Raine v. Spreckels

174 P.2d 857, 77 Cal. App. 2d 117, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 930
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 1946
DocketCiv. No. 12859
StatusPublished

This text of 174 P.2d 857 (Raine v. Spreckels) 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
Raine v. Spreckels, 174 P.2d 857, 77 Cal. App. 2d 117, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 930 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

GOODELL, J.

This appeal was taken from a judgment in favor of the defendants in a creditor’s suit.

The amended complaint alleges that in June, 1936, plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant Rudolph Spreckels and others for $923,031.91, on which an execution was returned wholly unsatisfied. It alleges on information and belief that the respondent Rudolph Spreckels transferred to his wife, the respondent Eleanor J. Spreckels, certain securities (3,267 shares of stock in 15 corporations are described in the complaint) or, alternatively, that he transferred to her the money with which she purchased them. Their value is alleged to exceed $250,000. It alleges that the transfer was without any valuable consideration and was made after respondent Spreckels had contracted the debt to the Bank of America (plaintiff’s assignor) on which the money judgment was recovered and while he was insolvent. It also alleges that the transfer was made with the intent to hinder, delay and defraud his creditors and particularly the plaintiff. The [119]*119prayer is that the transfer he declared fraudulent and void as against the plaintiff; that respondent Eleanor Spreckels account for the property transferred, and that it be applied in partial satisfaction of plaintiff’s money judgment.

The court found that the judgment indebtedness was $923,031.91, and that the execution had been returned unsatisfied. But it also found that no transfer had been made of any securities or of any money with which Mrs. Spreckels is alleged to have bought them.

It might be remarked at this point that the appellant did not prove any such transfer of securities or of money wherewith they are alleged to have been purchased, and on this appeal no such claim is made. The case was tried and is now presented on an altogether different theory—one which departs from the plaintiff’s pleading—namely, that respondent Spreckels, while insolvent, made an allowance to his wife of $2,500 for each of the first eleven months of 1930; that because of his insolvency such allowance was excessive, and that a substantial part of the $27,500 namely, all over and above a reasonable amount, should be applied on the appellant’s money judgment.

The court found that for many years Mrs. Spreckels had received from her husband an allowance of $2,500 each month; that each of the eleven payments in question “was based on a substantial and valuable consideration,” and that he at that time was not insolvent.

The appellant contends that the finding against insolvency is not supported by the' evidence, and that the duty of support is not a consideration for the allowance by an insolvent husband to his wife of $27,500 in eleven months.

The trial lasted over a week and some 40-odd exhibits were introduced in evidence.

In 1928 Rudolph Spreckels had a net taxable income of $13,400,000 on which he owed a federal income tax of $2,007,484.99. In September, 1929, he borrowed from the Bank of America on his unsecured note $500,000, which was used to pay the third installment of the tax. In January, 1930, he paid $50,000 on the note, and during 1930 several renewal notes for $450,000 were given, with security. Two corporations which he owned owed the bank a large sum of money, and in December, 1930, the entire indebtedness, including the unpaid $450,000, was consolidated into one note [120]*120secured by real and personal property. Respondent Spreckels guaranteed the note, and the action which eventuated in the judgment for $923,031.91 was brought on that total indebtedness.

In 1927 the affairs of Kolster Radio Corporation, in which respondent Spreckels was the largest stockholder, took him to New York, where he remained until 1935. Mrs. Spreckels meanwhile remained in California, living in the family home in Hillsborough. Each year he made several visits home. •

The size of respondent Spreckels’ taxable income for the year 1928 indicates his large resources at that time. He always had been a wealthy man, having inherited about $4,-000,000 from his parents, to which fortune he added greatly by his own efforts. He had been the largest stockholder, and president, of the First National Bank of San Francisco and later the owner of two-thirds of the stock, and president, of United Bank & Trust Company in the same city, which two-thirds interest he sold in 1927 for a little under $3,000,000. He testified that in 1920 his net worth was between $8,000,000 and $10,000,000.

Shortly after arriving in New York in 1927 he was drawn into the active management and control of the Federal Sugar Refining Company which was engaged in the refining and sale of sugar, with a refinery (the second largest in the United States) and an alcohol plant at Yonkers, New York. Between 1927 and 1929 he lent to that company $12,200,000 and in May, 1929, he effected its reorganization by incorporating the Spreckels Sugar Company, taking $12,200,000 of stock therein and wiping out the indebtedness in that amount. Spreckels Sugar Company owned 95 per cent of the stock of Federal, and respondent Rudolph Spreckels owned, in June, 1930 practically all the stock of Spreckels Sugar Company, which took over the assets of Federal. Its plant—real estate, buildings, machinery, equipment and supplies—became the principal asset of Spreckels Sugar Company, which continued to operate the Federal plant until it shut down in August 1930.

In January, 1930, the New York banks notified respondent Spreckels that they would no longer finance the new company and as a consequence the buying of raw sugar to operate the refinery as a producing enterprise had to be suspended. Respondent Spreckels was engaged during all of 1930 and well into 1931 in repeated attempts to dispose of the refinery. He fixed its value originally at $11,000,000. Negotiations com[121]*121mencing early in 1930 were carried on for some months with United Molasses Company. Thereafter negotiations were carried on, lasting from July, 1930, to the spring of 1931, with General Foods Corporation which offered $7,000,000 for the physical properties. These were followed by negotiations with the Suchard interests which were on the basis of $7,000,-000. The New York Central Railroad Company was a prospect .for it was then considering a change in its right of way which would have taken in the refinery. Each of these negotiations, in turn, fell through. There Avas also an unsuccessful plan to combine the output of the Yonkers plant with that of several other refineries. This plan was not abandoned until 1932. Throughout 1930 respondent Spreckels kept the Bank of America in San Francisco informed of his activities by correspondence, which indicated that he was quite confident of a successful outcome. In his letter of July 31, 1930, he stated that the sale of the refinery, upon which he Avas then working, would enable him not only to liquidate all his outstanding obligations but would place him in a very strong cash position. At the trial he testified to the same effect, saying “If I could have financed the Sugar Company my other problems would have been solved.” On October 9, 1930, he Avrote the bank that three prospective buyers were then seeking to acquire the refinery and that he was very confident that a satisfactory deal would be consummated shortly.

In 1932 after these efforts had failed, respondent Spreckels by his own action put the Spreckels Sugar Company into receivership. In 1935 the physical properties which he had originally held at $11,000,000, and for which General Foods had offered $7,000,000, Avere sold for $250,000 or less.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P.2d 857, 77 Cal. App. 2d 117, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raine-v-spreckels-calctapp-1946.