Underhill v. Santa Barbara Land, Building, & Improvement Co.

28 P. 1049, 93 Cal. 300, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 559
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1892
DocketNo. 13955.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 28 P. 1049 (Underhill v. Santa Barbara Land, Building, & Improvement Co.) 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
Underhill v. Santa Barbara Land, Building, & Improvement Co., 28 P. 1049, 93 Cal. 300, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 559 (Cal. 1892).

Opinions

The Court.

The following opinion, prepared by Commissioner Vanclief while this cause was pending in Department, is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court in Bank; and for the reasons therein given, the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed: —

Vanclief, C.

The Santa Barbara Land, Building, and Improvement Company is a corporation purporting to have been organized under title XVI., sections 639-647, of the Civil Code. The purposes for which it was organized, as expressed in its articles of incorporation, are: “The purchase of real estate, the construction of buildings, and making improvement on real property”; its principal place of business is the city of Santa Barbara, California, and its capital stock is twelve thousand dollars, divided into four hundred and eighty shares of twenty-five dollars each.

The action is to foreclose two mortgages on real property of the corporation, alleged to have been executed by the corporation to Gorham & Co. (a copartnership), and by the latter assigned to the plaintiff.

Martha S. Barker was made a defendant, on the ground that she held a subsequent mortgage on the same property.

*307 Both defendants answered, denying all the material allegations of the complaint, except the allegation that the Santa Barbara Land, Building, and Improvement Company was duly incorporated, which they expressly admitted, and alleging affirmative matters to show that the notes and mortgages were not executed by the corporation, and that the attempted execution of them was in excess of the power of the corporation.

The judgment was for the plaintiff, ordering a sale of the mortgaged property, and application of the proceeds to the satisfaction of plaintiff’s mortgages in preference to that of the defendant Barker.

Both defendants appeal from the judgment, and from an order denying their motion for a new trial; and the corporation also appeals from an order made after judgment requiring it to file an undertaking in the sum of twelve thousand dollars to stay execution pending the appeal from the judgment.

1. Appellants contend that the notes and mortgages constitute “bonded indebtededness” of the corporation, in the sense of section 11 of article XII. of the constitution of this state; and inasmuch as they were not executed in pursuance of any general law, nor with the consent of a majority of the stockholders at a meeting called for that purpose on sixty days’ notice, the execution of them was ultra vires. They also contend that the indebtedness was fictitious.

The court found, however, from evidence sufficient to justifiy the finding, that the consideration for the notes consisted of money advanced to and paid for the corporation, and property sold and delivered to it, by Gorham & Co., equal in value to the principal sums for which the notes were made; and that the whole consideration for said notes was applied by the corporation to the construction of fences, buildings, and other fixtures upon the mortgaged property. But only a part of the consideration for each note had been received by the corporation at the date of the note. Each note and mortgage was executed in pursuance of a previous agree *308 ment that Gorham & Co. were to advance and pay money and deliver lumber as needed and ordered by the corporation for the improvement of the mortgaged property, and the money was so advanced and paid, and the lumber so delivered.- The full consideration for the first note and mortgage (dated July 1,1886) was received by the corporation before the second note and mortgage were executed; and the full consideration for the second note and mortgage (of November 1, 1886) was received by the corporation before January 4, 1887. No fraud on the part of Gorham & Co. is charged; and all the transactions seem to have been in the ordinary course of business, and within the purview of the purposes for which the corporation was organized. Certainly the indebtedness secured by the notes and mortgages is not fictitious in any sense of the word.

Nor is the indebtedness “bonded indebtedness,” in the sense of section 11 of article XII. of the constitution. Without undertaking to define the meaning of the term “ bonded indebtedness,” as used in the constitution, it may be confidently asserted that it does not embrace a non-negotiable note and mortgage executed by a private corporation to secure its indebtedness for money loaned, money paid, property purchased, or labor performed in the ordinary course of its authorized business, and actually received and used in such business. The notes under consideration are not negotiable, as they are payable to Gorham & Co. alone; and they were executed for the considerations received and used as above expressed. Manifestly, it is not the intention of the constitution to prohibit the increase of all kinds of indebtedness, since the prohibition of a particular kind implies that there may be indebtedness of another kind, and if a corporation may incur and increase any kind of indebtedness without sanction of a general law and consent of a majority of the stockholders, what is the objection to securing all such indebtedness by mortgage? If the constitution does not prohibit a corporation from securing every kind of indebtedness by mortgage, it follows *309 that the mere fact that a corporation debt is secured by mortgage does not show that it is of the kind prohibited, and that the prohibited kind must be distinguished by some other attribute than that of mortgage security. It will hardly be contended that section 11 of article XII. of the constitution was intended to prohibit all increase of indebtedness not authorized by a general law and consent of a majority of the stockholders; much less that it was intended to prohibit mortgage security for any kind of indebtedness which a corporation may lawfully incur. Conceding that to constitute “ bonded indebtedness,” in the constitutional sense, it must be secured by mortgage, it does not follow, as contended by counsel, that all indebtedness secured by mortgage is “ bonded indebtedness ” in that sense.

2. Counsel for appellants further contend that inasmuch as the notes and mortgages were executed for indebtedness beyond the subscribed capital stock of the corporation, their execution was prohibited by section 309 of the Civil Code, which provides that directors of corporations must not “ create debts beyond their subscribed capital stock,” and that for a violation of this provision “the directors under whose administration the same may have happened (except those who may have caused their dissent therefrom to be entered at large on the minutes of the directors at the time, or were not present when the same did happen) are in their individual and private capacity jointly and severally liable to the corporation, and to the creditors thereof, in tht event of its dissolution, to the full amount of the .... debt contracted. There may, however, be a division and distribution of the capital stock of any corporation which remains after the payment of all its debts, upon its dissolution, or the expiration of its term of existence.”

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Bluebook (online)
28 P. 1049, 93 Cal. 300, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underhill-v-santa-barbara-land-building-improvement-co-cal-1892.