San Leandro Canning Co., Inc. v. Perillo

295 P. 1026, 211 Cal. 482, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 722
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1931
DocketDocket No. S.F. 13387.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 295 P. 1026 (San Leandro Canning Co., Inc. v. Perillo) 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
San Leandro Canning Co., Inc. v. Perillo, 295 P. 1026, 211 Cal. 482, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 722 (Cal. 1931).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

The plaintiff, a California corporation, commenced this action against the defendants, who were its former directors, to require the latter to repay into the treasury of the corporation the sum of $19,551.76, alleged to have been the money and property of the corporation which had been illegally withdrawn from its treasury through the action of the defendants while they were the directors of the corporation, and which were alleged to have been so withdrawn and expended under the circumstances set forth in the plaintiff’s second amended complaint. The original complaint was filed on March 21, 1924. The demurrer of the defendants to the second amended complaint was based upon two main grounds: First, that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute "a cause of action; and, second, that the plaintiff’s cause of action as alleged therein was barred by the provisions of subdivision 4 of section 338, section 359, and subdivision 1 of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The trial court sustained the demurrer upon each of said grounds and entered judgment in the defendants’ favor upon the declination of the plaintiff to further amend. The plaintiff appealed from this judgment to the District Court of Appeal, First District, Division Two, which reversed the judgment and ordered the demurrer to be overruled. (San Leandro Canning Co., Inc., v. Perillo et al., 84 Cal. App. 635 [258 Pac. 670].) In revers *484 ing the judgment the court expressly held that the action was not barred upon the date of the commencement thereof by any statute of limitations. This holding was apparently predicated upon the averments of the complaint to the effect that during all of the times mentioned in the complaint at which the moneys and property of the plaintiff corporation were asserted to have been illegally withdrawn by or through the acts of the defendants they, the defendants, were in full control of the plaintiff corporation as the directors thereof. The other matters adverted to by the appellate tribunal in its reversal of the judgment will be considered later in the course of this opinion. Upon the return of the cause to the trial court following such reversal the defendants filed their joint answer to plaintiff’s aforesaid second amended complaint, in which, after specific denials of the substantial averments thereof, the defendants repeated their plea to the effect that the plaintiff’s alleged cause of action was barred by the provisions of the several .sections of the Code of Civil Procedure above set forth. The cause went to trial upon the issues as thus framed, whereupon certain evidence was presented by the respective parties which formed the basis for the findings of fact and conclusions of law of the trial court. These facts, which are substantially undisputed, may be briefly summarized as follows: On or about November 8, 1920, the plaintiff was a California corporation having an unissued capital stock of $1,000,000, divided into 10,000 shares of the par value of $100 per share. It had at that time and thereafter up to a time shortly before the commencement of the present action a board of directors of seven members, the individuals composing which were the six defendants herein and another who was deceased at the time this action was commenced. These directors were during said period, as expressly alleged in said complaint and as expressly found by the trial court, in control of the affairs of the corporation and of the expenditure and disposition of the moneys and property thereof. The directors on or about said date entered into a plan to purchase the plant of another corporation for the sum of $135,000, to be paid for in corporate stock of the plaintiff, and in order to carry into effect such purpose to sell $150,000 worth of the treasury stock of the corporation. They therefore caused *485 the corporation to apply to the state corporation department for a permit to issue and sell said treasury stock, which permit when issued, among other things, provided that the compensation or commission to be paid for the sale of said shares of stock 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 authorizing him to act as plaintiff’s agent in making such sales; a true copy of the permit was to 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, the balance of the purchase price to be evidenced by promissory notes payable on or before seven and one-half months from the date of said permit. Acting upon this permit, and in some cases in anticipation thereof, certain of the directors of the corporation undertook to make sales of the said treasury stock of the corporation to various persons without possessing any authorization from the state corporation department so to do in order to conform to the requirements of the aforesaid permit. The two directors who undertook so to do were Pelton and Faustina, who received, according to the findings of the trial court, as commissions on the sale of so much of said treasury stock as were made by them, the sum of $14,112', of which the sum of $12,009.50 was paid by the action of the defendants herein as directors of the corporation to their codirectors Pelton and Faustina before March 21, 1921, and the sum of $2,062.50 after March 21, 1921. The court further found that the sum of $3,004.12 was paid as commissions to others than these two directors on account of similar sales of said stock. It would thus appear that the total sum paid out of the treasury of the corporation upon said sales of its treasury stock, according to the findings of the trial court, was $17,116.12. The total sum found to have been received by the corporation for the sale of its said treasury stock was the sum of $70,279.41, upon which, at the rate allowable for commissions under the terms of said permit, there would be payable to those legally entitled to receive the same the sum of $10,541.91. There are certain discrepancies in the foregoing findings of the trial court which may be cor- *486 reeled upon a retrial of the cause; as for example with respect to the total sum paid by or on behalf of the corporation to directors Pelton and Faustina as commissions for their services in selling said stock, the answer of the defendants expressly alleges that said directors received therefor the sum of $6,228.75 in cash, and also received from the corporation certain promissory notes of the face value of $10,000 on account of commissions for the sale of said stock. These two sums aggregate $16,228.75. The defendants undertake to evade the full effect of this admission upon the theory that the promissory notes so alleged to have been received by said two directors were property of the corporation as distinguished from money, and that for any unlawful transfer and receipt of said property the defendants cannot be held liable in this form of action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 P. 1026, 211 Cal. 482, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-leandro-canning-co-inc-v-perillo-cal-1931.