Rossi v. Caire

161 P. 1161, 174 Cal. 74, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 335
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1916
DocketS. F. No. 7101.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 161 P. 1161 (Rossi v. Caire) 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
Rossi v. Caire, 161 P. 1161, 174 Cal. 74, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 335 (Cal. 1916).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This case involves two appeals, one from an order made on April 3, 1914, directing the distribution of certain money among the stockholders of the Santa Cruz Island Company and directing the defendants, as trustees, to sell the real and personal property of said company at public auction, the other being an appeal from an order denying the motion of the appellants for a new trial.

The Santa Cruz Island Company was incorporated under the California law in 1869 for the purpose of carrying on the business of raising and selling cattle and acquiring such property, real and personal, as should be convenient for that business. Its principal place of business was San Francisco. It acquired a large amount of personal property and also Santa Cruz Island, situated in the Pacific Ocean, in Santa Barbara County, containing about fifty-four thous- and acres of land. On the thirtieth day of November, 1911, by reason of its failure to pay the license tax due under the act of March 20, 1905, and amendments thereto, said company forfeited its corporate charter. At that time the defendants, Arthur J. Caire, Fred F. Caire, Albina C. S. Caire, Delphine A. Caire, and Aglae S. Capuccio, were the directors of said corporation. The capital stock of the corporation was fifty, thousand dollars, divided into one hundred shares of the par value of five hundred dollars each. At the time of said forfeiture of the corporate charter one Amelie A. Rossi owned seven of said shares. The remaining shares were owned in various amounts by the defendants in the case. On May 23, 1912, Amelie A. Rossi transferred to the plaintiff, Edmund A. Rossi, her seven shares and all her interest as stockholder in and to the property and assets of the corporation. Thereafter the said plaintiff began this action. Its object, as shown by the prayer of the complaint, is to enjoin the aforesaid directors from carrying on the business of the corporation and to compel them, as trustees thereof, to wind up its affairs, pay *77 its debts and distribute its assets to the stockholders according to their interests and, specifically, that they thereupon distribute to the plaintiff seven one-hundredths of said assets.

Answers were filed raising issues of fact, the cause was tried, and on June 9, 1913, the court made its findings and conclusions of law, and thereupon gave an interlocutory judgment declaring that the charter of the company was forfeited on November 30, 1911, that the. said directors thereupon became trustees of said corporation and its stockholders, charged with the duty of settling its affairs, that the plaintiff and the other stockholders were entitled to an accounting from the trustees of the property and effects of the corporation, and to have distributed to them, after payment of its debts, their respective shares of said property. The decree also directed the trustees to publish a notice to the creditors requiring them to present their claims within a time stated, and that all claims not so presented would be barred from payment out of the funds in the hands of the trustees, and that they file- a true and correct inventory of all of said property. It declared that all other proceedings in the settlement of the affairs of the company and distribution of its property were reserved for subsequent determination.

Thereafter the plaintiff moved the court for an order requiring the said trustees to distribute to the plaintiff and other stockholders the surplus funds in their hands, as shown by their account filed December 19, 1913, and also directing them to sell the real and personal property of the corporation in their possession as trustees at public auction, after such notice and on such terms as the court should see proper. On April 3, 1914, the court, in pursuance of said motion, ordered the trustees to distribute thirty-five thousand dollars of the money in their hands, derived from the property of said corporation, proportionately to the respective stockholders, within twenty days thereafter, and further ordered that said trustees proceed to sell the real and personal property of said company, at public auction for cash, after . giving a certain prescribed notice. It is from this order that the appeal first mentioned is taken. The order denying a new trial, from which the second appeal is taken, was made upon a motion of the defendants to vacate the interlocutory judgment and the orders aforesaid, and for a new trial, *78 on the grounds that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings and interlocutory judgment or the said orders, that each of them was against law, and for errors of law occurring at the tri.al.

Two preliminary jurisdictional questions are presented which must first be determined.

1. The plaintiff contends that the orders of April 3, 1914, directing the sale and distribution of the corporate property are not appealable. We cannot assent to this proposition. If the judgment of June 9, 1913, is regarded as a final judgment, as plaintiff in one branch of his argument on this point insists, then the orders of April 3, 1914, would be appealable as special orders made after final judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 963, subd. 2.) That judgment, however, merely declared the status of the plaintiff as a stockholder, the number of his shares, his right to distribution, arid directed the trustees to give notice to creditors and file an inventory of the assets of the corporation. In its nature and effect it was preliminary and interlocutory, and not final. (Gray v. Brennan, 147 Cal. 355, [81 Pac. 1014].) The subsequent procedure by motion may have been unusual, but the result was the taking of further evidence and the making of orders for the distribution of the money on hand and the sale of the property. These orders were final in the same sense as any order for the sale of property or for the distribution of funds in litigation is final. The effect of the execution of the orders would be to take the property sold from the possession and control of the court and of the parties, and put the money distributed beyond the power of the court and out of the litigation, so that it could not be regained or affected by the subsequent proceedings. Such adjudications have always been held to be appealable as final judgments, because they are final so far as the property to be disposed of under them is concerned. (Los Angeles v. Los Angeles etc. Co., 134 Cal. 123, [66 Pac. 196] ; Anglo-California Bank v. Superior Court, 153 Cal. 755, [96 Pac. 803]; Zappettini v. Buckles, 167 Cal. 32, [138 Pac. 969].) We are of the opinion that these orders are appealable as final judgments, and further, that upon such appeal there may be a review of the previous proceedings including the sufficiency of the findings to support the interlocutory judgment.

*79 2. The other objection to the jurisdiction is that the action is for the determination of an interest in real property situated in Santa Barbara County, and that, under section 5, article VI, of the constitution, jurisdiction thereof is vested exclusively in the superior court of that county, and that the action will not lie in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco. The point is not tenable.

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Bluebook (online)
161 P. 1161, 174 Cal. 74, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rossi-v-caire-cal-1916.