Opinion
KAUS, P. J.
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendant-respondent, entered pursuant to the granting of a “motion to strike and dismiss” the plaintiffs’ first amended complaint. Out of nine plaintiffs, only Mr. Pearl has chosen to appeal the trial court’s determination, which, we also add, relates only to the single defendant, Mr. Shore, and not to the various other defendants named in the instant action.
On December 20, 1963, the plaintiff became involved in a limited partnership investment whereby nine limited partners invested a total of $60,000, $30,000 of which was contributed by Mr. Pearl. The general partner, it was agreed, was to be S.K.R. Enterprises, Incorporated (“S.K.R.”), whose principal and equal shareholders were the defendants in the instant action, Philip Shore, Irving C. Rubin, Morton L. Rubin and Elliot Kalt. These four were also treasurer, president, second vice president and secretary, respectively, and, except for Morton L. Rubin, directors of the corporation. The limited partnership was called “S.K.R.—Lindley.”
In Pearl’s initial complaint the defendant Shore was not named! Tlie original summons was lost and an “alias summons” was issued for an amended complaint, which then named Shore as a defendant. Contending that service of such summons did not confer jurisdiction over the new
defendant, Shore petitioned this court for a writ of mandate or prohibition to halt or restrain further action by the plaintiffs. The writ was denied. The Supreme Court denied a hearing.
Shore then demurred to and moved to strike and dismiss the first amended complaint. The trial court granted the motion to strike after depositions and sworn declarations were filed. It did not rule on the demurrer.
In all, th& amended complaint attempts to state seven causes of action. The first alleges that the corporate purpose of S.K.R. was in reality based upon a “fraudulent plan, scheme and device” to divert funds to the defendants’ personál use. There are also allegations of a lack of separateness between the corporation and the individuals, and of the corporation’s insolvency, so that no action can be successfully brought against it. This cause of action seems to revolve around the last two paragraphs where the plaintiffs allege that defendants ate indebted to them in' the sum of $60,000 “for money paid and delivered by Plaintiffs to Defendants at the special instance and request of Defendants. . . .” Finally, because of the defendants’ “oppression, fraud, and malice” the plaintiffs request exemplary damages in the sum of $180,000.
The second cause of action is no less confusing. Without alleging that they are minority shareholders in S.K.R., plaintiffs state that all of the defendants, comprising 100 percent of the shareholders, conspired to take secret profits and improperly withhold dividends, and refused to disseminate information regarding the corporate affairs, all to the detriment of the minority shareholders. The remainder of this cause of action dwells upon .the defendants’ knowingly false representations that they would operate the affairs of the limited partnership for the benefit of the partnership, their fraudulent appropriation of partnership funds, and the plaintiffs’ reliance upon those false representations. Simply stated, the second cause of action might be labeled “conspiracy to deceive and defraud.”
The third cause of action is merely a verbatim repetition of the substance of the second, except that no conspiracy allegation is set forth.
The fourth cause of action realleges the third, but adds that the defendants had no ground to believe their representations to be true, “in that Defendants did not have sufficient information and data to make such representations,” nor did defendants apprise the plaintiffs of their lack of information.
To this somewhat heady brew is added the ingredient of. a violation of section “2500 et seq.,”
of the Corporations Code, in the fifth cause of
action. The plaintiffs state that by defendants’ “failure to obtain a permit to issue securities all transactions by and between Plaintiffs and Defendants are null and void.”
As a sixth cause of action, the plaintiffs allege that because of the defendants’ fraud and deceit the plaintiffs are entitled to rescind the partnership agreement, and that the individual defendants are liable to the plaintiffs by virtue of a sale of the partnership property on December 21, 1965.
Finally, the last cause of action realleges the first and sets forth conduct forming the basis for the dissolution of “S.K.R.—Lindley,” pursuant to section 15032 of the Corporations Code. It also requests an accounting.
