Ryder v. Bamberger

158 P. 753, 172 Cal. 791, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 608
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1916
DocketL. A. No. 3519. In Bank.
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 158 P. 753 (Ryder v. Bamberger) 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
Ryder v. Bamberger, 158 P. 753, 172 Cal. 791, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 608 (Cal. 1916).

Opinions

Plaintiff's action is for damages for fraud. The gravamen of his complaint is that he was a stockholder in the Salt Lake Oil Company, and was induced by the misrepresentations and concealments of the defendants to sell his stock for two dollars a share, when in truth and in fact it was worth very much more. He lays his damages in the sum of $21,671. Certain of the defendants, and principally the defendants Bamberger, Wood, Price, and Phillips, are specifically charged with the active perpetration and consummation of the frauds, while certain other of the defendants, Chanslor and Porter, while not active in the perpetration of the frauds, are in effect charged as joint conspirators and reapers of the profit.

In outline, plaintiff's cause of action may be thus stated: He was a stockholder of the Salt Lake Oil Company of California, owning 1,667 shares of its capital stock. The total capital stock, all issued, was five hundred thousand shares, of the par value of one dollar per share. Of the defendants, Wood was president, Price manager, J.E. Bamberger a large stockholder and a director of the company, and Phillips a director and secretary. Wood, Bamberger, and Price controlled the company and had pooled the majority of the stock, which they owned. Defendant Porter was the general manager *Page 793 of the Associated Oil Company — a very large and prosperous company capitalized for forty million dollars. Defendant Chanslor was one of the directors of the Associated Oil Company. These men conspired to incorporate, and did incorporate, the Amalgamated Oil Company, which was to be a mere holding company, designed to acquire controlling interests in sundry oil companies and market their products. One-half or more of the stock of the Amalgamated Oil Company was to be sold to the Associated Oil Company, which it was understood should direct the affairs and control the destiny of the Amalgamated Oil Company. The Salt Lake Oil Company was producing oil and its wells were located near Los Angeles. The Associated Oil Company had large contracts for the supply of oil in and in the neighborhood of Los Angeles, which contracts it could much more profitably fill by using the oil of the Salt Lake Oil Company rather than by using its own oil, as its wells were much farther away from this southern territory, and the delivery necessitated a long haul by railroad. It was in contemplation that the Associated Oil Company, thus owning a control of the Amalgamated Oil Company, would turn over to the latter company most of its contracts for the delivery of oil in the southern part of the state, thus insuring to the Salt Lake Oil Company a ready and profitable market for its product. This conspiracy had been effectuated to the extent of an agreement between the conspirators for the organization of the Amalgamated Oil Company, and for the assignment to that company of the valuable oil contracts of the Associated Oil Company, when, for the purpose of securing to their own personal ends and gain the minority stock of the Salt Lake Oil Company, on October 25, 1904, Wood, Bamberger, and Price, in collusion with Porter and Chanslor, sent to all the minority stockholders and stockholders outside of the pool a letter and report. The letter spoke of the difficulty of financing the company and in avoiding assessments on its stock, due to the depressed condition of the oil market and the strenuous competition at unremunerative prices for the sale of oil; that these conditions threatened "to leave values very uncertain for an indefinite period," and that therefore "the principal owners of the capital stock have accepted an offer of two dollars per share. In doing so we deem that the best values that can be secured for our stock for some period in the future has been accomplished. *Page 794 We have obtained for every stockholder until the first day of December, 1904, the opportunity of having his stock taken over at two dollars per share cash. Any other policy would have to result in assessments and a radical competition in the disposing of the oil." The letter further set forth that the stockholders would receive this two dollars per share for their stock upon sending it, properly indorsed, to the Security Savings Bank of Los Angeles. Accompanying each of these letters was a copy of the report of defendant Price, the manager. This report demands exposition. Before making it, however, and in explanation of the report itself, it is pertinent to point out that the Salt Lake Oil Company was the lessee of one thousand acres of land, holding this land under the terms of a most stringent lease. The lease called for continuous drilling until at least one producing well was obtained upon every three acres of oil-producing land. It provided for the relinquishment by the lessees at the expiration of five years after the successful completion or the abandonment of the first well of all of the leased premises except such portion as should have been demonstrated to be oil producing in paying quantities by actual operation at the time. It allowed a suspension of developing but not of drilling for a period not exceeding three months whenever oil could not be sold at the wells in excess of fifty cents a barrel. The royalty of the lessor was a gross one-sixth of the oil product, with free transportation of this one-sixth through any conduit laid by the lessee. There were other terms unnecessary to set forth of equally drastic character, and of the lease it may be said finally, that years after the date of the transactions here complained of, and after enormous expenditures of money in the effort to secure oil, but two hundred and ninety acres of the one thousand acres had proved to be oil land, while at the time of these transactions but one hundred and sixty acres had so been proved.

Returning now to the report above referred to. That report declared that a group of twenty wells had been sunk, all of which were producers, excepting numbers 1 and 2. Four or five more wells were under way. The financial statement was unsatisfactory. The liabilities were fifty-two thousand dollars over all available assets. Notes payable amounted to fifty-five thousand dollars, a part of which had been advanced by the directors personally, and a large part of which *Page 795 was due to the bank on demand notes. Heavy expenditures were necessary to comply with the terms of the lease, and the additional requirements anticipated for 1905 over and above all possible receipts was estimated at forty thousand dollars. The condition of the oil market in Southern California, and particularly that condition as it affected the Salt Lake Oil Company, was represented as uncertain and perilous, with no prospect of improvement in the immediate future. We may now, with advantage, quote from the report itself, for the reason that it contains the asserted misrepresentations upon which appellant relies, representations, however, every word of which the trial court found to be fair and true. The setting forth of this report will relieve from the necessity of elaborating in this statement of facts, upon the existing condition of affairs.

"The pipe line is now under construction and our contract calls for 80% payment on these expenditures every 10 days. Our monthly expenses must be met promptly. The amount on special account is long past due and should be taken care of. Our loan at the bank is due on call. Although that may be continued for a period of time, as long as business looks prosperous for the company, but in view of the unsettled conditions of the oil market, the tendency of prices downward, there is no certainty as to how long the bank may look favorably upon the loan. It requires $20,000.00 or $25,000.00 working capital to swing our business from pay-day to pay-day at the present time.

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Bluebook (online)
158 P. 753, 172 Cal. 791, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryder-v-bamberger-cal-1916.