had been purchased by them in good faith and for value, and upon the representation of the corporation that said shares were fully paid up, and the corporation was thereby estopped to deny to these shares the character of fully paid *57 up stock; and the claim of plaintiffs is, that upon either theory, any assessment levied should have been upon all the shares of stock of the corporation; that a levy upon a portion thereof only was invalid for want of equality.

The findings of the court were against the plaintiffs upon the issues made under these theories. It found that the assessment was valid and entered judgment in favor of the defendants.

This appeal is taken by the plaintiffs from the judgment accompanied by a bill of exceptions bringing up the evidence for review in an attack by them upon the -sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings.

Before approaching a consideration of the main propositions involved in the attack upon the findings, it may be said that as to the ten shares originally issued to one of the directors of the corporation and held by one of the plaintiffs, there can be no manner of doubt but that the finding of the court that nothing was paid on its subscription price save a ten per cent assessment, is correct.

This brings us to a consideration of the really controlling question on this appeal, which is the correctness of the findings of the court as to the status of the stock represented by the certificates numbered 8 and 9 respectively.

It must be conceded, as the respondents freely do, that if the 7680 shares of stock included in the 7750 shares upon which the assessment in question was levied, stood in the same position with reference to the payment, or non-payment of the subscription price thereof, as the 12,250 shares did which were not assessed, such assessment would clearly be void for want of equality in its levy.

The court found that it did not stand in the same position.

As to certificate number 8 for the 7680 shares, the court found that on October 16, 1899, F. W. Samuelson, who was then president of the defendant corporation, caused to be issued to himself the certificate representing such shares; that he caused said certificate to be issued without any authority of the board of directors of the corporation therefor; that nothing whatever was paid upon said certificate at the time of its issuance; and, that nothing has been paid thereon since, with the exception of an assessment of ten per cent levied in March, 1904. The court, however, found that after the issuance of *58 said certificate, by levying and collecting the assessment of March, 1904, and by other acts and conduct on its part, the corporation recognized and treated the said certificate as having been validly issued to said Samuelson, upon his credit, for the full par value thereof, and is now estopped to assert that said certificate or the said shares are invalid, but is not estopped to deny that anything has been paid thereon in addition to said assessment levied in the month of March aforesaid.

The finding of the court as to the 12,250 shares evidenced by certificate number 9 was that they were fully paid shares of stock of the corporation issued in consideration of property received by it.

The main attack made by appellants here is as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain these findings, and a consideration of this attack will necessitate a somewhat extended reference to the transactions surrounding the formation of the defendant corporation and relating to the issuance of these two certificates 8 and 9. Upon these matters the evidence in the case shows that F. W. Samuelson and one Lombard were in 1897 the owners of a sixty-acre tract of land near Hollywood in Los Angeles County, and in that year, they, with others, formed a corporation known as the Hollywood Cemetery Association for the purpose of establishing a cemetery upon said tract of land. Subsequent to the formation of this corporation (which shall hereafter be referred to as the old corporation), and when it was about to actively engage in opening up and conducting the cemetery on this land, opposition developed and its operations were stopped by an injunction issued in the superior court of Los Angeles County. After the injunction was granted an appeal was taken by the corporation to this court. While the appeal was pending the defendants H. C. Brown, N. M. Entler, and John Freeman, who had no connection whatever with this corporation, conceived the idea of starting a cemetery in Los Angeles County, and with that object in view procured options upon a tract of land located about a mile and a half from the cemetery of the old corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
97 P. 1, 154 Cal. 53, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odea-v-hollywood-cemetery-assoc-cal-1908.