Wenban Estate, Inc. v. Hewlett

227 P. 723, 193 Cal. 675, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 354
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1924
DocketS. F. No. 10312.
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 227 P. 723 (Wenban Estate, Inc. v. Hewlett) 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
Wenban Estate, Inc. v. Hewlett, 227 P. 723, 193 Cal. 675, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 354 (Cal. 1924).

Opinions

LENNON, J.

In this action in equity the plaintiff sought and secured a judgment against the defendants declaring 500 of the plaintiff’s first mortgage bonds, of the par value of $500,000, to be null and void and requiring the defendants to surrender and deliver them up to plaintiff, upon the ground that said bonds were never issued by the corporation plaintiff nor delivered to the defendant Hewlett, who pledged *681 or transferred them to the other defendants, and that no consideration for their issuance and delivery, if any, was ever given or received as required by the fundamental and statutory law of the state, which provides that “No corporation shall issue stock or bonds, except for money paid, labor done, or property actually received, ...” (Const., art. XII, sec. 11; Civ. Code, sec. 359.)

After the institution of this action Caroline S. Wenban, who was originally named as a defendant, died, and Flora Wenban Mills, the executrix of her will, was substituted in her place and stead. Mary A. Huntington, also originally named as a defendant in this action, died after the action was instituted. Howard Huntington, the executor of her will, was substituted as a defendant in her place and stead. Since the appeal was taken to this court Howard Huntington died and Louis S. Beedy was appointed administrator with the will annexed of Mary A. Huntington’s estate in the place and stead of Howard Huntington as executor thereof, and said Beedy, as administrator, was in the court below substituted as defendant in his place and stead and a like order of substitution has been made by this court. Since the appeal was taken Mary E. Nelson, also named originally as a defendant in this action, died, and W. W. McNair was appointed executor of her will, and as such executor has been substituted as a defendant in her place and stead by orders made in the lower court and in this court.

The plaintiff’s complaint consisted of two counts, the first of which only need be considered, with relation to the points presented in support of the appeal, for the reason that no findings were made in response to the issues involved in the second count.

The first cause of action pleaded in plaintiff’s complaint alleges, among other things, that on the nineteenth day of June, 1909, the plaintiff, the Wenban Estate, Incorporated, executed a deed of trust bearing date July 1, 1908, to the Southern Trust Company, Incorporated, of Los Angeles, whereby the plaintiff corporation granted, conveyed, assigned, and transferred to said trust company, as trustee, certain property then owned by said plaintiff corporation, to secure, as the same should be issued and delivered by plaintiff, the payment, equally and without priority, of *682 1.000 bonds numbered consecutively from 1 to 1,000, both inclusive, bearing date of July 1, 1909. Said deed of trust, it was alleged, was thereafter delivered 'by the plaintiff corporation to said Southern Trust Company, as the trustee therein mentioned, and was on the eleventh day of August, 1909, duly recorded in the recorder’s office of the city and county of San Francisco.

The plaintiff’s complaint further alleges that 500 of said 1.000 bonds, which said trust deed was provided to secure, when the same should be issued and delivered by said plaintiff, were duly issued and delivered by said plaintiff corporation to one Caroline S. Wenban, as part consideration to her for certain property theretofore purchased from her by said plaintiff corporation and theretofore conveyed and transferred and delivered by her to said plaintiff corporation, and that said.last-mentioned 500 bonds and all thereof so issued and delivered by said plaintiff corporation to said Caroline S. Wenban were issued and delivered by said plaintiff corporation in good faith for property received by said plaintiff corporation, and that they and each of said bonds became and were, through such issue and delivery, the valid and existing obligations of said plaintiff corporation secured by said deed of trust.

The complaint, however, further alleges that, save and except the 500 bonds issued and delivered to Caroline S. Wenban, none of the 1,000 bonds of said plaintiff described in the deed of trust from the plaintiff to the Southern Trust Company, as trustee, ever was issued or delivered or authorized to be issued or delivered by said plaintiff; and that the plaintiff has never received any consideration whatsoever for said bonds or any thereof; and that any purported issue or delivery of said bonds to any person or persons at any time was and is wholly without authority of this plaintiff and without consideration.

It is further alleged that fifty-one of such unissued and undelivered bonds are now in the possession of said plaintiff corporation; that four of said bonds are in the possession of Hewlett; that 200 of the 'bonds are in the possession of Mary A. Huntington and that ownership of said 200 bonds is claimed by her 'by virtue of a pretended transfer of the same from the defendant Hewlett; that 150 bonds are in the possession of the German-American Trust and Savings Bank, *683 and that this bank claims a right to the possession of said bonds by virtue of a claimed agreement of pledge with Hewlett; that fifteen of such bonds are in the possession of the Security Trust and Savings Bank and this bank claims the right of possession to said bonds by virtue of a' claimed agreement of pledge with Hewlett; that eighty of said bonds are in the possession of Mary E. Nelson, right to the possession of which bonds was claimed by her by virtue of a claimed agreement of pledge with Hewlett; and that Mary A. Huntington claims the absolute ownership of an additional 200 of the bonds, some of which are now in the possession of either the plaintiff corporation or of the other defendants.

The complaint also alleges that the defendant Hewlett was during all of the times involved in the controversy in suit a member of the board of directors of the plaintiff corporation, and that all of the defendants had knowledge of this fact at all of the times of entering into the purported transactions by virtue of which they respectively claim ownership or the right' of possession to the unissued and undelivered bonds in suit.

The plaintiff’s complaint prayed that it be ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the bonds in suit were not' valid obligations of the plaintiff corporation; that none of the defendants holding said bonds have any right or lawful claim thereto; that the defendants having possession of said bonds be ordered and directed forthwith to surrender and deliver the same to the plaintiff corporation; that the title to such bonds be quieted in the plaintiff corporation free and clear of all claims of any kind of said defendants; that the rights of the various holders of all of the bonds of the corporation plaintiff issued and outstanding and their priorities and equities between each other, if any such there be, be ascertained and determined.

The plaintiff’s complaint, however, proceeded to pray further that in the event it should be determined that the defendants who are holding any of the bonds in suit or claiming (adversely to the plaintiff corporation) any inter- .

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Bluebook (online)
227 P. 723, 193 Cal. 675, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wenban-estate-inc-v-hewlett-cal-1924.