William Alfred Lucking v. Ojal Mutual Water Company, a Corporation, and the Ojai Valley Company, a Corporation

256 F.2d 403, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4347
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 26, 1958
Docket14945, 14946
StatusPublished

This text of 256 F.2d 403 (William Alfred Lucking v. Ojal Mutual Water Company, a Corporation, and the Ojai Valley Company, a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Alfred Lucking v. Ojal Mutual Water Company, a Corporation, and the Ojai Valley Company, a Corporation, 256 F.2d 403, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4347 (9th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

JAMES ALGER FEE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the dismissal of two complaints brought by Lucking against Ojai Mutual Water Company and The Ojai Valley Company.

The allegations of the first alleged cause of action in the first complaint are summarized by the following:

Defendant Ojai Mutual Water Company is a California corporation, incorporated in 1920 for the purpose of owning water and water rights in Ojai and vicinity and to deliver water to its stockholders only, for their exclusive use upon lands owned by them within certain District boundaries.

Defendant Ojai Valley Company is an Ohio corporation doing business in California of selling lands which it owns within the Ojai Valley. The Valley Company, it is averred on information and belief, was wholly owned by Edward D. Libbey and his immediate family until his death and now is wholly owned by the trustees of his estate.

Appellant, a citizen of the state of Michigan, purchased a total of 70.13 acres of land in the Ojai Valley from Florence Scott Libbey, and by reason of the purchase acquired 151 shares of stock in the defendant Ojai Mutual Water Company. Only those purchasing stock from the so-called Libbey interests *405 are entitled to shares of stock in the Ojai Mutual Water Company, and, when all the lands owned by the so-called Libbey interests, as they are referred to in the complaint, have been sold, any stock left over or remaining is surplus stock and should be cancelled.

The Ojai Valley Company is the owner of approximately 1,500 shares of stock in the Water Company, and by reason of that ownership exercises a controlling interest in the Water Company. No one is entitled to receive water from the Water Company unless the lands to which water is supplied were acquired from the Libbey interests. The amendment to the Articles of Incorporation of the Water Company, requiring one share per acre instead of four shares per acre, is invalid by reason of the fact that no notice of said amendment was given as required by law. Neither Ojai Valley Company nor the Libbey interests ever owned or intend to acquire or intend that more than 500 acres of land should be served by the Water Company. Demand has been made upon both defendants that the shares now owned and held by the Valley Company be cancelled or put in trust for the individual owners who are stockholders in the Ojai Mutual Water Company, and, if Ojai Valley Company sells its shares of stock in the Water Company in excess of $50.00, this would represent an unwarranted profit to the promoters of the Water Company.

Plaintiff is acting on his own behalf and for other individual owners of stock in the Water Company.

Plaintiff’s remaining causes of action in the first complaint all incorporate the allegations of the first cause of action with the following additions.

The second cause of action reiterates in slightly different language the proposition that the only lands entitled to water service are lands derived from the Valley Company or Libbey interests. It is alleged that, by reason of the invalid amendment to the Articles of Incorporation of the Water Company, plaintiff and the other grantees of Ojai Valley Company and the Libbey interests have been deprived of the control of the Water Company.

In his third cause of action, plaintiff alleges the invalidity of the amendment of the Articles of Incorporation.

The fourth cause of action alleges that the Ojai Valley Company will receive unwarranted and unjustified profits by the sale of the stock owned and held by it, which it is alleged are surplus shares.

The fifth cause of action alleges that there is insufficient water in the Ojai Valley Basin and that plaintiff and the shareholders have made actual and beneficial use of the water, and no others have any rights to the use of this water.

The sixth cause of action alleges that the shares of stock in the Ojai Mutual Water Company are appurtenant to the land, but have been treated and held as personalty.

The seventh cause of action alleges that the Ojai Valley Company has no right to own, vote or sell any of the 1,300 shares of surplus stock owned by it in the Ojai Mutual Water Company, and claims the right to and threatens to sell said stock, all to the injury of plaintiff and the other shareholders in the Water Conrpany.

The answer of defendants denies generally and specifically all the material allegations of the complaint and each and every alleged cause of action therein set forth. Defendants also set up special defenses to each and every alleged cause of action that they were barred by Sections 337, 339 and 343 of the California Code of Civil Procedure.

Defendants, as a sixth defense, alleged in substance the acreage owned by plaintiff and the shares of stock had been issued to him for water service, and also that in June, 1945, pursuant to a purchase of 20.92 acres of land, plaintiff received 20 shares of Water Company stock for service of water to this land. This was six years before the filing of his complaint. This special defense further sets forth the reasons for the amendment of the Articles of Incorporation, which was done by reason of the heavy increase in population requiring *406 the extension of water service within the service area, which comprised 2,675 acres of land, being some 2,000 acres in excess of the lands to which plaintiff claims were the only lands to which water could be furnished, namely, lands which were purchased from the Ojai Valley Company or from what he terms the so-called Libbey interests. It is further alleged that, knowing and being acquainted with these facts, plaintiff did nothing and permitted defendants to extend their water service to consumers within the service area.

Defendants also interposed a seventh defense, alleging estoppel on the part of plaintiff by reason of the facts and matters alleged and set forth in the sixth defense and an eighth defense of waiver.

The gist of a ninth defense is that, by reason of the facts alleged and set forth in the sixth defense, plaintiff has acquiesced in and consented to the various acts by defendants which are complained of by him.

The second complaint of plaintiff is entitled “Action for Accounting, Injunctive Relief and for Further Relief.” It contains many paragraphs which are repetitious of the first complaint relative to the invalidity of the amendment to the Articles of Incorporation and the purchase and ownership of stock by plaintiff. The complaint also alleges discrimination on the part of Ojai Mutual Water Company in furnishing and delivering water to its consumers, claiming that certain consumers have been receiving water at a lower cost than other consumers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 F.2d 403, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 4347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-alfred-lucking-v-ojal-mutual-water-company-a-corporation-and-the-ca9-1958.