San Leandro Can. Co., Inc. v. Perillo

258 P. 670, 84 Cal. App. 635, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 398
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 27, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5794.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 258 P. 670 (San Leandro Can. Co., Inc. v. Perillo) 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
San Leandro Can. Co., Inc. v. Perillo, 258 P. 670, 84 Cal. App. 635, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 398 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J.

The plaintiff commenced an action to recover moneys from the defendants. The defendants interposed a demurrer which pleaded that the plaintiff’s second amended complaint did not state facts sufficient; that plaintiff's alleged cause of action was barred by the pro *637 visions of subdivision 4 of section 338, section 359, and subdivision 1 of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure; and certain other matters not necessary to be stated. The demurrer was sustained, the plaintiff declined to amend, and thereupon judgment was entered in favor of the defendants. From that judgment the plaintiff has appealed and has brought up the judgment-roll.

The defendants interposed a preliminary objection to the hearing of this appeal. That objection was based on the same facts and involved the same provisions of law as the preliminary objection made in San Leandro etc. Co. v. Perillo et al., ante, p. 627 [258 Pac. 666].

From an inspection of the judgment-roll it appears that the action was commenced on the twenty-first day of March, 1924. The action was not barred on said date by any statute of limitations.

On November 8, 1920, the plaintiff was a corporation having an unissued capital stock of $1,000,000, divided into 100,-000 shares of the par value of $100 each. It had a board of directors of seven members, the six defendants and another, F. Stenzil, who was deceased at the time this action was commenced. The directors entered into a plan to purchase the plant of another corporation for $135,000 to be paid for in the corporate stock of the plaintiff and to sell $150,000 of the treasury stock. It applied to the corporation department and obtained a permit. The permit, among other things, provided that the compensation to be paid for the sale of said shares should not exceed fifteen per cent; nor should any commission or compensation be paid in connection with any sale made within this state except to an agent or broker holding a certificate from the commissioner of corporations, then in effect, authorizing him to act as plaintiff’s agent; that a true copy of the permit be exhibited and delivered to each prospective subscriber before his subscription should be taken. The permit authorized the sale of the stock for twenty-five per cent cash and the balance of the purchase price to be evidenced by promissory notes payable on or before seven and one-half months. Thereafter stock in the sum of $69,249.61 was sold by Allen E. Pelton, J. E. Faustina, L. B. Mills, P. K. Braly, GL A. Prosser, F. B. Cross, and W. J. Justin. The first two were directors and are made defendants. .The *638 other persons were not directors and are not made defendants. It is alleged that commissions amounting to $16,-193.66 were paid the director-defendants as commissions for the sale of said stock, but it is not alleged how many shares were sold by each of the director-defendants, nor how many shares were sold by any one of the other salesmen, although it is alleged that the other salesmen were paid $3,358.10. It is not alleged how many shares were sold.

It is alleged (1) that no one of the salesmen “was an agent or broker holding a certificate then in effect from the commissioner of corporations authorizing him to act as plaintiff’s agent”; (2) that no one of the salesmen “exhibited or delivered to any prospective purchaser of, or subscriber to, said stock” a copy of the commissioner’s permit; (3) that the defendants prepared and printed a prospectus, but in this connection it is alleged that said prospectus “was not filed in the office of the corporation commissioner and that its contents was concealed from said commissioner.” Belying on these allegations, the plaintiff contends that the payment of all commissions was unlawful and that for making unlawful expenditures these defendants are liable. (Const., art. XII, sec. 3.) The contention is too broad. The alleged facts do not show that the expenditures for commissions were unlawful. They show, at most, that the sales were made in an unlawful manner. Those allegations show a violation of the Corporate Securities Act (Stats. 1917, p. 673) as to the manner of making sales and might justify, against the salesman, the criminal proceedings mentioned in that act, but they did not constitute nor tend to constitute a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff to recover the chmmissions back, nor to make these defendants responsible therefor.

For the alleged wrongful acts of the salesmen the Corporate Securities Act (Stats. 1917, p. 673) gives no cause of action in favor of the plaintiff. The facts alleged show how the new purchasers of stock may have been wronged and how such purchasers may have had a cause of action against the salesmen, but not against the directors who did not act as salesmen. But no facts are pleaded showing a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff corporation.

As to the two director-defendants, it is alleged that neither of them had a prior contract or agreement with said *639 corporation whereby they, or either of them, was to be paid a commission for making sales of the corporate stock. As we understand the argument of the appellant it is to the effect that the claims for compensation of the two director-defendants were, therefore, ultra vires the corporation and could not legally be paid. If this were an action by said directors to recover compensation for the value of their services so rendered, it will be conceded at once that a prior authorization would be of importance. But that rule is not without limitation. In Bassett v. Fairchild, 132 Cal. 637, 643 [52 L. R A. 611, 64 Pac. 1082], the court said: “Now, it has been held that directors of corporations cannot, without previous express contract, receive compensation for such ordinary services as are usually rendered by directors without pay, for the common understanding, as declared by judicial decisions is, that such services are presumed to be rendered gratuitously. But that presumption does not apply to those onerous services performed by officers and agents of a corporation, though they be also directors, for which compensation is usually demanded and allowed, and which could not reasonably be expected to be performed for nothing.” (See, also, Hughes v. Pacific Wharf etc. Co., 188 Cal. 210, 216 [205 Pac. 105].) But we are running afield. This is not an action by a director to recover compensation. The complaint alleges that the directors have already been paid. This is an action to recover back those payments. Counsel do not cite any authorities, and we know of none, to the effect that, in the absence of allegations of fraud, the mere averment that without a prior authorization the payment to a director for services admittedly rendered would be either a void or a voidable transaction.

It is alleged the defendants caused to be printed and circulated a prospectus which stated in effect that the new company was itself selling its shares of stock and in this manner was saving to the company the cost and expenses of hiring solicitors to make the sales. As stated above, the corporation was, in truth and in fact, paying commissions authorized in the sum of fifteen per cent. Assuming, although it is doubtful (Blewitt v. McRae, 88 Wis. 280 [60 N. W.

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Related

Dunbar v. Redfield
61 P.2d 744 (California Supreme Court, 1936)
San Leandro Canning Co., Inc. v. Perillo
295 P. 1026 (California Supreme Court, 1931)
Brewis v. Toffelmier
275 P. 819 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
258 P. 670, 84 Cal. App. 635, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-leandro-can-co-inc-v-perillo-calctapp-1927.