Before moving to the validity of the trial court’s determination, we must first dispose of a procedural problem. Without deciding whether a motion to strike and dismiss a “sham” complaint grants the trial court wider powers than it has under section 437c of the Code of Civil Procedure, we consider the trial court’s granting of the motion to strike and dismiss, as if it were a summary judgment proceeding.
(Lavine
v.
Jessup,
48 Cal.2d 611, 614, fn. 2 [311 P.2d 8];
Pianka
v.
California,
46 Cal.2d 208, 212 [293 P.2d 458];
Hosking
v.
Spartan Properties, Inc.,
275 Cal.App.2d 152, 154-156 [79 Cal.Rptr. 893];
Lerner
v.
Ehrlich,
222 Cal.App.2d 168, 171-172 [35 Cal.Rptr. 106]; Chadbourn, Grossman & Van Alstyne, California Pleading, § 1463.) Plaintiff cannot complain of this.
It is now well established that a motion for a summary judgment is not a challenge to the other party to show that there are triable issues of fact, but that the moving party’s own showing must first negate the existence of such triable issues, even if the ultimate burden of proof is on the other side.
(Fuller
v.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.,
7 Cal.App.3d 690, 693 [86 Cal.Rptr. 705];
Barnes
v.
Blue Haven Pools,
1 Cal.App.3d 123, 127, [81 Cal.Rptr. 444].) We review the present record in the light of that rule.
Shore’s showing consists, in the main, of his deposition. It depicts him as a man who, because of his own lack of business acumen and the unjustified sanguinity of his three codefendants, lost somewhere around $200,000 as a result of his connection with S.K.R. S.K.R. was formed by
Shore, Elliot Kalt, Irving C. Rubin and Morton L. Rubin for the purpose of purchasing several parcels of land and constructing apartment houses thereon. Each project was to be operated as a limited partnership with capital contributions thereto made by the limited partners, such as the plaintiff Pearl. S.K.R. was to be the general partner.
Each of the four shareholders purchased $25,000 worth of stock, Shore lending the other three about half of the money they needed.
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Opinion
KAUS, P. J.
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendant-respondent, entered pursuant to the granting of a “motion to strike and dismiss” the plaintiffs’ first amended complaint. Out of nine plaintiffs, only Mr. Pearl has chosen to appeal the trial court’s determination, which, we also add, relates only to the single defendant, Mr. Shore, and not to the various other defendants named in the instant action.
On December 20, 1963, the plaintiff became involved in a limited partnership investment whereby nine limited partners invested a total of $60,000, $30,000 of which was contributed by Mr. Pearl. The general partner, it was agreed, was to be S.K.R. Enterprises, Incorporated (“S.K.R.”), whose principal and equal shareholders were the defendants in the instant action, Philip Shore, Irving C. Rubin, Morton L. Rubin and Elliot Kalt. These four were also treasurer, president, second vice president and secretary, respectively, and, except for Morton L. Rubin, directors of the corporation. The limited partnership was called “S.K.R.—Lindley.”
In Pearl’s initial complaint the defendant Shore was not named! Tlie original summons was lost and an “alias summons” was issued for an amended complaint, which then named Shore as a defendant. Contending that service of such summons did not confer jurisdiction over the new
defendant, Shore petitioned this court for a writ of mandate or prohibition to halt or restrain further action by the plaintiffs. The writ was denied. The Supreme Court denied a hearing.
Shore then demurred to and moved to strike and dismiss the first amended complaint. The trial court granted the motion to strike after depositions and sworn declarations were filed. It did not rule on the demurrer.
In all, th& amended complaint attempts to state seven causes of action. The first alleges that the corporate purpose of S.K.R. was in reality based upon a “fraudulent plan, scheme and device” to divert funds to the defendants’ personál use. There are also allegations of a lack of separateness between the corporation and the individuals, and of the corporation’s insolvency, so that no action can be successfully brought against it. This cause of action seems to revolve around the last two paragraphs where the plaintiffs allege that defendants ate indebted to them in' the sum of $60,000 “for money paid and delivered by Plaintiffs to Defendants at the special instance and request of Defendants. . . .” Finally, because of the defendants’ “oppression, fraud, and malice” the plaintiffs request exemplary damages in the sum of $180,000.
