Southern California Home Builders v. Young

188 P. 586, 45 Cal. App. 679, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 686
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 3133.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 188 P. 586 (Southern California Home Builders v. Young) 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
Southern California Home Builders v. Young, 188 P. 586, 45 Cal. App. 679, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 686 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BRITTAIN, J.

Five former directors of the plaintiff, a going corporation, appeal from a judgment for something *681 over thirty thousand dollars, the aggregate of three dividends paid during their administration, the trial court having found that none of the dividends was paid from surplus profits.

Under two broad contentions, that section 309 of the Civil Code does not permit the maintenance- of such an action as this by a corporation except for the benefit of creditors, and that good faith on the part of the directors is a complete defense to such an action, numerous questions are presented. Except in one particular, to which further reference is made, counsel for respondent assumes, and, after serious consideration, the court is of the opinion, the questions are properly before it upon a sufficient record.

The facts necessary to be considered are undisputed, and, without following the details of the trial procedure, may be summarized as follows: On the demand of the defendants a jury was called to establish the value of the corporation’s realty at the dates of the respective dividends. By stipulation these figures were modified, and, as so changed, were adopted by the court as a part of its findings. The court also found that at the date of each dividend the liabilities of the corporation exceeded its assets. For the sake of brevity the figures are tabulated, each dividend having been for two and one-half per cent of the par value of outstanding stock, declared and paid respectively at the dates indicated, as follows:

Apr. 15,1913. Oct. 15,1913. Jan. 15,1914.

Realty value ...........$311,091.00 $334,394.00 $327,222.00

Deficit ................. 50,099.19 117,534.35 142,312.40

Dividend ............... 8,958.99 9,635.14 11,492.61

The court further found that the defendants, at the date when each dividend was declared, had before them as directors a statement, inventory, and balance sheet, furnished by the employees of the corporation in charge of its books in the ordinary course of its business, purporting to show undistributed in the treasury and accumulated between the dates of the organization of the corporation and the particular dividend, surplus profits sufficient to pay the dividend, but that the statement, balance sheet, and inventory were not true, full, or correct statements of the financial condition of the corporation, for the reason that the property was shown at a fictitious value largely in excess of its actual value, and also because many items carried as assets *682 should have been carried as losses, and many carried as profits should have been carried as liabilities, and that if' the statement, balance sheet, and inventory had been true and correct, they would have shown the corporation had not made surplus profits, but that there was a deficit. These findings were based on evidence taken during fifty-eight days of trial, ten of which were devoted to the determination of the value of the real property. The evidence introduced is not before the court, it being recited in the bill of exceptions that sufficient evidence was introduced to support the findings, except those not heretofore mentioned, that the corporation was damaged to the amount of the respective dividends, upon which no evidence was introduced other than the fact of their payment.

Eliminating those clauses not involved in this appeal, section 309 of the Civil Code is as follows: “The directors of corporations must not make dividends except from surplus profits arising from the business thereof, . . . nor must they divide, withdraw or pay to the stockholders or any of them, any part of the capital stock. . . . For a violation of this section, the directors under whose administration the same may have happened-.' . . are, in their individual or private capacity, jointly and severally liable to the corporation, and to the creditors thereof, to the full amount of the capital stock so divided, withdrawn, paid out or reduced ...”

[1] The appellants contend that an action cannot be maintained by the corporation to recover upon the liability defined in the section except on behalf of creditors. The language of the statute at first glance would appear to be too clear to permit an interpretation limiting the right of the corporation to recover property taken from it. A forceful argument is presented to show that such a first impression cannot be supported upon sound reason.

A similar statute was adopted in New York in 1825, in New Jersey in 1846, and in this state in 1850. It is unnecessary to consider the changes in these statutes by amendments affecting either their language or punctuation. It is contended they are but codifications of a common-law rule, that the capital of-a corporation. im-a.. trust, .fund-first for the creditors and then for the stockholders, for the misapplication of which the directors were liable as trustees. *683 This view seems to have been held, in 1902, by Mr. Justice Pitney, now of the supreme court of the United States, then the vice-chancellor of the court of chancery of New Jersey. In a very learned and illuminating opinion he reviewed a great number of English and American cases, and reached a conclusion upon which he sustained a demurrer to bills in consolidated suits by certain stockholders against directors of two corporations, saying, among other things: “It would be unjust and inequitable for the stockholders directly or indirectly to recover from the directors the very moneys which they have already received.” (Siegman v. Maloney, 63 N. J. Eq. 422, [51 Atl. 1003].) An appeal having been taken under another name from the order made on demurrer, the court of errors and appeals reversed the ruling. In the course of the opinion, written by Mr. Chief Justice Gunmere, he said: “The apparent object of the provision is to afford protection equally to the corporation and to its creditors against loss by reason of the illegal act. But the creditors can suffer no injury from it unless the capital is so impaired as to render the company insolvent. Not so with the corporation. Any impairment of its capital is harmful to it in some degree; the seriousness of the injury depending upon the extent of the impairment. For the full protection of the company the liability of the company must be absolute. ... In our judgment, the legislature intended by this provision to afford the full measure of protection which the words provide.” Concerning the statement that it would be inequitable to permit stockholders to recover from directors money they had themselves received as dividends, it was said: “The argument assumes there will be no transfer of the stock of the company during the period of the liability of the directors. The assumption is' unwarranted. The very declaration of the dividend, evidencing, as it does, the apparent prosperity of the company, creates a desire on the part of outsiders to become holders of the stock. It at the same time decreases the actual, while increasing the apparent, value of the stock. The result is to afford unscrupulous directors, and stockholders who are cognizant of the illegal action of the board, an opportunity to unload their holdings upon innocent purchasers at fraudulently inflated prices. . . .

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188 P. 586, 45 Cal. App. 679, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-california-home-builders-v-young-calctapp-1920.