Stanley v. Robert S. Odell and Co.

218 P.2d 162, 97 Cal. App. 2d 521, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1569
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 16, 1950
DocketCiv. 14146
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 218 P.2d 162 (Stanley v. Robert S. Odell and Co.) 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
Stanley v. Robert S. Odell and Co., 218 P.2d 162, 97 Cal. App. 2d 521, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1569 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

Joseph T. Stanley brought an action for $10,000 for money had and received against Robert S. Odell and Company, Robert S. Odell, Pacific States Savings. and Loan Company, State Guaranty Corporation, Pacific States Auxiliary Corporation, Frank C. Mortimer and Frank C. Mortimer as Building and Loan Commissioner. Pacific States Savings and Loan Company cross-complained against Stanley and one Miller, agent of Stanley, to recover possession and to quiet its title to $10,000 in Pacific States investment certificates. *523 Stanley claimed these certificates as his own. Mortimer, individually and as commissioner, was dismissed as a defendant. Miller, who had physical possession of the certificates, deposited them in court and was dismissed as a cross-defendant. The trial court held against Stanley on his complaint, and no appeal is taken from that portion of the judgment. The trial court decided in favor of Stanley on the issues presented by the cross-complaint and quieted his title to the certificates. From these portions of the judgment Robert S. Odell and Company, Robert S. Odell, State Guaranty Corporation and Pacific States Auxiliary Corporation, as well as Pacific States Savings and Loan Company appeal. The first four named were not parties to the cross-complaint. They were in the case solely as defendants named in the money had and received action filed by Stanley. The issues presented in that action were decided in their favor, and no appeal is taken from that portion of the judgment. Not being parties to the cross-complaint, they have no right to appeal from the portions of the judgment disposing of the issues solely presented by the cross-complaint. Pacific States Savings and Loan Company and Stanley, so far as the issues presented by the pleadings are concerned, are the sole claimants to the certificates. This being so, the purported appeals by Robert S. Odell and Company, Robert S. Odell, State Guaranty Corporation and Pacific States Auxiliary Corporation must be dismissed.

This case presents another facet in the litigation resulting from the seizure by the Building and Loan Commissioner of the assets and properties of Pacific States on March 4, 1939. Pacific States, as permitted by law, resisted the seizure. Its validity was upheld by the trial court and by the California Supreme Court, the date of the Supreme Court decision being January 31, 1945. (Pacific States Sav. & L. Co. v. Hise, 25 Cal.2d 822 [155 P.2d 809, 158 A.L.R. 955].) While this case was pending and still undecided, and thereafter, the commissioner, pursuant to his statutory power to liquidate, took bids on various properties owned by Pacific States, and, where he thought the bid was adequate, sought court approval of the proposed sale. Odell, who was the moving and controlling spirit in all of the corporations above named, appeared in one of his various capacities at such court hearings, and, whenever he believed the bid to be too low, would protest the confirmation and challenge the validity of the proposed sale on constitutional grounds. He would *524 then appeal from the order of confirmation. The present controversy grew out of just such a transaction.

Stanley had been engaged in the furniture business at 719 Mission Street, San Francisco, for over 20 years. His lease on those premises expired on December 1, 1944, and he knew that he would have to move from those premises on that date as early as July of that year. He made arrangements to rent the premises at 725 Mission Street, but the best deal he could get at that location was a month-to-month tenancy. He was most anxious to secure a permanent location in the immediate neighborhood. The only building available for his purposes was 739 Mission Street, then owned by Pacific States.

Miller, a real estate broker, interested Stanley in the property at 739 Mission Street. On October 26, 1944, Stanley made a bid, in open court, of $86,500 cash for this property. This bid was withdrawn when the court announced that it would not accept bids on the property on that date. At that hearing Odell told Livingston, Stanley’s attorney, that: "Before we let you get away with that and get that property at any such price we’ll keep you in court for five years.” Livingston repeated this conversation to his client. Thereafter, Stanley submitted a formal bid to the commissioner of $85,000, and, after the commissioner sought but was unable to secure a higher bid, the commissioner, on November 20, 1944, accepted that bid and petitioned the court for approval of the sale. The trial court had had its own appraisals of the Pacific States properties made, and on the date here involved had two appraisals of the Mission Street property, one for $90,000 and one for $100,000. The trial judge refused to accept the $85,000 bid, and stated that he would not approve a sale at less than $95,000, the average of the two appraisals. Stanley thereupon, in open court, bid $95,000 cash for the property, which bid the court approved. The court, thereupon, made its order authorizing the commissioner to sell the property to Stanley' at the bid price. Gardiner Johnson, attorney for Pacific States, and for some of the other defendants named in the complaint, orally objected to the sale, placing his objections entirely on constitutional grounds. No objection that a higher bid was available, or that the proper procedure had not been followed, was made. At this time—November 20, 1944—the Hise ease was still undecided by the Supreme Court, the District Court of Appeal by a divided court had reversed the order of seizure, *525 and, although the Supreme Court had granted a hearing, the validity of the seizure was still in doubt.

After the court order authorizing the sale had been made, and on the same day, the commissioner and Stanley executed a deposit receipt, which was, in effect, a contract of sale. The document acknowledged receipt of 10 per cent of the purchase price, and provided for the opening of an escrow. The escrow ivas to last 30 to 60 days and Avould then be terminated if the seller was unable to convey insurable title within that time, and within any extensions that might be granted by the buyer. While this escrow was still open, and on January 5, 1945, Pacific States appealed from the court order authorizing the sale. Because of this appeal, Stanley agreed with the commissioner that the escrow would remain open pending the determination of the appeal and for 30 days thereafter, if the appeal were determined in the commissioner’s favor.

This appeal was one of 62 such appeals filed by Pacific States. None of these appeals was ever completed by Pacific States by the filing of the transcripts or by paying the filing fees. In the instant case, Livingston, on behalf of Stanley, had the transcripts prepared. The attorney for Pacific States failed to file any brief in this case or in any of the other 61 cases. Livingston tried to expedite the appeal and wrote to the appellate court objecting to any further extensions, but no brief was filed. Finally, in September of 1945, the attorney-general, on behalf of the commissioner, moved to dismiss all of the appeals on the ground that the appeals were frivolous, in that all constitutional questions had been decided adversely to Pacific States in the Hise case, and only such questions were presented on the appeals.

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Bluebook (online)
218 P.2d 162, 97 Cal. App. 2d 521, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-v-robert-s-odell-and-co-calctapp-1950.