The second cause of action is no less confusing. Without alleging that they are minority shareholders in S.K.R., plaintiffs state that all of the defendants, comprising 100 percent of the shareholders, conspired to take secret profits and improperly withhold dividends, and refused to disseminate information regarding the corporate affairs, all to the detriment of the minority shareholders. The remainder of this cause of action dwells upon .the defendants’ knowingly false representations that they would operate the affairs of the limited partnership for the benefit of the partnership, their fraudulent appropriation of partnership funds, and the plaintiffs’ reliance upon those false representations. Simply stated, the second cause of action might be labeled “conspiracy to deceive and defraud.”
The third cause of action is merely a verbatim repetition of the substance of the second, except that no conspiracy allegation is set forth.
The fourth cause of action realleges the third, but adds that the defendants had no ground to believe their representations to be true, “in that Defendants did not have sufficient information and data to make such representations,” nor did defendants apprise the plaintiffs of their lack of information.
To this somewhat heady brew is added the ingredient of. a violation of section “2500 et seq.,”
of the Corporations Code, in the fifth cause of
action. The plaintiffs state that by defendants’ “failure to obtain a permit to issue securities all transactions by and between Plaintiffs and Defendants are null and void.”
As a sixth cause of action, the plaintiffs allege that because of the defendants’ fraud and deceit the plaintiffs are entitled to rescind the partnership agreement, and that the individual defendants are liable to the plaintiffs by virtue of a sale of the partnership property on December 21, 1965.
Finally, the last cause of action realleges the first and sets forth conduct forming the basis for the dissolution of “S.K.R.—Lindley,” pursuant to section 15032 of the Corporations Code. It also requests an accounting.
Before moving to the validity of the trial court’s determination, we must first dispose of a procedural problem. Without deciding whether a motion to strike and dismiss a “sham” complaint grants the trial court wider powers than it has under section 437c of the Code of Civil Procedure, we consider the trial court’s granting of the motion to strike and dismiss, as if it were a summary judgment proceeding.
(Lavine
v.
Jessup,
48 Cal.2d 611, 614, fn. 2 [311 P.2d 8];
Pianka
v.
California,
46 Cal.2d 208, 212 [293 P.2d 458];
Hosking
v.
Spartan Properties, Inc.,
275 Cal.App.2d 152, 154-156 [79 Cal.Rptr. 893];
Lerner
v.
Ehrlich,
222 Cal.App.2d 168, 171-172 [35 Cal.Rptr. 106]; Chadbourn, Grossman & Van Alstyne, California Pleading, § 1463.) Plaintiff cannot complain of this.
It is now well established that a motion for a summary judgment is not a challenge to the other party to show that there are triable issues of fact, but that the moving party’s own showing must first negate the existence of such triable issues, even if the ultimate burden of proof is on the other side.
(Fuller
v.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.,
7 Cal.App.3d 690, 693 [86 Cal.Rptr. 705];
Barnes
v.
Blue Haven Pools,
1 Cal.App.3d 123, 127, [81 Cal.Rptr. 444].) We review the present record in the light of that rule.
Shore’s showing consists, in the main, of his deposition. It depicts him as a man who, because of his own lack of business acumen and the unjustified sanguinity of his three codefendants, lost somewhere around $200,000 as a result of his connection with S.K.R. S.K.R. was formed by
Shore, Elliot Kalt, Irving C. Rubin and Morton L. Rubin for the purpose of purchasing several parcels of land and constructing apartment houses thereon. Each project was to be operated as a limited partnership with capital contributions thereto made by the limited partners, such as the plaintiff Pearl. S.K.R. was to be the general partner.
Each of the four shareholders purchased $25,000 worth of stock, Shore lending the other three about half of the money they needed. In return he was given notes and a pledge of the stock, but did not have the right to vote more than his 25 percent. He had nothing to do with the day to day operation of the corporation. The other shareholders only involved Shore in the corporate business when they needed additional funds for down payments on new properties. He advanced such funds.
