Wright v. Delta Properties, Inc.

180 P.2d 57, 79 Cal. App. 2d 470, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 850
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 5, 1947
DocketCiv. 13105
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 180 P.2d 57 (Wright v. Delta Properties, Inc.) 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
Wright v. Delta Properties, Inc., 180 P.2d 57, 79 Cal. App. 2d 470, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 850 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

*471 NOURSE, P. J.

This is an action for an accounting and for the establishment of a trust in real property based on a joint venture allegedly having existed between plaintiff W. Q. Wright and Theodore Y. Halsey, the predecessor of defendants. The trial court found against the existence of a joint venture and plaintiff appeals.

In the early nineteen twenties appellant, W. Q. Wright, a civil engineer, organized the Wright Corporation for the exploitation of certain tracts of delta land which had belonged to his father. Appellant was at all times president and general manager and, after he had taken over on credit the interest of his sister, who married Theodore Y. Halsey, was also the majority stockholder of the corporation, holding 80 per cent of its stock. The Wright Corporation issued to the public $600,000 bonds secured by most of the real property of the corporation. When in the 1929 depression the bonds defaulted there were still $441,500 outstanding; moreover, there were at that time unsecured debts amounting to some $100,000. A Bondholders’ Protective Committee and a Board of Trade Committee for the unsecured creditors were formed; appellant was continued in his position. For several years, during which these conditions prevailed unchanged, appellant tried to interest his brother-in-law T. Y. Halsey in different plans for the reorganization of the company. Although T. Y. Halsey in the course of time loaned the corporation more than $100,000 in security not subject to the bonded loan, it was not until late in 1935 that plans for decisive changes took shape. Under date of December 18, 1935, a memorandum of an agreement between appellant and T. Y. Halsey was prepared by Mr. Gray, then T. Y. Halsey’s attorney, for signature by the parties. It provided in part that Halsey would offer to buy the outstanding bonds of the Wright Corporation at 20 per cent of their face value, that he would advance $7,500 for certain expenses and as security, that appellant would aid Halsey to obtain the bonds, and if the same were acquired, to organize a new corporation which would purchase and operate the properties which secured the bonds and that the common stock of the new company would be divided 49 per cent to appellant and 51 per cent to Halsey. It does not provide how the means to finance the operation would be obtained. This memorandum was never signed. Nevertheless, it plays an important role in this suit.

*472 On January 10, 1936, T. V. Halsey made to the Bondholders’ Protective Committee an offer the provisions of which were in accord with those of the unsigned memorandum. It stated that Halsey in making this offer was acting for unnamed principals friendly to the Wrights. The Protective Committee submitted the proposal to bondholders but' the completion of the transaction was delayed by the fact that on April 14, 1936, T. V. Halsey suffered a stroke which kept him away from his office until August. On May 29, 1936, A. B. Halsey, who was employed by his brother T. V. Halsey as an assistant with respect to his real estate interests —T. Y. Halsey was primarily a telephone corporation executive—asked appellant’s cooperation in getting extension of the terms within which tendered bonds had to be paid. Appellant complied. At the time that T. Y. Halsey made his extension request to the Bondholders’ Protective Committee offering a further advance of $5,000, appellant made available a quitclaim deed of his corporation to the properties covered by the bonds and that corporation waived any remedy by which it could impede execution in case the purchase of the bonds would not be timely consummated. The extension was granted and the purchase of the bonds consummated. The funds required for the transaction were obtained by T. Y. Halsey by means of a personal loan from the Bank of America. The letter in which he applied for this loan mentions a required amount of $165,000. He promised as security a first mortgage on all the properties of the corporation after foreclosure. Appellant had also made available to T. Y. Halsey 90 per cent of the stock of the corporation to serve as security. At different times in the year 1936, appellant claimed in conversations that he had an interest in the properties to be acquired.

On August 20, T. Y. Halsey sent appellant a letter in which he informed appellant in substance that he had acquired 80 per cent of the outstanding bonds and had demanded a trustee’s sale, that he intended to purchase all the property covered by the bonded loan and that he put appellant on notice that if he would be the successful bidder he had no intention of giving any participation in the properties to the Wright Corporation or any of its stockholders. This, however, would not prevent him from employing appellant on a salary or on another basis to supervise engineering and other matters.

The trustee’s sale took place September 19, 1936, and T. Y. *473 Halsey was the successful bidder. He had organized a corporation under the name Delta Properties Inc., without any cooperation of appellant but this first corporation never functioned and did not take over the purchased properties. T. Y. Halsey operated these under the fictitious name “Delta Properties Company.” A letter of appellant of September 19, 1936, in which he reports to A. B. Halsey on a meeting of the Board of Trade Committee for the unsecured creditors contains the following sentence: “I repeated that there was no agreement between Mr. Halsey and myself regarding the equity, but it was my hope that something could be arranged in the future. ’ ’

Beginning September 1, 1936, T. Y. Halsey paid appellant a monthly salary of $450. This salary was cut to $250 monthly by a letter of September 30, 1939, to $175 monthly by a letter of July 31, 1940, and eliminated completely by a letter of July 21, 1941, after which date appellant still performed engineering services for T. Y. Halsey or his second corporation, which services were each paid for separately. The letter of July 21, 1941, uses the term “you and other employees.”

The second corporation under the name Delta Properties Inc.,—the first had been dissolved—was organized by T. Y. Halsey, his son, T. Y. Halsey, Jr., and A. B. Halsey; the articles dated August 22, 1940, were filed October 30, 1941. This corporation is the respondent of that name. One of the properties sold at the trustee’s sale, Jersey Island, was transferred by T. Y. Halsey to it and this respondent still held title to it at the time of the trial. All other properties purchased at the trustee’s sale were disposed of prior to the trial. As to these sales and the conditions of them, appellant was never consulted. One of the properties, the Wright tract, was sold in 1941 for $190,000. Also during these years appellant sometimes claimed in conversations that he had an interest in the properties sold, but until after the death of T. Y. Halsey on March 10, 1943, he took no legal action nor is there any evidence that until that time he ever asserted his claim in writing. Theodore Y. Halsey, Jr., the other respondent in this action, was duly appointed executor of his father’s last will. This action was commenced July 17, 1943.

The complaint is in two counts, of which the first alleges an oral agreement of joint venture between appellant and T. Y.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Martinovich v. Pelton
295 P.2d 483 (California Court of Appeal, 1956)
Estate of Durham
238 P.2d 1061 (California Court of Appeal, 1951)
Hollingum v. Moore
227 P.2d 845 (California Court of Appeal, 1951)
Millard v. Millard
227 P.2d 477 (California Court of Appeal, 1951)
Barthorpe v. Brown
223 P.2d 884 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)
Spolter v. Four-Wheel Brake Service Co.
222 P.2d 307 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)
Garcia v. Heaton
203 P.2d 560 (California Court of Appeal, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 P.2d 57, 79 Cal. App. 2d 470, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-delta-properties-inc-calctapp-1947.