Randall v. California Land Buyers Syndicate

20 P.2d 331, 217 Cal. 594, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 663
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1933
DocketDocket No. L.A. 13069.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 20 P.2d 331 (Randall v. California Land Buyers Syndicate) 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
Randall v. California Land Buyers Syndicate, 20 P.2d 331, 217 Cal. 594, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 663 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in an action against the California Land Buyers Syndicate, its directors, and its fiscal agent, to recover real property alleged to have been unlawfully received by the defendant corporation in exchange for shares of its stock, or for other appropriate relief.

At the times involved the defendant California Land Buyers Syndicate was a corporation organized under the *596 laws of the state of Delaware with authority to transact business in this state, and with its principal place of business in San Diego. Its business was to buy San Diego real estate and sell it at a profit. Its fiscal agent was R. L. Stewart, who had an exclusive agency for the sale of the corporation’s stock at a commission to him of 20 per cent. Under an amended permit of the corporation commissioner the corporation was authorized to sell units consisting of one investment share and one common share of its capital stock for the sum of $30 per unit, cash.

The plaintiffs were the owners as joint tenants of real property in San Diego consisting of a lot and eight fiats. The pleadings admit that the value of this property was $37,500, subject to a mortgage of $7,000. In June, 1929, the plaintiffs deeded their real property to the defendant corporation, subject to the $7,000 mortgage, and received from the corporation certificates representing 1,000 of its investment shares and 1,000 of its common shares in a transaction the details of which were arranged by the fiscal agent, R. L. Stewart, and which in People v. Stewart, 115 Cal. App. 681 [2 Pac. (2d) 195], was declared to be a sale of stock for real property and not a sale for cash, and therefore in contravention of the permit authorizing sales of stock for cash only. The stock certificates issued to the plaintiffs were void pursuant to the provisions of section 12 of the Corporate Securities Act. (Stats. 1917, pp. 673, 679.) Subsequent to the receipt by it of the deed from the plaintiffs and on the same day the defendant corporation by its officers executed and delivered its deed of trust of the same property to secure a loan of $18,000 from Pacific Finance Corporation, and which was still an outstanding lien against the property at the time judgment in this action was rendered. The trial court found all of the facts favorably to the plaintiffs and rendered judgment against each and all of the defendants, with the exception of three as to whom orders of dismissal were entered, that they forthwith obtain satisfaction of all liens and encumbrances against the real property involved over the sum of $7,000, and that they execute or cause to be executed a reconveyance of the property to the plaintiffs subject to an indebtedness of $7,000, or in lieu thereof, the plaintiffs to have judgment against the defendants in the sum of $30,163.28. The corporation *597 and directors Fletcher and Haskell have prosecuted appeals from the judgment.

It is obvious that the judgment must stand unless the plaintiffs are in pari delicto with the defendant corporation; and, if the plaintiffs are not in pari delicto with the corporation, that it must stand also against the defendants Fletcher and Haskell unless no cause of action was stated and proved against them.

The plaintiffs, at the time of the transaction, were people of about eighty years of age. However, it is not denied that they knew that their property was to be taken in exchange for stock. Furthermore, the pleadings admit that the plaintiffs had seen a copy of the permit issued to the defendant corporation. It is upon these two facts appearing in the record that the appellants1 base their contention that the case of Domenigoni v. Imperial Livestock etc. Co., 189 Cal. 467 [209 Pac. 36], applies to prevent the granting of any affirmative relief to the plaintiffs. The appellants do not, and in fact, on the record presented, cannot charge the plaintiffs with any conspiracy or intent to defraud, as in the Domenigoni ease, or any conduct making it inequitable to grant the relief sought, as in Michell v. Grass Valley Gold Mines Co., 206 Cal. 609 [275 Pac. 418], or conduct excluding the buyer from obtaining relief at the hands of the court, as in First Nat. Bank v. Thompson, 212 Cal. 388, 407 [298 Pac. 808]. No facts are presented sufficient to take this case out of the operation of the general rule and within the exceptions noted in those cases. It is no longer questioned that the general rule stated in Tatterson v. Kehrlein, 88 Cal. App. 34 [263 Pac. 285], wherein the plaintiffs recovered damages, applies to a case such as is here presented. That rule is stated (at page 49) to be that “The penalties prescribed by the Corporate Securities Act being all laid on the seller and none on the buyer, and the statute being for the benefit and protection of buyers, the parties are not in pari delicto, and the buyer may have judgment for the money paid out by him under the illegal contract, and may have the contract, the stock certificates and promissory note given in payment of such stock canceled . . . (citing cases).” That statement has been followed or recognized as the general rule in other cases. (Eberhard v. Pacific Southwest L. & M. Corp., 215 Cal. 226 [9 Pac. (2d) 302]; Walker *598 v. Harbor Realty etc. Corp., 214 Cal. 46 [3 Pac. (2d) 557] ; Pollak v. Staunton, 210 Cal. 656, 662, 663 [293 Pac. 26] ; Olds v. Simmons, 123 Cal. App. 275 [11 Pac. (2d) 36]; McClory v. Dodge, 117 Cal. App. 148, 152 [4 Pac. (2d) 223] ; Becker v. Stineman, 115 Cal. App. 740 [2 Pac. (2d) 444] ; Rossi v. Jedlick, 115 Cal. App. 230, 235 [1 Pac. (2d) 1065]; Castle v. Acme Ice Cream Co., 101 Cal. App. 94, 99 [281 Pac. 396]; Hemmeon v. Amalgamated C. Mines Co., 95 Cal. App. 400, 402 [273 Pac. 74].) Although the parties seeking affirmative relief, i. e., the buyers of such stocks, may be in some degree guilty with the parties against whom the relief is sought, they will be denied relief only where the record shows that they are equally culpable (Campbell v. Julian Merger Mines, 111 Cal. App. 649 [295 Pac. 1040]) ; and, considering the object and' purpose of the Corporate Securities Act, mere knowledge of the terms of the permit or of the fact that no permit has been issued, may not alone be sufficient to raise the guilt of the purchaser or subscriber to that degree. (In re Builders’ Finance Assn., Inc., 26 Fed. (2d) 123; Walker v. Harbor Realty etc. Corp., supra; Olds v. Simmons, supra.) The plaintiffs here were therefore not in pari delicto with the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
20 P.2d 331, 217 Cal. 594, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randall-v-california-land-buyers-syndicate-cal-1933.