Vail v. Nichibei Bussan Co.

223 P. 577, 65 Cal. App. 60, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 84
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 26, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 4687.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 223 P. 577 (Vail v. Nichibei Bussan 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
Vail v. Nichibei Bussan Co., 223 P. 577, 65 Cal. App. 60, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 84 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment against him in an action in which he sought to *61 have certain transfers of personal property declared void and the property subjected to execution in satisfaction of a judgment obtained upon August 20, 1921, against the defendant S. Tatsuno for over two thousand dollars upon a promissory note dated September 29, 1920.

The complaint alleged that on September 28, 1917, S. Tatsuno was the owner and in possession of certain personal property consisting of a stock of merchandise in a dry-goods store in San Francisco, California; that about October 15, 1920, S. Tatsuno transferred this personal property to Tsuyo Tatsuno, intending thereby to delay, hinder, and defraud the creditors of S. Tatsuno and subsequent to November 1, 1920, Tsuyo Tatsuno transferred the property to S. Tatsuno, T. Tsuchiya, M. Uehiyama, N. Yokiyawa, and Tsuyo Tatsuno, intending thereby to hinder, delay, and defraud the creditors of S. Tatsuno, and that on December 1, 1920, the five persons last named, as co-owners, transferred the property to Nichibei Bussan Company, a corporation, intending to delay, hinder, and defraud the creditors of S. Tatsuno; that the Nichibei Bussan Company had notice of the intended fraud upon the plaintiff as a creditor of S. Tatsuno.

For a second cause of action, the plaintiff added to the allegations contained in the first count the following: That on September 28, 1920, and prior thereto, S. Tatsuno was the owner of and in possession of the merchandise in dispute and has ever since remained and now is in possession and control of said property and in addition thereto the bank account carried in the name of Nichibei Bussan Company; that S. Tatsuno is manager of and in control of the Nichibei Bussan Company.

The trial court found, specifically, that all of the allegations of the complaint were untrue and found the facts to be: That on or about December 1,1920, the defendants S. Tatsuno, T. Tsuchiya, M. Uehiyama, and N. Yokoyawa, as copartners and co-owners were in possession of the store and merchandise mentioned in plaintiff’s complaint; that at said date the said copartners transferred said property to the defendant Nichibei Bussan Company, a corporation; that said transfer was made in good faith and without any intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor of S. Tatsuno and that said transfer was accompanied by an immediate *62 and continued change of possession of the property transferred.

The appellant complains of the findings against him, asserting they are unwarranted by the evidence. The record is very brief, the plaintiff’s case resting upon the following testimony by the defendant S. Tatsuuo:

“I am one of the defendants in this action. My business is the dry-goods business, at 1701 Post Street. The name of the store is the Niehibei Bussan Company. I have been j connected with it from 1902, I think. I have been employed in the dry-goods business under the name Niehibei Bussan Company from 1902 right down to date. Originally, when I first start in business I had two partners, Mr. Kano and Mr. Koto. Mr. Koto stayed in the business, I think about two years until he died. When he died we paid to his doctors a fee and expenses and that used up' his interest, when we paid the expenses of his funeral and sickness. I think that is it, I don’t know if it was exactly. Later Mr. Kano went to Los Angeles and we separated. I then bought his interest. Then I was all by myself for a little while. Mr. Kano sold out to me one day before the fire in 1906. Then I took in some new partners who are the same men that are with me to-day. We continued to conduct the store as the. Niehibei Bussan Company. When we first opened the store sometimes I signed, and sometimes Mr. Kano signed and sometimes Mr. Koto signed checks for the payment of goods. After Mr. Kano and Mr. Koto went out I signed the checks. I was manager of the store during the course of the partnership formed after Kano and Koto were out. The corporation was formed in 1920. The same men who were my partners after Mr. Kano and Mr. Koto left formed this corporation. There were no new persons interested in the corporation. The business has continued down to the present time as a corporation. I am manager of the corporation. Mr. Tsuchiya is president of the corporation. I sign the checks. The name is just the same except we add ‘a corporation,’ and we have continued on in the same place of business. After Kano and Koto went out of our original partnership no articles of partnership were ever signed between myself and the new partners. No papers were ever made. We never published any notice of the formation of this partnership or that I was selling *63 to them. I am still the manager of the Nichibei Bussan Company, now a corporation, and. I still sign all the checks and I signed all the cheeks before the formation of the corporation. ’ ’

Upon cross-examination, Mr. Tatsuno testified: “At the time the Nichibei Bussan Company, a corporation, took over the store we changed the name over the door and issued cards announcing that it was a corporation and changed the bank account from the name of the partnership to the name of the corporation. Before the formation of the corporation the name was Nichibei Bussan Company, after Nichibei Bussan Company, a corporation, incorporated.”

Appellant argues that since S. Tatsuno merely testified that he “took in some new partners who are the same men that are with me to-day” and failed to state that these men took actual possession of the property or exercised any dominion over the same, the findings should have been that Tatsuno alone remained in possession up to the time of the transfer to the corporation and not that the copartners were in possession of the same at the time of said transfer. This argument overlooks the fact that the burden of bringing himself within the purview of section 3440 of the Civil Code rested upon the plaintiff. He did not sustain the burden of proving the fact that S. Tatsuno, individually, was in “possession and control of. the property” at the time of the transfer to the corporation. Appellant contends that the assumption should be in his favor in the absence of any proof upon the subject. On the contrary, when no evidence is introduced upon an issue, the finding should be against the party having the burden of proof. (Dieterle v. Bekin, 143 Cal. 683, 688 [77 Pac. 664].)

It appears from findings, properly made, that the transfer to the corporation sought to be set aside as fraudulent against the creditors of S. Tatsuno was made by a co-. partnership and not by S. Tatsuno, individually, and that the partnership was in possession of the property at the time of the transfer and delivered the possession of the same to the corporation. The fact strongly relied upon by appellant that S. Tatsuno was retained in the employ of the corporation as manager of the store despite the fact that he had been actively engaged in the management of the business under the partnership arrangement is only a cir-

*64 cumstance which would have aided a finding in favor of appellant upon the question of change of possession had such a finding been made, but there is nothing conclusive about it.

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223 P. 577, 65 Cal. App. 60, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vail-v-nichibei-bussan-co-calctapp-1923.