Stubbe v. Cordova

23 F.2d 257, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3172
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 27, 1927
DocketNo. 2065
StatusPublished

This text of 23 F.2d 257 (Stubbe v. Cordova) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stubbe v. Cordova, 23 F.2d 257, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3172 (1st Cir. 1927).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Circuit Judge.

This case is before us on a demurrer, and under the well-known rule all facts well pleaded are to be taken as true. ■ -

The parties were formerly members of a mercantile partnership doing business under the firm name of Gandía & Stubbe. On July 24,1916, they executed what is called a “deed of dissolution, or articles of dissolution and liquidation of a mercantile partnership.” By this certain specific property belonging to the partnership was assigned to each partner.

The value of the property assigned to Gandía was $23,888.71, of that assigned to Stubbe $58,555.01, in which was included 250 shares of the stoek of the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company at its par value of $100 each, or $25,000. Sixty shares of this stoek stood in the name of Stubbe, 60 shares in the name of Gandía, 5 shares in the names of other parties, and the remaining 125 shares in that of the firm of Gandía & Stubbe.

A liquidator was agreed upon, who was to “take charge of the books and open the corresponding) liquidation accounts, charging Stubbe and Gandía with the assets of which they have taken charge, and crediting the same to the corresponding accounts. The liabilities of the firm of Gandía & Stubbe shall be paid by the liquidator, charging the same to the corresponding accounts.”

Section 8 of the articles of dissolution is as follows:

“The partners agree upon the following special conditions for the purpose of the liquidation : (a) Gandía will sell to Stubbe all of his stock in the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company at par, one-half of all the dividends declared by the said company remaining to the credit of Gandía.”

This provision has been the fruitful source of a great deal of litigation between the parties, which has engaged the. attention of this court at three different times. In Gandia v. Porto Rico Fertilizer Company the plaintiff obtained a judgment in the district court of San Juan, October 28, 1920, ordering the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company to carry on its stoek and transfer books 60 shares of its stoek in the name of Gandía, and pay him whatever dividends were declared and distributed upon it from the profits of the corporation, and also that the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company pay to Gandía the sum of $8,234.06 and interest on the same at 6 per cent, annually from February 28, 1917, said amount being one-half of the dividends upon stoek of the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company due and unpaid at the date of the dissolution.

The Supreme Court of Porto Rico reversed in part the judgment of the district court on the ground that J. D. Stubbe or his assignees, the firm of Stubbe Bros., were necessary and indispensable parties to the action, and affirmed that part of its judgment which held that the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company should pay to the plaintiff the sum of $8,234.06, with interest.

This court, in its opinion in 291 F. 18, held that neither J. D. Stubbe, nor his assignees, Stubbe Bros., were indispensable parties, reversed the judgment of the Supreme Court of Porto Rico in this particular, and remanded the ease to that court for further proceedings not inconsistent with its opinion.

In the cross-action of Porto Rico Fertilizer Co. v. Gandia, this court affirmed the judgment of the Supreme Court of Porto Rico, so far as it affirmed the judgment of the district court.

After receipt of the mandate of this court by the Supreme Court of Porto Rico, it proceeded to determine the ownership of the 60 shares of stoek, and held that these shares were by the deed definitely transferred to Stubbe by Gandía.

On appeal to this court it was held (2 F. [2d] 641) that, “for the purpose of effecting the liquidation, the 60 shares standing in Gandia’s name were 'his stock/ to be transferred and paid for at par, plus his half of the dividends already declared, or $8,234.06.” This court reversed the judgment of the Supreme Court of Porto Rico, and remanded the case to that court for further action, not inconsistent with that opinion.

Upon receipt of this mandate, the' Supreme Court of Porto Rico affirmed the judgment of the district court of Porto Rico, in which it held that the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company should pay to Gandía the sum of $8,234.06, dividends, and interest, and that [259]*259it should carry upon its stock and transfer books the name of Gandia as the owner of 60 shares of its stock, and consider him as one of its stockholders to the extent of 60 shares, and pay him dividends thereon. .

An appeal to this court was taken from this judgment of the Supreme Court, and this court held, in a per curiam opinion (7 F.[2d] 1021), that the judgment of the Supreme Court conformed to the mandate of this court, and affirmed its judgment, with costs.

In the present action Stubbe filed a complaint in the district court of San Juan, Porto Rico, against Gandia, setting forth the dissolution of the partnership between them and the deed by which this was effected. His complaint contains three causes of action. In the first it is alleged that the firm of Gandia & Stubbe was the owner of 250 shares of stock of the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company, including the 60 shares standing in the name of Gandia; that in the deed of dissolution Gandia agreed to transfer the said 60 shares to the plaintiff, but had refused so to do; and that upon these said shares dividends had accrued to the amount of $7,830.13, which the defendant demanded. Under this cause of action the plaintiff in substance prays that this court reverse its decision made in Gandia V. Porto Rico Fertilizer Co., supra.

The second cause of action sets forth the eighth section of the deed of dissolution, which provides in substance that Gandia “will sell to Stubbe all of his stock in the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company at par, one-half of all the dividends declared by the said company remaining to the credit of Gandia,” and alleges that it was the intention of the parties, as disclosed “by the deed itself and by contemporaneous facts and circumstances,” that Gandia was to transfer or indorse the certificate which ho held for said 60 shares, without receiving any payment except what accrued to him upon the allotment of the whole 250 shares to Stubbe for the sum of $25,000, but stating that, if for any reason the court should conclude that Gandia is bound to transfer the 60 shares of stock to the plaintiff for their par value, the $6,000 be charged to the plaintiff, Stubbe, in the liquidation. Under this cause of action the plaintiff prays that this court reverse so much of its decision as hold that the sum of $6,000 should be paid to Gandia upon the transfer by him of the 60 shares of stock of the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company, and hold that said sum of $6,000 should be paid from any balance found to be due upon liquidation from the plaintiff to the defendant.

The third cause of action, relying upon the allegations in the first two causes oE action, alleges that by the deed of July 24, 1916, all the property of Gandia & Stubbe was distributed between the partners, and there only remained the accounts payable and accounts receivable to be liquidated; that all the accounts payable were paid by thq partners themselves after dissolution; and that the accounts receivable had been collected by the liquidator, Arturo Trias, appointed by the deed, and one Juan Diez de Andino, appointed by the court as trustee to take possession of the properties in the 'liquidation of the firm.

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Related

Gandia v. Porto Rico Fertilizer Co.
2 F.2d 641 (First Circuit, 1924)
Gandia v. Porto Rico Fertilizer Co.
291 F. 18 (First Circuit, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
23 F.2d 257, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stubbe-v-cordova-ca1-1927.