Rosemead Co. v. Shipley Co.

278 P. 1038, 207 Cal. 414, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 510
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1929
DocketDocket No. L.A. 9961.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 278 P. 1038 (Rosemead Co. v. Shipley Co.) 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
Rosemead Co. v. Shipley Co., 278 P. 1038, 207 Cal. 414, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 510 (Cal. 1929).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

The decree is affirmed. By it the plaintiff, Rosemead Company, a common law trust", is declared the owner of the property in suit. As incidental to this relief, the defendant Shipley Company, a corporation, is found to be the alter ego of its grantor, the defendant Don P. Jones, and is declared to hold the conveyance of said property as security only. The decree also declares the. transaction resulting in the conveyance of said property as security to be usurious and the right to interest is thereby denied. An accounting is had between the parties and a reconveyance is directed upon payment of the true amount loaned and unpaid as found therein; also as further incidental relief, an agreement of compromise between the parties as to the division of the proceeds of a prospective sale is impeached and canceled for fraud and, as incidental to the last-named relief, a quitclaim deed, in furtherance of said agreement, of the property to' defendants by plaintiffs is canceled as is also a decree taken for the same purpose, quieting title to said property in the defendants. The decree is an apt illustration of the scope and efficacy of the powers of a court of equity.

The salient facts needful for the purposes of this discussion are: Plaintiffs, a common law trust and its trustees and beneficiaries, owned, subject to a trust in the Security Trust and Savings Bank of Los Angeles, a subdivision of land known as Rosemead Gardens. Desiring to promote activity in the sale of lots in this tract, plaintiffs conceived the idea of erecting on lot 1 and a portion of lot 2 thereof a store building. The court found the building site to have • been at the inception of this transaction of the value of $4,500. Plaintiffs in this emergency sought the defendant Don P. *417 Jones, a presumed friend, and entered into with him an elaborate agreement in writing, intended doubtless to hide rather than to elucidate the true intent of the parties.

The writing bore date of January 22, 1923, but was executed in March following. It provided in substance that Jones should put up $1,866.67, the amount necessary to release the said site from the trust held by the bank, and should take a deed of conveyance of the property; that a brick store should be erected thereon at a cost not to exceed $9,600, which sum was to be obtained by a mortgage upon the property. Plaintiffs were to procure the builder, agree with him on the terms and were to supervise the construction without charge to Jones. This latter covenant Jones exacted by a special writing. Plaintiffs were to have one year after construction to repurchase the property and improvements for the sum of $3,000 and interest on $2,000 at the rate of seven per cent-per annum from the date of the deed, the balance of $1,000 to draw no interest. Plaintiffs likewise were to secure tenants for the property, but Jones was to receive all rentals and was to apply them to the payment of the contemplated mortgage and interest, taxes, insurance and interest on the $2,000 to himself and to hold the remainder, if any, to be adjusted and accounted for at the time of the exercise of the option by plaintiffs to repurchase. It was further provided, however, that if said rentals were insufficient for all or any of these several purposes, plaintiffs would make such deficiency good. The contract further provided that if at any time during the coming five years the mortgage should be foreclosed and Jones should lose the amount advanced by him, or any part thereof, plaintiffs were to pay him the said deficiency with interest.

Jones put up the said sum and took a deed from the bank. A builder was procured by plaintiffs and the building started, but he proved unfaithful and the parties to this agreement got together and decided to finish the building by each putting up a portion of the sum required over and above the sum of $5,000 that had been raised by a mortgage on the property and had gone into the construction of the building. Under this new arrangement plaintiffs put up the sum of $2,200 and Jones put up the balance. The building was finished in the summer of 1923 *418 and plaintiffs immediately secured tenants for it. Various rentals were from that time forward received by Jones.

The court below on this contract as construed by it, on the conduct of the parties with respect thereto, and on the oral testimony of plaintiffs and their witnesses, found this arrangement to be a loan and the conveyance to Jones a mortgage. This finding is so evidently correct that comment is unnecessary. It is a plain case of a loan of $1,866.67 and an agreement to pay a bonus of $1,133.33, besides lawful interest on the sum of $2,000. The disguise in which the transaction is clothed only emphasizes the fact that it is a loan and a loan at a grossly usurious rate of interest. Several writings of defendant Jones were introduced in evidence showing his exorbitant interest demands and demands for bonuses. One witness testified that Jones said he was getting twenty-eight per cent interest from others and would exact the same rate from plaintiffs.

It is true that within the one year provided for in said writing plaintiffs did not exercise the so-called option to repurchase nor to repay said defendant for the sums advanced by him, but this requirement, if material, was waived by the unsatisfactory statements of account given by Jones to plaintiffs and .the above-mentioned, other executed oral modifications of said contract made to finish said building. However, after the year had expired, Jones did render a statement of his account in which he claimed advances to the amount of $6,135.66, on which he demanded a bonus of $3,691.40, coloring the transaction, nevertheless, by the assertion that it was an offer to sell at such figures.

The court, after declaring the transaction a loan and after decreeing the agreement respecting interest to be usurious, stated the account between the parties and found that Jones had actually advanced over and above the rents received by him the true sum of $3,073.37. If it was proper to deny interest, no criticism of this item can be made.

But the story must be carried further—early in the proceedings, the defendant Jones and his wife deeded said property to defendant corporation, a concern in which they owned practically all the stock and of' which Jones was the president and controlling spirit. It is not claimed, nor could it be claimed, that this corporation is in the position *419 of an innocent purchaser for value. On February 1, 1925, this corporation brought a suit against plaintiffs to quiet title to the property, which suit was answered by plaintiffs by the setting up of the transaction presumably as herein-above outlined. A suit for the foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien in the sum of $750 was also pending at this time. Plaintiffs, seeking to extricate themselves from this maze .of difficulties, essayed to sell the property and to that end procured a bona fide purchaser who was willing to pay the sum of $17,000 for it and to go into escrow arrangements to this effect, which he did on his part by putting up the full proposed purchase price. Plaintiffs then sought out defendants and finally agreed with them in writing upon a division of this purchase price.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 P. 1038, 207 Cal. 414, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosemead-co-v-shipley-co-cal-1929.