Partch v. Adams

130 P.2d 244, 55 Cal. App. 2d 1, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 11
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 14, 1942
DocketCiv. 12023
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 130 P.2d 244 (Partch v. Adams) 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
Partch v. Adams, 130 P.2d 244, 55 Cal. App. 2d 1, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 11 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment rendered in an action to quiet his title to 812% shares of stock of defendant Acampo Winery and Distilleries, Incorporated. The trial court determined that 750 shares claimed by plaintiff were the property of defendant Adams, while the remaining 62% shares were held to be the property of defendant Propper. Propper has since died and his administrator has *4 been properly substituted. The appeal is taken on a bill of exceptions.

Plaintiff Parteh and defendant Adams are both judgment creditors of one Mathews, who owned the 812% shares of stock of the Acampo Winery and Distilleries, Incorporated, that are the subject of this action. Both litigants predicate their claim to ownership of this stock as purchasers at execution sales had upon their respective judgments. Propper predicates his claim upon his purchase at a separate execution sale of 62% shares of the Mathews stock, which execution sale was had upon the judgment in favor of Adams against Mathews.

Parteh caused execution to be levied on the 812% shares in Sacramento County on October 20, 1938, and purchased at execution sale on November 3, 1938. The trial court found that Adams was entitled to priority as to the 750 shares by virtue of an execution levied in San Joaquin County on July 27, 1938, pursuant to which levy Adams purchased at execution sale on November 21, 1938. The trial court also found that Propper was entitled to priority over both Parteh and Adams as to 62% shares, by virtue of a levy of execution and sale thereunder in San Joaquin County in 1937.

It will be noted that both Adams and Propper claim by virtue of levies and execution sales had in San Joaquin County, while Parteh claims by virtue of a levy and execution sale in Sacramento County. The main contention of Parteh on this appeal is that the stock was not subject to execution levy or sale in San Joaquin County, but only in Sacramento County, that county being designated by the articles of incorporation of the Acampo Winery and Distilleries, Incorporated, as the principal place of business of the corporation. Appellant further urges that even if the levies and sales were proper in San Joaquin County, Adams and Propper failed to establish their priority, it being contended that the evidence shows such priority in Parteh.

Strangely enough, there appears to be no ease in California determining the proper situs of corporate stock of a domestic corporation for the purpose of attachment or execution, and there is little authority in other jurisdictions. Appellant urges that the sole situs of such stock for the purposes of attachment or execution is the legal domicile of the corporation, that is, the county of the principal place of business as designated in the articles, while respondents urge that, although such county is undoubtedly a proper county, such attachment *5 or execution can also be had in the county of the domicile in fact of the corporation.

For many purposes, such as taxation, stock in a corporation follows the domicile of its owner. But for the purposes of attachment and execution, the stock is located where the corporation is legally located. At common law, shares of stock being intangible, and therefore incapable of manual seizure, were not subject to attachment or execution. (Fletcher, Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations, (perm. ed.) vol. 10, p. 70, § 4759.) Whatever right exists in California to reach such stock, exists solely by statute. Under the provisions of section 13 of the Uniform Stock Transfer Act (partially adopted in this state) no attachment or levy is valid unless the certificate of stock is actually and physically seized by the officer making the attachment or levy. California failed to enact that provision of the uniform act. In this state the location of the certificate is of no consequence. Under section 699 of the Code of Civil Procedure it is not necessary for the sheriff to take physical possession of the certificates in order to hold a valid sale on execution of the shares. The sheriff simply gives the purchaser at such sale a certificate of sale which conveys all the right the debtor had.

The basic statutory provisions are four in number. Section 541 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that: “The rights or shares which the defendant may have in the stock of any corporation or company . . . may be attached, and if judgment be recovered, be sold to satisfy the judgment and execution.”

Section 542, subdivision 4, provides the manner by which shares of stock must be attached. It provides: “Stocks or shares ... of any corporation or company, must be attached by leaving with the president, vice president, or other head of the same, or the secretary, assistant secretary, cashier, assistant cashier, or any managing agent, thereof, a copy of the writ, and a notice stating that the stock or interest of the defendant is attached, in pursuance of such writ. ’ ’

Section 688 of the Code of Civil Procedure is the section listing the property subject to execution. So far as shares of stock are concerned, it provides that such shares “may be levied upon or released from levy in like manner as like property may be attached or released from attachment.”

Section 694 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides how execution sales shall be conducted. So far as is pertinent here, it provides that: “All sales of property under exeeu *6 tion . . . must be held in the county where said property or some part thereof is situated. ...”

As already pointed out, the articles of incorporation of the Acampo Wineries and Distilleries, Incorporated, a domestic corporation, designated Sacramento County as the location of its principal office and place of business. The trial court found that the corporation ‘1 did not maintain an office for the transaction of corporate business in Sacramento County” but that it maintained “its office for the transaction of corporate business in San J oaquin County, and its principal officers, executive offices, its books of account and stock records were and are located in said San Joaquin County.” These findings are supported by the testimony of Elmer J. Walther, attorney for the corporation since 1936. He testified that the place of business of the winery is in San Joaquin County; that all the distilling takes place in that county; that all the officers of the corporation including the president, vice president and secretary, are in San Joaquin County except a director and vice president who live in Fresno County; that there is no office maintained by the corporation in Sacramento County and no officer is in that county; that all the corporate records are kept in San Joaquin County. Appellant contends that the testimony of Walther related to the time of trial rather than at the time the executions were levied. While it is true that the evidence as set forth in the bill of exceptions uses the present tense, when read in its entirety it is obvious that the witness was referring to the period since he became attorney in 1936.

From the findings it is clear that we are dealing with a situation where the corporation has designated one county as its principal place of business, and actually, in fact, all of its business is done in another county where most of its officers reside and where it keeps all of its corporate records.

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Bluebook (online)
130 P.2d 244, 55 Cal. App. 2d 1, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/partch-v-adams-calctapp-1942.