Slinack v. Superior Court

13 P.2d 670, 216 Cal. 99, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 534
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1932
DocketDocket No. L.A. 13565.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 13 P.2d 670 (Slinack v. Superior Court) 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
Slinack v. Superior Court, 13 P.2d 670, 216 Cal. 99, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 534 (Cal. 1932).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is an application for a writ of prohibition to restrain the respondent superior court from exercising jurisdiction in an action brought for the partition of personal property and the appointment of a receiver.

The petition alleges an agreement entered into between California Reserve Company, a California- corporation, and Metropolitan Trust Company of California, approved by the commissioner of corporations, whereby the former company was authorized to purchase first and second mortgages and trust deeds upon improved California real estate and to deposit the securities so purchased with said Metropolitan Trust Company of California, which is designated as the depositary. The California Reserve Company was authorized to sell and did sell to the public certificates evidencing ownership in proportionate shares of all trust deeds and mortgages so purchased and deposited. These certificates provided for interest at eight per cent, payable quarterly. The agreement contained many provisions as to safeguards and guaranties, terms and manner of repurchase of certificates, and duties, obligations, rights and powers of the respective parties not necessary to note. It is sufficient to state that the California Reserve Company was constituted the agent of the certificate holders to collect installments of principal and interest falling due under the mortgages and trust deeds, make payment of interest to the certificate holders, and re-invest the principal and deposit newly acquired securities with said depositary. In said agreement certain acts or omissions on the part of the California Reserve Company were declared to constitute a breach of the agreement on its part. In the event of a breach and written notice as provided, the company was to be considered divested of all of its rights, powers and interest, which should thereupon become vested in the depositary which in turn should hold the mortgages and trust deeds on deposit for the account and benefit of the company and the owners of certificates then outstanding, for the purpose of enforcing the provisions of the mortgages and trust deeds and *102 disbursing the proceeds as the interests of the company and certificate holders might appear.

It further appears from the petition that operations were conducted under this agreement until, at the times hereinafter mentioned, the certificates outstanding numbered 2493, bearing a face value of $1,882,350. The securities deposited evidenced a value of more than $2,000,000. In October, 1931, because of insufficient funds remaining after complying with demands for numerous repurchases of certificates, the company defaulted in the payment of quarterly interest due ■on certificates outstanding, and it appeared that it would continue to be in default. At the request of California Reserve Company and pursuant to a written waiver of notice executed by it, the Metropolitan Trust Company of California, in December, 1931, took over the management and control of the company’s affairs. Subsequently in the same month the plaintiffs, who are three of the largest certificate holders, and two others who later resigned, were nominated by the certificate holders as a committee to meet and advise with the Metropolitan Trust Company of California. On January 15,1932, the latter company commenced an action in the superior court in Los Angeles County naming as defendants the California Reserve Company and two certificate holders, W. G. Nott and J. T. Keirns. By that action the plaintiff sought to have construed the trust agreement referred to and to have declared and defined its rights, powers and duties pursuant thereto under the circumstances noted. In the complaint in that action it was alleged that the defendants Nott and Keirns held and represented divergent views as to the rights, powers and duties of the plaintiff trustee under said trust agreement, also held by the numerous certificate holders, and that each of said defendants Nott and Keirns was joined in the action not only individually but, because of the impracticability of joining all certificate holders in said action, also as the representative and for the benefit of all certificate holders or beneficiaries of the trust, thus divided into two classes, who held the same views as each of said defendants respectively. It was also sought by said complaint to have the court assume continuing jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter and the questions arising during the administration of the trust, for the purpose of giving further in *103 structions and affording additional relief as the need might arise. The defendants in that action were served and appeared therein prior to January 22, 1932.

On January 25, 1932, Marie K. Seuss, Eloise A. Seuss' and Rhcta M. Seuss, three of the certificate holders, commenced an action in the Superior Court in and for Tulare County against California Reserve Company, Metropolitan Trust Company, sixty-five named certificate holders, and certificate holders designated as John Doe One to John Doe Five Thousand. In the complaint in that action it was alleged that no one was authorized to protect and.preserve the liens secured by second mortgages and trust deeds purchased by the California Reserve Company and on deposit with Metropolitan Trust Company of California, and that it was necessary that a receiver be appointed to take charge of and operate said property and preserve the same from loss to the certificate holders. The plaintiffs therein also sought a partition of said property, or a sale thereof and a division of the proceeds in accordance with the respective rights of the plaintiffs and defendants. On that complaint and the ex parle application of the plaintiffs, the superior court in Tulare County, the respondent herein, on the same day, ordered the appointment of S. H. Rosenthal as receiver and, upon the filing of certain bonds, vested in him authority to take possession of and operate all of the properties involved herein. It is alleged that S. H. Rosenthal qualified and is purporting to act as such receiver.

On January 26, 1932, the petitioners herein filed a complaint in intervention in the action pending in Los Angeles County praying for the appointment of themselves as trustees in the place of Metropolitan Trust Company of California on the ground that their administration of the trust, without compensation, would be for the best interests of the certificate holders. On the following day, one of the plaintiffs in the Tulare County action also intervened in the Los Angeles County action and purported to show that the issues raised by the complaint in the Los Angeles County action were then moot, inasmuch as the superior court in Tulare County had appointed a receiver and instructed him on all the questions raised by the action in Los Angeles County and that instructions from the superior court in the Los Angeles County action were then *104 neither proper nor necessary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 P.2d 670, 216 Cal. 99, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slinack-v-superior-court-cal-1932.