Vannucci v. Pedrini

17 P.2d 706, 217 Cal. 138, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 355
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1932
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14546.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 17 P.2d 706 (Vannucci v. Pedrini) 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
Vannucci v. Pedrini, 17 P.2d 706, 217 Cal. 138, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 355 (Cal. 1932).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

The question presented on this appeal is the legal effect of a by-law of a corporation which was assented to by all the stockholders and of which the party dealing with the stockholders had notice and knowledge. The defendants Plenry Matteucci, Oreste Matteucci, Vincent Matteucci, Evelyn Matteucci and Ida Bianehini were stockholders of the Roma Macaroni Factory, a corporation organized under the laws of this state, and while such stockholders said corporation adopted, with the acquiescence and express consent of said defendants, a by-law reading as follows:

“No transfer shall be valid or shall be registered on the books of the Company without the Order of the Board of *140 Directors, of any shares upon which any assessments have been levied and are unpaid, or the holders of which are indebted to the corporation on any account whatever.
“If certificates shall be lost or destroyed, the Board of Directors may order new certificates to be issued, upon such terms as they may deem satisfactory.
“The shares of stock of the Company shall not be transferable or the subject of sale or pledge, until first offered to the Company at the then book value. If said offer is refused by the Company then said stock shall be offered to the stockholders and if necessary prorated among them or such of them as desire to purchase.
“In each of the foregoing cases, if such offer shall be made and declined by the Company and the stockholders, the shares so offered shall be subject to sale, pledge or transfer, but not otherwise. The shares, if any, so purchased by the Company, shall be resold by it upon such terms as the Board of Directors may determine, but all remaining shareholders shall be first entitled to participate in the purchase in proportion to the number of shares then held by them.
“In no case shall any shares be assignable or transferable until after offer to the company and refusal by it and subsequent offer and refusal by the stockholders to purchase, as aforesaid. ’ ’

Notwithstanding this provision in the by-laws said defendant stockholders sold, or at least attempted to sell, seventy-one shares of stock owned by them in said corporation, without complying with the terms and provisions of said by-law, to the defendant Camilla Pedrini, who had knowledge of the existence of said by-law and of its terms and provisions. This appeal comes to us after judgment rendered upon sustaining a general demurrer to the complaint. To be more specific, plaintiffs filed an amended complaint in which four causes of action are set out in which they asked that, defendants be required to deliver to plaintiff stockholders a fair and just proportion of said seventy-one shares, or a minimum of thirty-eight shares, upon the plaintiffs paying over to said defendants the book value of said stock at the time of said pretended sale, which was alleged to be the sum of $4,282.22. The four causes of action are little more than restatements of the,same facts in somewhat different form. It is not material to any issue involved to show the *141 several statements of these facts in said four causes of action. To each of these four causes'of action the defendants interposed a general demurrer. The court sustained the demurrers and entered judgment accordingly in favor of the defendants, from which the plaintiffs have appealed.

The validity and binding effect of a by-law of a corporation somewhat similar to that set forth above have been before the appellate courts of this state in at least the following three cases of Mancini v. Setaro, 69 Cal. App. 748 [232 Pac. 495]; Mancini v. Patrizi, 87 Cal. App. 435 [262 Pac. 375] ; Mancini v. Patrizi, 110 Cal. App. 42 [293 Pac. 828]. These three cases evidently arose out of the same state of facts and are relied upon by respondents to support the judgment in the instant case. The first of these three cases, in view of the language used by this court in its order denying a hearing before the Supreme Court, to the effect that “We express no opinion as to the question of the validity of the by-law discussed in the opinion of the District Court of Appeal”, must be disregarded as authority upon the point now being considered.

In each of these three cases the plaintiff sued to recover from the secretary and president of a corporation as liquidated damages the sum of $400 under section 324 of the Civil Code, which provided for such penalty in that amount “whenever any officer of any corporation shall refuse to make entries upon the books thereof, or to transfer stock therein, or to issue a certificate or certificates therefor to the transferee as provided by this and the next preceding section”. In those cases the transferee of said stock, the plaintiff in said actions, was a purchaser for value of the stock which defendants had refused to transfer, and purchased said stock without notice of the by-law of said corporation which provided that “No share of stock of this corporation is transferable without the holder thereof first presenting same at the office of this corporation and offering the same for sale to said corporation”. This by-law was not complied with by the owner of said stock prior to his sale thereof to the plaintiff in said actions.

It will be noted that the facts in those cases differ in two material respects from the facts in the case now before us. In those cases the transferee or purchaser of said stock purchased the same without any notice or knowledge of said *142 by-law. In the present case it is alleged that the purchaser of said stock “was informed of and knew of the existence of” the by-law “providing for the offer of said capital stock to the plaintiff stockholders herein prior to such . . . purchase” by her. In the second place, the bylaw considered by the court in those three eases simply provided that no stock should be sold unless the holder thereof should first offer the same to the corporation for sale. The by-law we are considering in the present instance requires that no stock shall be subject to sale “until first offered to the company at the then book value”, and then provides, “If said offer is refused by the company then said stock shall be offered to the stockholders and if necessary prorated among them or such of them as desire to purchase”. The three cases mentioned above, and particularly the last two, lay great stress upon the fact that the purchaser in those cases bought the stock without any knowledge of the existence of the by-law requiring a prior offer thereof to the. company. They also hold that a purchase of its stock by a corporation under the law as it then stood would be in violation of section 309 of the Civil Code prohibiting the dividing, withdrawing or paying to the stockholders, or any of them, any part of the capital stock of the corporation except such as remained after payment of its debts upon dissolution. In support of the first of these two statements we quote from Mancini v. Patrizi, 110 Cal. App. 42 [293 Pac. 828, 829], at page 45, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
17 P.2d 706, 217 Cal. 138, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vannucci-v-pedrini-cal-1932.