Roberts v. Prisk

284 P. 984, 103 Cal. App. 599, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 943
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1930
DocketDocket No. 3976.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 284 P. 984 (Roberts v. Prisk) 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
Roberts v. Prisk, 284 P. 984, 103 Cal. App. 599, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 943 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

This action was begun by the plaintiffs against the defendants to recover of and from the four individual defendants mentioned the sum of $75,000, and directing that such sum be repaid to the defendant Press Telegram Publishing Company, a corporation; that an accounting be had; a receiver appointed; and an injunction issued; it being alleged in the complaint that the four individual defendants mentioned had misappropriated the funds of the Press Telegram Publishing Company, a corporation, the *601 gist of the action being to restore to the treasury of the defendant Press Telegram Publishing Company, all the moneys alleged to have been misappropriated by the individual defendants named, the Press Telegram Publishing Company being made a defendant because it refused to join as a plaintiff in this action.

The complaint alleges the corporate existence of The Daily Telegram Company of Long Beach, the Press Telegram Publishing Company and the Press Telegram Building Company, the latter being the present name of the corporation originally known as the Long Beach Press Building Company. The board of directors of the Press Telegram Publishing Company are the defendants named in this action, together with S. S. Conklin, Oscar Conklin and the plaintiff Belle McCord Roberts. The directors of the Press Telegram Publishing Company, a corporation, are identical in personnel with the directorate of the Press Telegram Building Company. The complaint also alleges that the individual defendants named in this action constitute a majority of the board of directors of both companies. It is then further alleged in the complaint that the Press Telegram Building Company undertook to erect a large building in the city of Los Angeles, and became heavily indebted; that the individual defendants in this action being in control of said corporation, as aforesaid, and also the defendant Press Telegram Pnblishing Company, at divers times appropriated, used and diverted the funds and money of the Press Telegram Publishing Company to said Press Telegram Building Company, in the sum of $75,000. It is further alleged that on or about the twentieth day of December, 1926, at a meeting of the board of directors of said Press Telegram Publishing Company, the individual defendants above named then constituting a majority of the board of directors, caused to be adopted a resolution, in which resolution it was provided and declared that the said Press Telegram Publishing Company should purchase 650 shares of the capital stock of the Press Telegram Building Company. It further appears in the complaint that the board of directors of the defendant Press Telegram Publishing Company have purchased, all told, 658 shares of the capital stock of the Press Telegram Building Company.

*602 Stripped of its legal verbiage, the record shows that the directors of the Press Telegram Publishing Company and Press Telegram Building Company are identical; that the Press Telegram Building Company has been erecting a building to be occupied by the Press Telegram Publishing Company. Some time prior to the beginning of the erection of the building referred to, The Daily Telegram Company of Long Beach and the Press Publishing Company of Long Beach, respectively publishing newspapers, were consolidated, and thereafter only one paper was published and known as the “Press Telegram,” by the Press Telegram Publishing Company. In the consolidation of the companies it appears that The Daily Telegram Company of Long Beach was given thirty-two per cent of the capital stock of the Press Telegram Building Company and thirty-two per cent of the Press Telegram Publishing Company. The Long Beach Press Publishing . Company, under the consolidation, was given sixty-eight per cent of the capital stock of the Press Telegram Publishing Company, and was given sixty-eight per cent of the capital stock of the Press Building Company. The capital stock is still owned in the same proportions by the same companies. In the construction of the Press Telegram Building the Press Telegram Publishing Company advanced money from time to time to the Building Company in the aggregate of $80,800, and had received from the Building Company at the date of the trial, 808 shares of its capital stock. The records introduced upon the trial show the following resolutions adopted by the Press Publishing Company oil December 20, 1926: “Be it Resolved that the Press Telegram Publishing Company accept from the Press Telegram Building Company, in payment of $15,000.00 advanced during the year 1926, 150 shares of the capital stock of the Prsss Telegram Building Company, at par. Be it further Resolved that during the year 1927 that this Corporation purchase at par, as much of the capital stock of the Press Telegram Building Company, not to exceed 500 shares, as the president may deem it advisable, and that such purchase be made from time to time from the profits of the Press Telegram Publishing Company on hand. Be it further Resolved that the actions of this Corporation in purchasing such capital stock of said Press Telegram Building Company during the year *603 1926, be, and the same is hereby approved and ratified as the acts and deeds of this Corporation.” The action before us was begun in January, 1928. Summarized, the complaint alleges that the individual defendants used and diverted funds and money belonging to, and in the treasury of the Press Telegram Publishing Company; that said acts were fraudulent and a breach of trust of said individuals; that said acts were done by said individual defendants for their own profit, benefit, and gain; that the Press Telegram Building Company is insolvent and its shares of stock worthless. The record further shows that $75,000 was borrowed by the Press Telegram Publishing Company from the Pacific Southwest Trust and Savings Bank of Los Angeles, by resolution introduced by the plaintiffs in this action and voted for by all of the directors of the Press Telegram Publishing Company. While there is no action of the directors of the Press Telegram Publishing Company called to our attention relative to the purpose for which this money was to be used, it does appear that the directors all understood that it was to be used for the purpose of advancing money to the Press Telegram Publishing Company, and that the capital stock of the Publishing Company to which we have referred should be accepted for the money so advanced. It may be further stated to clarify whatever confusion might result from the use of the moneys herein, that the stockholders of the Press Telegram Publishing Company were the seven directors thereof, and that the stockholders of the Building Company were the seven directors thereof. Thus, while the two corporations were distinct entities, the directors and stockholders were the same in both corporations. So far as we have been able to trace the money set forth in the transcript originally borrowed by the Press Telegram Publishing Company, or that may have come from the profits of the Press Telegram Publishing Company and advanced to the Building Company, all went toward the payment of the expenses incurred in erecting the building occupied by the Press Telegram Publishing Company, and as presented by the record, the Press Telegram Building Company owns the building, and the Press Telegram Publishing Company and the directors thereof own all of the capital stock of the Building Company. The money referred to, although charged in the complaint to have been *604

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 P. 984, 103 Cal. App. 599, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-prisk-calctapp-1930.