Watson v. Commonwealth Insurance of New York

63 P.2d 295, 8 Cal. 2d 61, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 725
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1936
DocketS. F. 15651
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 63 P.2d 295 (Watson v. Commonwealth Insurance of New York) 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
Watson v. Commonwealth Insurance of New York, 63 P.2d 295, 8 Cal. 2d 61, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 725 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

This is an action for damages for the conversion of 2,500 shares of corporate stock by the defendant insurance companies. The charges of conversion grow out of an attempt to salvage the corporation of Watson & Taylor, an insurance agency which had acted as general agent for the defendant companies for a period of years. Except for a qualifying share held by each of the three directors, the plaintiff Kenneth Watson, Churchill Taylor and J. E. Barry, the entire stock of the corporation was owned by the former partners, Watson and Taylor, the ownership being evidenced by certificate No. 5 for 4,997 shares, issued to Watson and Taylor and held in escrow ever since the organization of the corporation by direction of the corporation commissioner.

In December of 1930 Watson & Taylor was indebted to the defendant companies in an undetermined sum representing the balance due on back premiums. The insurance companies demanded payment and in January, 1931, threatened suit. Meetings and conferences were had and negotiations begun between Watson, Taylor, A. T. Bailey, manager and vice-president of several of the defendant corporations, and J. C. Griffiths, president of another of the defendant companies, and, at some meetings, Barry, director of and attorney for Watson & Taylor, and Thornton, attorney for defendants were present. Testimony on behalf of the defendants is to the effect that Watson and Taylor undertook to raise the money and individually promised to pay the indebtedness. Watson denies that be personally undertook to raise the money for the discharge of these obligations (later found to be approximately $106,000), but concedes that Taylor gave his individual promise to pay. At a meeting on January 23, 1931, according to the defendants’ evidence, the following agreement was reached: Watson and *63 Taylor were, on their request, given five days’ extension of time in which to attempt to raise the money and if they were unsuccessful the defendants were to cancel existing contracts and close the agency. Thornton testified that he was called into this meeting and the situation outlined as stated, in the presence of both Watson and Taylor; that he was instructed to draw up a bill of sale to three of the defendant companies which was signed that evening; that by the bill of sale the assets were assigned to him as trustee at the suggestion of Watson and Taylor instead of to Bailey and Griffiths, as originally planned; that several meetings were had thereafter and, Watson and Taylor reporting that they could not raise the money, the accountants having been called in and it having been discovered that there were other outstanding obligations of Watson & Taylor, including an overdraft at the bank, and that the bonding companies were asking for a receiver, more time was refused and another “agreement and bill of sale” to the remaining defendant companies was executed on March 19, 1931. Thereafter, the defendants attempted to interest various insurance agencies in taking over the firm of Watson & Taylor, but were unable to do so and, finally, about March 31, 1931, Watson and Taylor were told that the only arrangement the defendants had been able to make was to turn over the agency to Richards and Rhorer, former employees of Watson & Taylor, with the understanding that if they paid off the indebtedness the agency was to belong to them. Watson and Taylor were to be allowed a drawing account of $200 a month each, which was in fact paid to them for several months. The existing agency contracts were then canceled by mutual consent (April 7, 1931) and new contracts drawn (dated April 21, 1931) with the agency as then constituted but in the old name of Watson & Taylor. In September, 1931, the corporate name was changed to “Richards & Rhorer”, the resolution of amendment having been passed September 2, 1931. The certificate of amendment filed with the Secretary of State recited the ownership of all the stock of Watson & Taylor by Richards, Thornton and Watt, the latter an attorney associated with Thornton and one of the new directors. It is the passage of this resolution to change the name of the corporation to which the plaintiff points as the act of conversion in that it was the exercise of dominion *64 and control over the 2,500 shares of stock which he contends still belonged to him even though the certificate was in escrow and the stock could not be released without permission of the corporation commissioner.

The documents evidencing the transactions are three. The January 23, 1931, “agreement and bill of sale” was executed by Watson & Taylor by K. Watson and C. Taylor, by Bailey for Commonwealth Insurance Company of New York and Pennsylvania Insurance Company of Philadelphia and by Griffiths for the California Insurance Company of San Francisco. It recited the general agency of Watson & Taylor, its indebtedness to the named defendants and that the object of the agreement was the liquidation of the indebtedness and provided that Watson & Taylor does “hereby sell, assign, transfer and set over” to the companies named all the portion of the general insurance business conducted by it as general agents for those companies, including the good will and rights to renewals, and all papers and records in connection therewith and agreed to “endorse and deposit with H. A'. Thornton, as trustee, the entire capital stock of the party of the first part, to be held by such trustee until such time as the indebtedness” was “paid or released”; not to “transfer or permit to be transferred, except as hereinabove set forth, any of the shares of the capital stock”; that the transfer to Thornton should “carry with it the right to vote said shares of stock at any and all meetings of the stockholders or directors” and that “in the event that said indebtedness is not liquidated and paid within five days from the date hereof, said trustee may, and he is hereby empowered to sell said stock, or such portion thereof as may in the opinion of the parties of the second part be necessary to liquidate such indebtedness”. The defendant companies which were party to the document agreed to extend the time of payment of the indebtedness five days and that, upon liquidation of the indebtedness within that period, they would cause the trustee to reconvey the capital stock to Watson & Taylor.

The “bill of sale and agreement” of March 19, 1931, is essentially the same, the parties being Watson & Taylor and Car and General Insurance Company, Ltd., State Assurance Company, Ltd., and Provident Fire Insurance Company, represented by G. T. Forbush. The general agency *65 and the indebtedness which it is the object of the agreement to liquidate are again recited and Watson & Taylor transfers to the named companies the portion of its general insurance business carried on by it as agent for those companies. It is agreed that time for payment shall be extended five days and that in the event of liquidation within five days the bill of sale and agreement shall be null and void but, if payment is not made within that period, to remain in full force and effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 P.2d 295, 8 Cal. 2d 61, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-commonwealth-insurance-of-new-york-cal-1936.