As far as the limited partnership venture in which the plaintiff Pearl invested is concerned, Shore had merely heard of the name, was not “involved in any deal pertaining” thereto, had never seen the limited partnership agreement, had never seen or met any of the limited partners and had never even talked to the other three shareholders about them. In fact on none of the projects did he have anything to do with any of the limited partners.
According to Shore the basic reason for S.K.R.’s financial demise was that the other three shareholders who were running the corporation acquired additional properties too soon,, drew salaries and incurred expenses not justified by the corporation’s profit—if any. Shore drew no salary. At least one property was turned back to Shore who had been forced to make good on his guarantee of a loan for the purchase price, when the corporation ceased to pay interest.
We leave our discussion of the law for a later point and merely state here that in our opinion Shore’s showing adequately negatives any cause of action which the investors in “S.K.R.—Lindley” might have directly against Shore, on any of the pleaded causes of action, or indirectly by way of an
alter ego
theory. He personally had nothing whatever to do with them. He had never even talked to his co-shareholders about them. He was a legal stranger to them.
Plaintiff’s own deposition establishes that Shore was also a personal stranger to him. Pearl was apparently solicited to join the limited partnership by Irving Rubin. Irving Rubin’s dealings were largely with plaintiff’s attorney, a Mr. Lurie. Plaintiff himself knew of no facts which would have supported any of the charging allegations in the complaint.
Lurie failed to appear for a deposition. Plaintiff did, however, file his declaration. It contains nothing but inadmissible hearsay and conclusions
so obviously unsupported by facts that they amount to nothing, even when filed in opposition to a summary judgment.
A picture somewhat different from that painted by Shore emerges from the depositions of Kalt and the Rubins. Unfortunately it is extremely vague, for the books and records of. the corporation either would or could not be located and the witnesses spoke about the various real estate ventures in generalities without the benefit of documentation.
They complained that Shore demanded 10 percent interest on money he had loaned to the corporation, initially took title to one property in his own name but for the benefit of the corporation and eventually used his status as a creditor to force the corporation to deed properties to him in satisfaction of S.K.R.’s debts. It was not claimed, however, that the debts were not due, nor does it appear that in the corporation’s dealings with him, Shore gained any undue financial advantage.
The most that can be
said is that he ceased being the corporation’s “angel” rather sooner than the other shareholders had hoped. They also complained that Shore at one point promised that if buyers for the properties were found, he would sell them and credit the corporate account with the profits, if any. He then refused to deal with prospective purchasers. There is no suggestion, however, that they ever produced a purchaser willing to pay a price which would have resulted in a profit. At no point in the record did plaintiff attempt to show just how and why the corporation became frustrated in its basic purpose, namely to convert raw land which costs money to own into apartment buildings which create a profit.
Discussion
Liability on the seven causes of action is apparently predicated upon three bases: (1) that the corporate entity should be disregarded so that Philip Shore would be held accountable for S.K.R.’s debts; (2) that Shore is personally hable for conspiracy to defraud, fraud, and misrepresentation, all perpetrated upon Bert Pearl; and (3) that Shore is personally hable to Pearl for not adhering to the strictures-of section 25000 et seq. of the Corporations Code as weh as for an accounting of the partnership account.
We hold that the trial court properly disallowed the plaintiffs’ attempt at attaching personal habihty for corporate debts upon the defendant. “Summary judgment is proper only if the affidavits or declarations ... in support of the moving party would be sufficient to sustain a judgment in his favor and his opponent does not by affidavit show facts sufficient to present a triable issue of fact.”
(Parker
v.
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., 3
Cal.3d 176, 181 [89 Cal.Rptr. 737, 474 P.2d 689].)
In the leading case of
Associated Vendors, Inc.
v.
