Thomas v. Wentworth Hotel Co.

117 P. 1046, 16 Cal. App. 403, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 123
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 13, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 985.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 117 P. 1046 (Thomas v. Wentworth Hotel 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
Thomas v. Wentworth Hotel Co., 117 P. 1046, 16 Cal. App. 403, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 123 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

JAMES, J.

Action brought to enforce payment of two promissory notes executed by the Wentworth Hotel Company, a corporation, one being for the sum of $22,500, made in favor of the First National Bank of Pasadena, and the second for the sum of $25,000, made in favor of the Union Savings Bank of the same city. Appellants were joined as parties defendant because of the fact that they were owners of stock in the hotel company at the time the indebtedness sued on was incurred, and recovery was sought against them on their shareholders’ liability arising under the provisions of section 322 of the Civil Code. Judgment went against appellants for the amount prayed for, except that a deduction of 150 shares of stock was apportioned ‘as a credit among appellants Fleishhacker and Bachman, reducing the number of shares found by the court to be held by them at the time the indebtedness was incurred to the following totals, respectively; Mortimer and Herbert Fleishhacker, 137½ shares each; S. Bachman, 275 shares. The occasion for the making of this reduction is hereinafter referred to in connection with the *406 mention of stock issued to Lewis C. Warner and C. Dana Warner. The appeal is from the judgment and from an order denying a motion for a new trial.

The Wentworth Hotel Company was organized under the laws of the territory of Arizona for the purpose, in part, of transacting business in the state of California. The par value of the stock was the sum of $100. At the time of the organization of the company the appellants were subscribers for shares of stock in the following amounts, to wit: Mortimer Fleishhacker and Herbert Fleishhacker, 175 shares each; David Neustadter and Jacob H. Neustadter, 150 shares each; S. Bachman, 350 shares. No certificates representing the stock were issued to any of the subscribers until November 8, 1906. The subscription contract was signed by appellants prior to the date upon which the indebtedness represented by the two promissory notes was incurred, and provided that payment for the stock subscribed for should be made in four equal installments not less than sixty days apart, upon fifteen days’ notice from the treasurer of the company. The promissory notes represented money borrowed from the respective banks for uses of the corporation. The date of the note to the First National Bank was October 5, 1906; that to the Union Savings Bank was November 16, 1906. On August 23, 1906, and before any payment had been made by appellants on account of their subscription agreements, the board of directors of the hotel company adopted a resolution whereby they proposed to release appellants Mortimer and Herbert Fleishhacker and S. Bachman from their obligation as to one-half of the number of shares subscribed for by each. This resolution recited in substance that, as the said appellants had suffered great loss and damage by the earthquake and fire in San Francisco, to such an extent that they were unable to take all of the stock subscribed for and pay for the same, but as they were willing to take one-half of the number of shares so subscribed for and to make certain cash payments, and that it appeared to be for the best interests of the company to enter into such agreement, that the said appellants were, therefore, released from their subscriptions to the extent stated. Under the terms of this resolution, $5,000 in cash was to be paid by each of the Fleishhackers and $3,750 was to be paid by each on November 1, 1906. Bachman was *407 to pay the sum of $10,000 in cash and $7,500 on November 1, 1906. On October 10, 1906, by a resolution similar in terms, the two Neustadters were to be released from liability as to one-half of the amount subscribed by them upon the payment in cash of the sum of $7,500 each, these amounts being in full payment for one-half of the stock mentioned in the agreement of subscription executed by these two appellants. The amounts of money mentioned in these resolutions were paid by appellants in accordance with the terms thereof. If the .adoption of these resolutions operated to release appellants at the time the action referred to was takén by the board of directors of the hotel company, then at the time the notes were executed the two Fleishhaekers and S. Bachman were the owners of only one-half of the number of shares of stock originally subscribed for by them, and the Neustadters had been released from liability as to a like proportion of their subscription for stock after the first note was executed, but before the note for the sum of $25,000 was made in favor of the Union Savings Bank on November 16, 1906. The trial court determined that the releases attempted to be made were all invalid, and that all of the appellants were liable for their proportion of the indebtedness represented by the two promissory notes up to the full number of shares of the stock contracted to be taken by them under their subscription contracts. The question as to the validity of these releases is the principal one argued. The position taken by respondent is that a subscriber to stock of a corporation cannot be released from the obligation of his contract, except by payment according to its terms, or with the consent of all the remaining stockholders and the creditors of the corporation. With this contention the trial court agreed; hence, its judgment.

Stating the rule in its general sense, it is correct to say that a stockholder may not be released from liability on his contract of subscription without the consent of his fellow-stockholders, as well as that of the creditors of the corporation. The reason for the rule is found in the doctrine, now thoroughly established by the decisions of the American courts at least, which views the subscribed capital stock of a corporation, both paid and unpaid,- as a trust fund which the stockholders and creditors have the right to insist shall not be reduced, diminished or impaired except with their consent. (1 Thompson *408 on Corporations, par. 765; Morgan v. Struthers, 131 U. S. 246, [9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 726, 33 L. Ed. 132].) In considering the application of the rule just stated, however, it must be kept in mind that the creditor of a corporation is not a direct party to the contractual relation entered into between the corporation and a subscriber to its capital stock. Under the trust fund theory the creditor is presumed to have given credit upon the faith that the working capital of the corporation, whether actually paid in or promised to be paid, will be kept available to satisfy his debt. The corporation, then, cannot, without committing a fraud against such creditor, wipe out the fund either by returning the money paid by subscribers or releasing the obligors on their unpaid subscription contracts. The rights of the creditor, nevertheless, do not extend so far as to permit him to interfere and prevent a stockholder from altering his relation toward the corporation with respect to his membership therein as a holder of its shares.

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Bluebook (online)
117 P. 1046, 16 Cal. App. 403, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-wentworth-hotel-co-calctapp-1911.