R. H. Herron Co. v. Shaw

133 P. 488, 165 Cal. 668, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 468
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1913
DocketL.A. No. 2983.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 133 P. 488 (R. H. Herron Co. v. Shaw) 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
R. H. Herron Co. v. Shaw, 133 P. 488, 165 Cal. 668, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 468 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an action against the several defendants, as stockholders of a corporation named Kern River Mining and Power Company to recover a separate judgment against each of them in a sum' equal to the amount unpaid upon his subscription for the stock of said company held by him, not exceeding, however, the debt which it is alleged is due from said company to the plaintiff. The court below made its findings and thereupon rendered judgment for the defendants, from which plaintiff appeals.

The complaint is in three counts. Each count is based upon a judgment recovered by plaintiff against said Kern River Mining and Power Company. The first count is upon a judgment for $2,380, rendered by the superior court of Los Angeles County on September 16, 1910. Two of the defend *670 ants in their answers aver that an appeal from said judgment is pending in the supreme court of California. Upon the hearing it was stipulated that upon said appeal said judgment had been reversed on the ground that no valid service of the summons had been made. We do not think this reversal can affect our decision on the present appeal. Plaintiff’s standing as a creditor upon the other two judgments is admitted, and it is entitled, by virtue thereof, to contest the judgment below by this appeal. The question presented by the record affects all the debts alike. If a reversal of the case at bar is necessary the appellant may amend the first count or file a supplemental pleading relating thereto, as the facts may warrant and as he may be advised.

The case turns upon the question whether or not the stock issued to and held by the several defendants was fully paid up. The authorized capital stock of the Kern River Mining and Power Company was one million dollars, divided into one million shares of one dollar each. Of this, the defendants held in the aggregate 537,635 shares. The complaint alleges that they had paid thereon only ten cents per share. On this point the court found, in effect, that certain persons, not named, owned certain water-rights, mining claims, and mining machinery, that solely in consideration of the transfer thereof by said owners to said company it issued to said owners six hundred and ninety-five thousand of its shares as fully paid nonassessable stock, that nothing further has ever been paid for or on account of said shares, that the market value of said property did not then exceed sixty-nine thousand five hundred dollars, that the board of directors of said corporation did not then believe that the market value of said property was six hundred and ninety-five thousand dollars, but did believe that it exceeded sixty-nine thousand five hundred dollars and believed that the property purchased could be developed to a value in excess of six hundred and ninety-five thousand dollars, and that said directors “in issuing said stock for said property acted in good faith and in the honest belief that said property could and would be developed so that the said property would have a market value in excess of $695,000.” The stock owned by the defendants is a part of the six hundred and ninety-five thousand shares above referred to..

*671 Where the stock of a corporation is issued without being fully paid up, the amount remaining unpaid is, so far as its creditors are concerned, deemed to be money due to. the corporation from the stockholders. Such creditor, if the corporation becomes insolvent, may apply, in equity, as plaintiff sought to do here, to have the fund so deemed to be due to the corporation collected and applied upon his debt. The fact that the stock is issued as fully paid up does not estop or bind the creditor, and in such a ease, if it is not fully paid up, the creditor may prove the fact and recover enough of the portion that is unpaid to satisfy his debt. No subterfuge or device by which it is made to appear as fully paid up when it is not, will enable the stockholder to avoid this liability. Thus, in Vermont M. Co. v. Declez Granite Co., 135 Cal. 579, [87 Am. St. Rep. 143, 56 L. R. A. 728, 67 Pac. 1057], the par value of the stock was one hundred thousand dollars, and it had all been issued to the stockholders as fully paid stock on payment of only twenty thousand dollars. This was done without any intent to defraud creditors. The case holds that the balance of eighty thousand dollars not paid was a fund for the benefit of creditors, which they might collect from the stockholders if the corporation became insolven'. The court said: “The question concerns creditors only. As to them the corporation is presumed to have sought credit based upon its supposed capital of one hundred thousand dollars, actually paid in or due from its stockholders. Public policy requires that the fact whether a particular creditor did trust the corporation on that basis should not be inquired into. The constitution and laws require commercial corporations to have a capital stock, the amount of which shall be stated in the articles, and that this can be had of the corporation only for value.” The language of the constitution referred to is that stock can be issued only for “money paid, labor done, or property actually received.” (Art. XII, sec. 11.)

It is proper to add that in the case just cited it was not claimed that the creditors, at the time of giving credit, knew that the stock had been issued at a cash price less than the par value. The part of the quotation declaring that “public policy requires that the fact whether a particular creditor did trust the corporation on that basis (that the par value had been paid) should not be inquired into,” was not necessary *672 to the decision of the ease'. The fact that par value had not been paid was admitted. The basis of the doctrine is that credit is given in reliance on the presumption that full par value has been received by the corporation for the stock it has issued as fully paid. We would not here say that this presumption is in all cases conclusive. Cases may arise in which the corporation, at the time of obtaining- the credit, made full disclosure to the creditor and the credit has been given with full knowledge by the creditor of the difference between the par value of the stock and the value of the property received for it. If such facts are properly pleaded and proved by the stockholder, we do not mean to declare that it might not be a complete defense to a suit by the creditor to recover such difference. Nothing of the sort appears here, either in the pleadings or findings, and it is unnecessary to consider the question. ‘

The Vermont Marble Company case establishes the rule in this state as to creditor’s rights, where the stock is an original issue and is issued as paid up at a price substantially less than the par value, where the price is paid in money. Where it is issued in exchange for labor, services, or specific property, the rule, so far as other stockholders are concerned, seems to be that the transaction is conclusive unless it is fraudulent as to them in purpose or in effect. With regard to creditors we know of no decision in this state.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 P. 488, 165 Cal. 668, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-h-herron-co-v-shaw-cal-1913.