Porter v. Gibson

154 P.2d 703, 25 Cal. 2d 506, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 334
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1944
DocketL. A. 18926
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 154 P.2d 703 (Porter v. Gibson) 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
Porter v. Gibson, 154 P.2d 703, 25 Cal. 2d 506, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 334 (Cal. 1944).

Opinion

*508 CURTIS, J.

This action was instituted for the recovery of the purchase price of certain shares of corporate stock, which it is alleged the defendant agreed to purchase from the plaintiff. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and the defendant has appealed.

The agreement upon which the action is based was in writing signed by each of the parties thereto, and provided that the plaintiff “agrees to sell” to the defendant, and the defendant “agrees to buy” of the plaintiff, two hundred shares of stock of the Gibson Oil Company, a corporation, for the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) at the rate of fifty dollars ($50) per share, and defendant agrees to pay for said stock at the rate of one hundred and fifty dollars ($150) per month, the first payment to be made at the date of the execution of the contract, July 24, 1939, and subsequent payments of one hundred and fifty dollars ($150) to be made monthly on the fifteenth day of each and every month until the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) shall have been paid. The right was given to defendant to pay a greater amount each month than said sum of one hundred and fifty dollars ($150), and, if he elects, he may “take up the whole amount of the stock at any time upon the payment of the balance due at the said rate of fifty dollars ($50) per share. Buyer shall have the right to delivery to him of the stock paid for each month as it is paid for, but not in lots less than ten (10) shares. Buyer shall be under no further or additional obligation to purchase stock under this agreement should Gibson Oil Company be adjudicated a bankrupt or an assignment for the benefit of creditors be made by it or if Mr. Gibson, party of the second part, is removed from the management of the company through the action of its creditors or bankers.”

Plaintiff retained the right to vote said stock until payment therefor shall have been made and the stock transferred to defendant on the corporate records. Various other provisions were contained in the agreement which concerned other matters of interest to the parties, but which are not material to any issue in this action, except paragraph 6 of said agreement, which is as follows: “In order that this agreement may operate to the protection of the parties, it is agreed that buyer and seller will create an escrow at the Bank of America,- - Branch, and that appropriate instructions and a ■ copy of this agreement shall be entered therein by buyer and *509 seller, pursuant to which said two hundred (200) shares of stock shall be deposited therein by seller, and that said escrow instructions shall provide for the payment to and collection by said escrow holder, for the account of seller, of the purchase price of said shares in cash at the times and in the amounts as herein provided and for the delivery of said purchase price installments to seller as paid and for the delivery of said shares to buyer as paid for, but not in lots less than ten (10) share lots. The buyer is to pay all escrow charges and taxes on said transaction and seller is to receive the full amount of $50.00 per share without any deductions of any nature whatsoever. Time shall be the essence of this agreement and in particular of the payments herein provided to be made. It shall be a condition of said escrow and of this agreement that should buyer fail to make any payment for said shares at the times and in the amounts and manner herein provided, or in the event that buyer should fail to pay any escrow charges, taxes and other sums herein provided to be paid by buyer, then and in either of such events seller may withdraw from said escrow, without any notice to or demand upon buyer, all shares of said stock not paid for and withdrawn and seller may retain any of said shares as to which payment may have been made, as liquidated damages for any such breach of this agreement; and it shall be a further condition of this agreement and of said escrow that in the event of any such default in payment, said escrow holder shall redeliver to seller promptly and without question upon demand, notwithstanding any notice, demand or contention upon the part of the buyer, all of said shares not then withdrawn from said escrow, and that said escrow holder shall not be liable to buyer by reason of any such redelivery, and seller may otherwise dispose of said shares freed of the terms of this agreement.”

The escrow provided for in the agreement ivas opened on August 4, 1939. Defendant made the first payment called for by the agreement and continued to make these payments until March 16, 1940, when payments stopped. Up to the latter date defendant had paid $1,550 and had received thirty shares of stock, and there remained $50 in the possession of the escrow holder for one share of stock not delivered.

Beginning as early as August, 1940, the Gibson Oil Company was having financial difficulties with its creditors. A committee of the creditors was appointed; in September, *510 1940, a tentative agreement was entered into between the' company and its creditors; and in November, 1940, a second agreement in writing was entered into between them. The later agreement is set out in full in the reporter’s transcript, but we do not find the prior one in the record. The later agreement seems to be the one under which defendant and the creditors of the company operated its business. It gave to the creditors’ committee certain, rights over the operation of the business of the company as will be more particularly referred to later in this opinion. It provided, however, that the defendant C. J. Gibson, should be retained “to manage the affairs of the Company, subject to the terms of this and the former agreement and subject to the control of the committee as in this and said former agreement set forth. ’ ’ His salary was fixed at the sum of $250 per month, or “ten (10%) per cent of the Company’s net production, whichever is less.” There is evidence in the record showing that the net production of the company was $2,500 or thereabouts, each month.

On May 27, 1942—the defendant having failed to make any further payments under his agreement with plaintiff other than those mentioned above—the plaintiff, pursuant to the terms of the agreement, withdrew from escrow the shares of stock theretofore deposited with the escrow holder, and thereupon delivered the same to defendant properly endorsed with a demand for the payment of the sum of $3,700, the accrued installments then due and unpaid. On May 29, 1942, she filed the present action seeking to recover said amount. At the trial of the action on January 14, 1943, plaintiff filed a supplemental complaint covering payments falling due under the agreement between the date of filing of the action and the date of trial. The amount then alleged to be due and unpaid was the sum of $4,750. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff and against defendant for this amount, together with interest. The defendant has appealed from the judgment.

By his answer defendant admitted the execution of the contract, and that he had paid only the sum of $1,550 on the purchase price of the stock. As a special defense he alleged that he was removed from the management of the Gibson Oil Company in September, 1940, and.since that daté the company had been under the direction, management and control óf a *511

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 P.2d 703, 25 Cal. 2d 506, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-gibson-cal-1944.