Oakland Meat Co.,
210 Cal.App.2d 825, 838 [26 Cal.Rptr. 806], it is said that “. . . bad faith in one form or another is an underlying consideration and will be found in some form or another in those cases wherein the trial court was justified in disregarding the corporate entity. ...” It seems to us that plaintiff’s attempt to fasten corporate liabilities onto defendant must fail because of the complete lack of showing of bad faith, in any form.
Plaintiff claims that the corporation was undercapitalized for the ventures it pursued. Whether or not undercapitalization alone can be the basis for disregarding the corporate entity is a nice point. (See
Harris
v.
Curtis,
8 Cal.App.3d 837, 841-843 [87 Cal.Rptr. 614].) We have looked at many cases which involve undercapitalization as a factor in determining whether
or not the corporate veil should be pierced.
In none of them was the capitalization anything near the $100,000 involved here. Of course if a corporation keeps on purchasing raw land and does virtually nothing with it, yet goes on paying interest on loans, taxes and salaries to its officers and other employees, any amount of capital would soon disappear. The troubles of S.K.R. seem to be attributable to poor management on the part of Kalt and the Rubins, rather than initial undercapitalization.
Plaintiff makes much of the several properties which defendant eventually acquired and on which the corporation had spent money for taxes, interest and other upkeep. However, as noted, there is nothing in the record to suggest that had the creditor been a bank, and had the securities been conventional trust deeds, rather than trust deeds disguised as deeds, the corporation would have been one whit better off. There was much talk in the court below of defendant “dealing with corporate assets as his own,” “commingling” and so forth. The use of such catch phrases from the glossary of
alter
ego
law ignores the fact that legally and equitably defendant had a substantial security interest in the properties.
“It is the general rule that the conditions under which a corporate entity may be disregarded vary according to the circumstances in each case. (See
H. A. S. Loan Service, Inc.
v.
McColgan,
21 Cal.2d 518, 523 [133 P.2d 391, 145 A.L.R. 349];
Stark
v.
Coker,
20 Cal.2d 839, 846 [129 P.2d 390].) It has been stated that the two requirements for application of this doctrine are (1) that there be such unity of interest and ownership that the separate personalities of the corporation and the individual no longer exist and (2) that, if the acts are treated as those of the corporation alone, an inequitable result will follow. . . .”
(Automotriz etc. De California
v.
Resnick, supra,
47 Cal.2d 792, 796.) We are not persuaded that plaintiff has shown that there is a triable issue with respect to whether a failure to pierce the corporate veil will or will not result in an inequity. To the contrary, it seems plain that all the equities are on defendant’s side.
So much for any personal liability of Shore based on a piercing of the corporate veil as to him.
We now turn to the various fraud counts in the
plaintiff’s attempt to attach direct liability on Shore. The defendant’s fraud liability may be predicated upon either a direct misrepresentation as to the defendant’s willingness to back the corporation, a misrepresentation by way of his agents or co-venturers, the Rubins and Kalt, or the fraudulent appropriation of corporate assets to the plaintiff’s detriment. In all instances, we must affirm the judgment. It is undisputed that no contact between Pearl and Shore took place, since Shore never dealt directly with any limited partners, including those who were involved in the Lindley deal. Nor does the plaintiff allege an agency or joint venture relationship between Shore and the other corporate officers, even though Shore specifically denies such possibilities. Finally, no fraudulent misappropriation theory can be sustained because the plaintiff offers no facts upon which such a claim can be based, and the defendant’s claim that he received no assets or funds, outside of the transactions involving the various loans, is surprisingly undisputed and even supported by the plaintiff’s
evidence. No triable issue of fact has been brought out, although the defendant’s showing is sufficient to sustain a judgment in his favor.
Finally, the provisions of section 25100, subdivision (1) of the Corporations Code preclude the fifth.cause of action (see fn. 2,
ante).
Since only the corporation, not Shore, may be liable for an accounting to Pearl, we need not be concerned with the last cause of action.
The judgment is affirmed.
Stephens, J., and Aiso, J., concurred.