Welch v. Sargent

59 P. 319, 127 Cal. 72, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 601
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1899
DocketSac. No. 691.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 59 P. 319 (Welch v. Sargent) 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
Welch v. Sargent, 59 P. 319, 127 Cal. 72, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 601 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

This is an equitable action brought/by a creditor of the Stockton Combined Harvester and Agricultural Works, a corporation, and to obtain a judgment against certain stockholders therein to the extent of the unpaid balance due from them on their subscription to the capital stock of said defendant corporation; to have certain transfers of stock, alleged to Imve been fraudulently made, declared illegal, the transfers canceled, and that judgment be entered against the transferrers. General relief is also asked. The pleadings are multitudinous and present many phases all grouping around the defendant corporation, while all the pleaders seek some sort of relief fifom it and from each other.

PhíintiíPs intestate, on April 28, 1894, became a judgment crcd/itor of the corporation. Plaintiff alleges that at a time when the corporation was insolvent certain defendants, for the purpose of evading liability, transferred, without consideration, tó certain other defendants, alleged to be then and now insolvent, specified shares of its capital stock. Defendant Houser pleads certain facts relating to the way he acquired his stock as exempting him from liability thereon; that he obtained his stock as fully paid up and unassessable, and that he had settled 'with the intervener—the Stockton Savings and Loan Society— '.and had been by it released. Some of the defendants file erossicomplaints setting up that they are holden as indorsers on a pertain note given by the corporation to the intervenor, the ¡loan society, for $60,000, of which $57,000 remain unpaid. (Dhese defendants allege that some of the stockholder defendants still owe twenty-five per cent bn their capital stock, and ¡they seek to have the fund arising from such stock applied to '.said note. Defendant R. C. Sargent files a cross-complaint, /much the same as the last above defendants, and in a still further cross-complaint avers that he and certain other defendants on March 17, 1892, executed to defendant J. P. Sargent their promissory note for $50,000, upon which the makers obtained that sum of money and advanced the same to the corporation under an agreement that it would pay the note when due; that it paid all of said note except $16,069.68, for which *76 unpaid balance the holder of the note has sued the makers; this defendant prays that the assets of the corporation may be applied to its. indebtedness generally, including this note. Defendant Baldwin also files a cross-complaint alleging that the corporation owes him and another attorney a fee, of which his share is $500, and prays that its assets may be applied to its debts, including" "this__claim. The loan society, like plaintiff, has a judgment against the'-murporation, entered December 28, 1893, upon which, by complaint Tn intervention, it claims an unpaid balance of $153,034.27, and pra^payment be made to the loan society, ratably with other indebfeétness of the corporation, out of any sum found coming to the corporation from the stockholders. Plaintiff answers this intervention and among other things alleges that the loan society molds securities given it by the corporation sufficient to pay thi^judgment, and that this intervener, the loan society, should\not share the other assets of the corporation without delivering\up its securities to the common creditors’ fund. James A. Loutt^t, as executor, intervenes, setting up that his testatrix, on February 18, 1885, obtained a judgment against the corporation for $13,966.90, no part of which has been paid; he sets up substantially the facts as pleaded by plaintiff, and asks to hav^ the fund derived from the unpaid stock applied ratably on thiá judgment. Executions on these several judgments were re-'^ turned nulila bona. The foregoing will convey a general idea of j the issues.

Certain, but not all, of the defendants appeal from the order denying their several motions for a new trial. There is not appeal from the judgment. The court found, as conclusions ofl law, that there is due from the corporation to plaintiff, the, intervenors, and certain cross-complainants, a sum largely in excess of the unpaid balances due on the capital stock of the corporation. That the court cannot fix the amount now due th e loan society until the unpaid subscriptions are paid in and the value of the securities held by the loan society is ascertained and the securities are collected. That cross-complainants B. C. Sargent and Baldwin are entitled to no credits by reason of the matters set forth in their cross-complaints and answers; that as to the equities claimed by certain other defend *77 ants and cross-complainants, the court cannot entertain or consider them, but will do so when the amount due on the unpaid stock shall have been paid in, and until such payments said equities cannot be ascertained; that the several transfers of stock in the pleadings and findings mentioned, except as to defendant Fred. M. West, are fraudulent and void, and as to West’s transfer it is void as against the creditors of the corporation; that judgment should be entered in favor of certain parties against certain named defendants in amounts named, being the amounts due on the unpaid stock of the corporation; that there being divers persons interested in the fund to arise from said subscriptions to the stock of the corporation, it is necessary that a receiver be appointed to receive all sums paid under the judgments, to be held subject to the order of the court.

It is quite difficult, within any reasonable space, to fairly present the facts and the law upon the various conflicting interests involved. Avoiding unnecessary minutiae we will endeavor to dispose of the salient questions. It sufficiently appears from the evidence that the corporation was insolvent when the transfers of stock complained of were made as found by the court, and has been insolvent ever since, and that the transferrers knew the fact; and the evidence also sustains the finding that the transfers were made out of the ordinary course of business, were voluntary and without valuable consideration, and were made to insolvent or irresponsible transferees, and, except as to defendant F. M. West, with intent on the part of the transferrers to escape liability. This finding relates to the following defendants: E. 0. Sargent, William Inglis, L. 1J. Shippee (defendant Tarbox’s intestate), C. Grattan, F. M. West, Otis Perrin (defendant Kate M. Perrin’s testate), Kate M. Perrin, W. H. McKee, and Frank Burton. The owners of shares when the action was begun, not embraced in the foregoing category, are: Daniel Houser, W. A. Shippee, B. F. Langford, 0. H. Fairchilds, George A. McKenzie, F. T. Baldwin, P. B. Fraser, S. S. Littlehale, and George Inglis. There is no finding as to defendant and stockholder T. H. McCall, who owns eighty shares, for the reason that he has not appeared and is beyond the jurisdiction of the court, being a nonresident. It was found that defendant and stockholder Fairchilds had been *78 discharged of liability by insolvency proceedings. It was found that there remained unpaid on all the shares of the defendants above named a balance of twenty-five per cent except on the ten shares of Littlehale, which were fully paid up; and chat the corporation had neglected and refused to levy any further assessments upon the shares owned by these defendants, or to collect the unpaid subscriptions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P. 319, 127 Cal. 72, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-sargent-cal-1899.