Weintraub v. Superior Court

267 P. 733, 91 Cal. App. 763, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 1035
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 1928
DocketDocket No. 6035.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 267 P. 733 (Weintraub v. Superior Court) 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
Weintraub v. Superior Court, 267 P. 733, 91 Cal. App. 763, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 1035 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

CRAIG, J.

The petitioner in this proceeding commenced an action in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County by filing a complaint, which was amended and, as amended, *764 is made a part of the petition herein, against the California Surety Company, a California corporation; California Surety Company, a Nevada corporation; Fred A. Brun, and unknown defendants designated by fictitious names. The complaint consists of five separate and distinct alleged causes of action. The first count alleges that on or about December 7, 1927, the plaintiff sold and delivered to the defendants certain goods, wares, and merchandise for which they agreed to pay the sum of $392.80, no part of which has been paid. In the second count it is alleged that on said date there was an account stated, that the sum of $392.80 was then found to be due the plaintiff, and that the defendants agreed to pay the same. In the third count the plaintiff avers upon information and belief that the California corporation and the Nevada corporation both comprise the same stockholders, directors and officers, as to personnel, position, and shareholdings; that they are identical and the same as to business management and all other functions, with the same interests and no separate or other capital. It is also alleged in the third count that the plaintiff at all times believed he was doing business with the Nevada corporation; that Brun, its manager, led him to believe that it was legally doing business in California; that the fact that this was untrue came to plaintiff’s knowledge subsequently to the sale and delivery of the merchandise; and that plaintiff has no speedy and adequate remedy at law.

The fourth count alleges upon information and belief that the stockholders of the two corporations have no equity or interest in any stocks of which they are the nominal holders, but that the defendant Brun is the sole and exclusive owner and holder of all of their assets; that Brun is the sole owner of both corporations, that they are insolvent, and the plaintiff is unable to collect the amount due from the Nevada corporation by process of law, but that Brun is solvent and able to pay the same; that in truth and in fact both corporations are the same, and that their obligations are equitably the same.

By the fifth count two promissory notes of “The California Surety Company (Signed) Fred A. Brun,” for $100 each, dated respectively September 30, 1927, and October 31, 1927, payable to the order of Moe’s Printing and Sta *765 tionery Company, which were assigned to the plaintiff, are set forth in haeo verba. It is further alleged that Brun is the sole owner of both corporations, and the only one at whose individual special instance and request the indebtedness was incurred; that he incurred them in the name of the California Surety Company, and is in fact the person obligated therefor; “that plaintiff was inadvertently made a victim of said fraud practiced upon him by said Fred A. Brun in leading plaintiff to believe that the California Surety Company was a Nevada corporation owning large assets and that the said defendant Fred A. Brun there and then knew that the said statements so made to plaintiff were false and that they were made with the intention to defraud plaintiff of the sums complained of.”

Judgment is prayed (1) for $392.80; (2) that the California corporation and the Nevada corporation be declared the same and “that the court pierce the corporate veil of said corporations and declare the obligation of each and all binding upon the other”; (3) “that the said corporations are in truth and in fact the property of Fred A. Brun, and a subterfuge used by him to do business, and that the obligations of said corporations are binding upon him”; (4) for the sum of $200, and (5) for costs and for general relief.

A writ of attachment was issued in said action and levied upon certain property of the defendants, whereupon motion was made to release it upon the ground that the suit was based upon fraud, and was therefore in equity, and that in such event an attachment would not lie. The trial court, after argument and presentation of authorities, announced that the motion would be granted, and the petitioner institutes this proceeding in prohibition, praying that a writ issue restraining the entry and enforcement of an order pursuant to such announcement.

Respondent demurred to the petition for writ of prohibition, assigning as grounds therefor that upon the facts presented by the record the petition does not state a suffi.cient foundation for the relief sought, and again insisting in this court, that the original suit is one in equity wherein, a writ of attachment cannot legally be issued.

The petitioner relies principally upon the authority of Stanford Hotel Co. v. M. Schwind Co., 180 Cal. 348 [181 Pac. 780]. It there appeared that a California corporation *766 entitled the Maryland Dairy Lunch Company became indebted to the plaintiff hotel company for rent, that it was solvent, and apparently meeting its ordinary and current liabilities; that in January, 1916, its directors conceived the fraudulent scheme of organizing a Nevada corporation, authorized to do business in California, and to which all of the places of business and leasehold rights of the original corporation were sold and transferred, except that for which rent was due to the plaintiff. It was alleged that one M. Schwind was the sole owner and held all of the stock, with the exception of one share each standing in the names of dummy directors; that after said transfer the California corporation was dissolved, so that Schwind then owned and operated the restaurant business maintained and conducted upon the plaintiff’s property, but was not a party to the lease, the original lessee was extinct, and both Schwind and the Nevada corporation denied any liability for the obligation upon which suit was brought. The hotel company commenced an action by complaint setting forth these facts, among others, and alleging that said transfer was without consideration, that the purpose of the transfer was to effectuate the continuation of the business of the original corporation under a new name which was in substance and effect but a continuation of the old business, owned substantially by the same persons, for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiff. The prayer of the complaint demanded a temporary injunction restraining the new corporation from disposing of its assets, that the transfer to it of the properties of the California corporation be declared void, that the defendant be charged as holding all of the property subject to the payment of the plaintiff’s claim for $3,617.60 therefrom, and that the property be sold for the plaintiff’s claim and its costs. A writ of attachment was levied in that action upon said property, and the defendant, without answering, moved to dissolve the attachment upon the ground that the cause of action was not one in which a writ of attachment could issue. It being claimed that the cause of action alleged was one ex delicto for fraud, it was there argued, as here, that the suit was in equity, and that property could not be attached therein. The Supreme Court, in passing upon this question, said:

*767

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Bluebook (online)
267 P. 733, 91 Cal. App. 763, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 1035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weintraub-v-superior-court-calctapp-1928.