281 P. 396 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1929
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *96 This is a rehearing of an appeal from a judgment in an action for damages for the breach of a contract and for partial failure of the consideration therefor.
The plaintiffs were the owners of an ice-cream business in Merced, called the Castle Ice Cream Company, valued at $45,000, which was sold and delivered to the defendant corporation subject to an indebtedness of $26,679.65, which *97 obligation was assumed by the purchaser. The sale was consummated pursuant to the terms of a written contract which was executed by the respective parties August 22, 1922. The title to the ice-cream plant passed to the purchasers. In addition to assuming the indebtedness above mentioned, the balance of the purchase price agreed upon was the sum of $1,000 in cash, which was paid and the transfer of "common stock of the Acme Ice Cream Company in the amount of $9,000 par value," which was issued by the corporation and delivered to the plaintiff. In the contract for the purchase of the Castle Ice Cream Company it was agreed that plaintiffs might exchange one-half of the common stock which was transferred to them for preferred stock of the corporation of a similar value. C.O. Swanberg, the president of the corporation, was the owner and holder of 4,500 shares of common stock which had been duly issued to him in payment of a debt due to him from the corporation. In fulfillment of the contract which is involved in this action Swanberg transferred to the corporation his stock. His certificate for 4,500 shares was indorsed and canceled and the corporation, on August 25, 1922, issued to the plaintiffs two certificates of common stock of forty-five shares each of the total par value of $9,000. This stock was issued and transferred to the plaintiffs without the authorization of the corporation commissioner of California. In a contract executed by the respective parties four days subsequent to the original purchase, it was agreed that within two years therefrom the plaintiffs might exchange one-half of their common stock for preferred stock of the same value. On May 25, 1924, pursuant to the last-mentioned agreement, plaintiffs tendered to the defendant forty-five shares of common stock and demanded preferred stock in exchange therefor. The defendant failed and refused to consummate this exchange. Thereafter, for the first time the plaintiffs discovered that the defendant corporation had never procured from the California corporation commissioner an authorization to sell or transfer this common stock, and that the stock transaction was, therefore, void. The plaintiffs then tendered to the defendant corporation the entire $9,000 issue of common stock on the ground that the issue of stock was void, and demanded in lieu thereof the sum of $9,000 in cash, which was refused. This action for damages was then *98 commenced. Judgment for $9,000 was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs. The court found that all of the allegations of the complaint were true and upon the contrary that all of the allegations of the answer in conflict therewith were untrue, but did not specifically find the market value of the stock.
The appellant contends that the plaintiffs' sole remedy consists of an action of rescission which must fail for the reason that there was no offer to restore the entire consideration; that a suit for damages will not lie in an action which is based on a contract, the consideration for which is wholly or partially illegal; that the judgment is not supported by the evidence for the reason that there is a total lack of proof of the value of the stock in question, and that the action is barred by the provisions of the statute of limitations.
It is conceded this is not an action for rescission. A return of the entire consideration was not tendered. Rescission is a proper remedy for cancellation of an unlawful contract when the invalidity does not appear on the face of the instrument. (Sec. 3406, Civ. Code.) It is, however, not the only remedy for loss sustained under facts similar to those which exist in the present case. [1, 2] Clearly, the stock transaction was illegal and void for two reasons: First, because the defendant corporation sold and transferred the stock without authority of the corporation commissioner, and second, assuming that the corporation possessed an authorization to sell the stock in question, there was a failure to comply with the specific requirement of the authorization to the effect that a true copy of the permit was required to be exhibited and delivered to each prospective purchaser of securities before the subscription therefor was accepted.
The California Corporate Securities Act (Stats. 1917, p. 673; Act 3814, Deering's Gen. Laws 1923, sec. 3) provides in part: "No company shall sell . . . or offer for sale, negotiate for the sale of, or take subscriptions for any security of its own issue until it shall have first applied for and secured from the commissioner a permit authorizing it so to do." And section 4 of said act further provides in part: "The commissioner may impose such conditions as he may deem necessary to the issue of such securities. . . ." Section *99 12 of the act renders void any securities issued in violation of the provisions of this statute.
[3] When a part of the consideration for the purchase of property is illegal the entire contract is ordinarily void (sec. 1608, Civ. Code; Tatterson v. Kehrlein,
[6] It is argued that since the ninety shares of common stock of the defendant corporation of the par value of $9,000 were owned individually by Swanberg, the president of the company, and that the sale and transfer of his private stock required no authorization from the corporation commissioner, this transfer of stock was not in violation of statute or void. The contract, however, was with the corporation for ninety shares of its common stock and not with its president *100 as an individual. The record shows: "There was issued to C.O. Swanberg a certificate for 4,500 shares of common stock in accordance with the terms of the permit of the commissioner of corporations then in force; that certificate was duly endorsed by C.O. Swanberg, turned in, canceled, and out of it in addition to other stock, there was issued on the 25th day of August, 1922, to C.H. Castle, Jr., and Mabel Pearl Castle, certificate C-15 for 45 shares and certificate C-16 for 45 shares." This may have been a circuitous way of avoiding the statute. In any event, it was not a transfer of stock from Swanberg to the plaintiffs. His stock was indorsed, transferred to the company and canceled. Other stock was issued directly from the corporation to the plaintiffs without authority from the corporation commissioner. [7] Furthermore, the original agreement to purchase the Castle Ice Cream business specifically provided that the corporation would exchange and transfer to plaintiffs preferred stock of the corporation for one-half of the value of ninety shares of the common stock held by plaintiffs. This part of the contract was also void for lack of authority to make such exchange and transfer of stock.
The only authorization which was obtained from the corporation commissioner prior to the sale and transfer to plaintiffs of the stock in question was dated June 14, 1922, and permitted the sale only of 2,000 shares of preferred stock. The sale of no common stock was authorized. Moreover, this authorization provided: "That a true copy of this permit be exhibited and delivered to each prospective subscriber for or purchaser of said securities before his subscription shall be taken therefor or any sale made thereof to him." Respecting this provision the plaintiff C.H. Castle, Jr., testified: "Q. . . . Did anyone ever exhibit any copy or any permit of the Acme Ice Cream Company to sell stock? A. No, sir." The failure on the part of the defendant corporation to comply with this condition of the authorization to sell stock also rendered the sale void. (Otten v. Riesener ChocolateCo.,
[8] The sale of plaintiffs' ice-cream business having been consummated without fraud or concealment on their part, and the transfer of defendant's stock as part consideration therefor being illegal and void for lack of statutory *101 authorization, the plaintiffs are entitled to maintain this action to recover the value of the stock, which was duly tendered to the defendant corporation. (Tatterson v. Kehrlein, supra.)
The appellant, however, contends that neither the pleadings nor the proof will support a finding of damages for the reason that the plaintiffs failed to allege or prove the actual market value of the stock. [9] It is true that the amount which is recoverable for failure to deliver corporation stock is measured by the market value which must be alleged and proved. (Peek v.Steinberg,
The judgment is affirmed.
Finch, P.J., and Plummer, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on November 2, 1929, and a petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on December 2, 1929.
All the Justices concurred. *103