Raisch v. Warren

124 P. 95, 18 Cal. App. 655, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 394
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 6, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 932.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 124 P. 95 (Raisch v. Warren) 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
Raisch v. Warren, 124 P. 95, 18 Cal. App. 655, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 394 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Injunction. Upon filing the complaint and executing a bond for $1,000, the court granted the prayer of the complaint for an injunction, further ordering that defendants show cause at a date named “why this order should not be continued in force until the further order of the court in the premises.” Before the hearing thus ordered, defendant, Charles A. Warren, Jr., served and filed his motion to dissolve and vacate said order of injunction, based on the complaint in said action and upon the ground that “said complaint does not state or show that any ground or cause exists or has existed for the making of said order or for the granting of any injunction in this action.”

At the hearing the court ordered: “ 1. That the demurrers to complaint be overruled ten days to answer; 2. Motion to dissolve injunction denied; 3. Motion to appoint receiver denied without prejudice to renewal of motion.” It appears from the record that ‘ ‘ Said order included the decision of said court upon motions of other parties, as well as said motion of said Charles A. Warren, Jr., and also decisions of demurrers.”

Defendant, Charles A. Warren, Jr., excepted to the order denying his motion “to dissolve said order of injunction and *658 refusing to dissolve said order of injunction as to him. ’ ’ He alone appeals “from the order made and entered . . . refusing to dissolve the injunction granted on the twenty-seventh day of January, 1910, . . . and denying said defendant’s motion to dissolve said injunction.”

The averments of the complaint are substantially as follows : That on March 1, 1903, Charles A. Warren, the defendant Buckman and plaintiff formed a partnership for the purpose of securing contracts from the United States government and performing said contracts when secured, relating to what is known as the Truckee-Carson Project of Nevada, and that said partnership continued until the death of said Charles A. Warren, which is alleged to have occurred on December 24, 1908; that defendant C. A. Warren Company now is and, since April 2, 1903, has been a duly organized California corporation, as also is and has been the San Francisco Construction Company, since January 8, 1900; that from the beginning of said partnership to its termination aforesaid “the two corporations last mentioned were controlled, operated and used by such partnership to facilitate, carry on and advance the affairs, work and business of said partnership, and acting for and under the direction of said copartners, did duly make to the Secretary of the Interior of the United States certain proposals for doing the construction work in connection with the aforesaid Truckee-Carson Project of Nevada”; that said proposals were accepted and pursuant thereto said corporation, C. A. Warren & Company, “for the purposes aforesaid and acting for and under the direction of said copartners, and as an instrument of said partnership to facilitate and carry on its business, did duly make and enter into a certain contract with the United States,” engaging to perform certain work relating to said project, for which the said United States agreed to pay said corporation certain sums of'money and that said corporation fully completed said work. Then follow averments that the said corporation, the said San Francisco Construction Company, for purposes as above averred, and acting for said copartnership as above averred, entered into another contract with the United States to further prosecute the work on said project, for which the said United States agreed to pay said corporation certain sums of money, and that “said *659 copartners, doing business as such in the name of said corporation, San Francisco Construction Company, did duly . . . complete the contract last aforesaid.” Then follow also averments relating to a third contract entered into by said last-named corporation for like purposes as above set forth and as in other alleged cases, “acting for and under the direction of said copartners,” and “for the purpose of facilitating, carrying on and advancing the affairs, work and business of said partnership”; that defendant, Charles A. Warren, Jr., was duly appointed administrator of the estate of Charles A. Warren, deceased, on January 15, 1909; that defendant Buck-man assigned to plaintiff all his right and interest in and to all demands against the estate of Warren, deceased, but now claims some interest in the assets of said partnership; that there has never been an accounting between said copartners as to its business, nor has there been an accounting between the surviving members and defendant Charles A. Warren, Jr., the administrator of said estate of said deceased copartner; “that should an accounting be had of the aforesaid copartnership matters and business, it will be found and ascertained that a large sum of money, to wit, the sum of about $150,000 is due from the estate of said Charles A. Warren, deceased, on account of said copartnership matters and business, to this plaintiff”; that plaintiff has demanded of defendant Warren, Jr., administrator of the estate of Warren, deceased, and of defendant Buckman, an accounting of said copartnership business, but said defendants have refused and still refuse to make such accounting; that plaintiff, within the time allowed by law therefor, prepared his contingent claim against the estate of said deceased in which was recited “substantially all the matters aforesaid and stated the particulars of said contingent claim, and demanded that an accounting be had forthwith between this plaintiff and the said administrator of the estate of Charles A. Warren, deceased, and that provision be made for the payment of such sum as may be found to be due this plaintiff on such accounting, and that such payment be made from and out of the assets of the estate of said deceased”; that said administrator rejected said contingent claim; that said administrator has duly returned an inventory of said estate showing the same to be of the value of $8,798.66; that said inventory does not show the true value and character *660 of the entire estate left by deceased; that the said corporation, the Charles A. Warren Company, had a capital stock of $100,000, divided into 100,000 shares of the par value of $1 each, of which deceased, at the time of his death, was the owner of 60,416 shares; that, immediately before his death, said Warren delivered all his said shares to one Haskell, with instructions that, in the event of the death of said Charles A. Warren, Haskell “should then, and in that event only, deliver said capital stock to the defendants herein, William T. Warren, Charles A. Warren, Jr. and Henry O. Warren in equal shares”; but should he survive his then illness, said capital stock was to remain the property of said Charles A. Warren, “who was to repossess the same and enjoy the income thereof and have all the rights and benefits arising from the ownership thereof”; that, after the death of said Warren, said capital stock was delivered by said Haskell as directed by said Warren, and the said transferees aforesaid are now the holders thereof, and that the defendants Bertha and Claudine Warren claim some interest therein; “that said capital stock is of great value, to wit, of the value of about $1,000,000, and that the same is a part of the estate of said Charles A.

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Bluebook (online)
124 P. 95, 18 Cal. App. 655, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raisch-v-warren-calctapp-1912.