Young v. New Pedrara Onyx Co.

292 P. 55, 48 Cal. App. 1, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 195
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1920
DocketCiv. 3011; Civ. 3053
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 292 P. 55 (Young v. New Pedrara Onyx Co.) 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
Young v. New Pedrara Onyx Co., 292 P. 55, 48 Cal. App. 1, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 195 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

Plaintiffs stockholders of the New Pedrara Mexican Onyx Company (hereafter referred to as the California company), suing on behalf of that corporation, brought this action to set aside a certain resolution adopted by the Compaq’s board of directors on June 27, 1911, whereby, so it is claimed, the board rescinded a transfer to the company of certain shares of the capital stock of another corporation, hereafter, for convenience, referred to as the Mexican Company. There are two appeals, each upon a separate record. Both appeals are from judgments in the same case.

These two appeals were decided and opinions filed qn December 10, 1919. Thereafter, on petition of appellants, a rehearing was granted in each case. The appeal in case No. 3053 is from a judgment of nonsuit entered August 13, 1915, in favor of defendants Smith, Lea, and the Pedrara Onyx Company (hereafter referred to as the Arizona company), and the appeal in case No. 3011 is from a judgment on the merits, entered February 4, 1916. Both appeals will be treated in one opinion.

Our résumé of the principal facts, gleaned in part from the findings and in part from the evidence, will suffice *5 for an understanding of the questions presented. It may he that, as to some of the facts set forth in our statement of the case, there is a conflict in the evidence. Needless to say, nothing that may be said by us should be regarded as a foreclosure of the trial court’s exclusive right to decide, according to the evidence, governed by the exercise of its own sound judgment, any controverted fact that may be presented on the retrial of any issue that may properly be the subject of a new trial upon the case being remanded.

The material facts of the case are these: Some time prior to July 3, 1906, the New Pedrara Onyx Company (the company herein referred to as the Mexican company) was incorporated under the laws of this state with a capital stock of ten thousand dollars, divided into one hundred shares of the par value of one hundred dollars each. Immediately upon its organization all of its shares were issued, one share to each of the company’s five directors—one of whom was the defendant L. A. Blochman-—and the balance, ninety-five shares, to “L. A. Blochman, Trustee.” All of the one hundred shares stood upon the books of the Mexican company in the-names of these five persons until June 29, 1911, when they were transferred to the name of Pedrara Onyx Company, the corporation herein referred to as the Arizona company.

Shortly after the organization of the Mexican company, and prior to July 3-, 1906, the one hundred shares of the Mexican company’s capital stock were pledged to the Bloch-man Banking Company to secure an indebtedness due to it. The bank is not a party to the action. When this pledge was made the certificates evidencing the one hundred shares were indorsed and delivered to the bank as pledgee, but the transaction was not noted on the records of the Mexican company in any manner whatever; and, so far as the boobs of that company show, the five original shareholders continued to be the record owners of the one hundred shares until June 29, 1911, until which (date one share stood on the books of the Mexican company in the name of L. A. Blochman and ninety-five shares in the name of ”L. A. Blochman, Trustee.”

The New Pedrara Mexican Onyx Company (the. California company) was incorporated shortly prior to July 3, 1906. It was incorporated with a capital stock of one *6 million dollars, divided into one hundred thousand shares of the par value of ten dollars each. Its shares were divided into preferred and common stock—twenty-five thousand shares of preferred and seventy-five thousand shares of common stock. Plaintiffs are holders of some of the shares of the capital stock of the California corporation, and, as we have said, they are prosecuting this action in its behalf.

Blochman was elected president of the California company at the first meeting of its board of directors, held July 3, 1906. At this first meeting—the certificates evidencing the one hundred shares of the Mexican company still remaining in the hands of the bank as pledgee, but the shares evidenced thereby still being registered on the boobs of the Mexican company in the names of the five original subscribers—Blochman, so the minutes of the California company show, orally offered to sell and deliver to the California company the entire capital stock of the Mexican company, one hundred shares, and receive in exchange therefor the entire capital stock of the California company —one hundred thousand shares. This offer, so the minutes show, was immediately' accepted by the California company’s board of directors. Thereupon, after the acceptance of Blochman’s offer to exchange the one hundred shares of the Mexican company for the one hundred thousand shares of the California company, Blochman offered to give to the California company the optional right to repurchase all of its twenty-five thousand shares of preferred stock and twenty-three thousand shares of its common stock for the sum of one hundred and sixty thousand dollars, payable at any time within two years. This offer was immediately accepted by the California corporation, and thereupon the first vice-president and secretary of the California company were authorized and directed to enter into a contract with Blochman in accordance with his offer to give such optional right to repurchase said shares for one hundred and sixty thousand dollars.

Four days thereafter, viz., on July 7, 1906, a written instrument, subscribed by Blochman, was delivered by bim to the California company. By this instrument, Blochman, in effect, confirmed his previous oral offer to exchange all of the capital stock of the Mexican company for the stock of *7 the California company. This instrument, so far as material, is as follows: “ . . . L. A. Blochman, of San Diego, California, hereby exchanges and agrees to transfer at once one hundred shares of the New Pedrara Onyx Company [the Mexican company] ... for twenty-five thousand (25,000) shares of the preferred stock and seventy-five thousand (75,000) shares of the common stock of said latter company [the California company], being all of the stock of said company.” Then follows a paragraph in relation to the optional right of the California company to repurchase its shares for one hundred and sixty thousand dollars, and a further paragraph whereby Blochman agrees to deliver as many shares of the stock of the California company as that company should sell, provided he be paid eight dollars on each share sold by the company, less the cost of sale, the same to be credited on the purchase price of one hundred and sixty thousand dollars. Immediately thereafter certificates for all the shares of the California company’s capital stock were made out in the name of Blochman, but remained in the manual possession of that corporation. As the California company’s stock was sold to others at eight dollars per share, certificates for the shares so sold were issued and delivered to the purchasers, among whom are these plaintiffs. The trial court found that the California company neglected to pay to Blochman the proceeds of the shares so sold by it, but, instead, used the money in the conduct of its business.

The property of the Mexican company consisted almost entirely of certain onyx quarries in Mexico.

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Bluebook (online)
292 P. 55, 48 Cal. App. 1, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-new-pedrara-onyx-co-calctapp-1920.