This is an appeal from the judgment following an order sustaining a demurrer to the complaint. The action was to recover rents alleged to be due from defendants as lessees under a written lease executed to them by one McDonald, as lessor.
The ease as made by the complaint, in so far as is necessary to an understanding of the question presented, is as follows: McDonald, the original lessor, transferred the lease and the property therein described to the Hollister Avenue Pier Company, a California corporation. Thereafter the Hollister Avenue Pier Company forfeited its - charter for nonpayment of the state license tax. Thereafter the persons who, at the date of the forfeiture, were the directors in office of the defunct corporation, as trustees of the corporation and its stockholders, “for the purpose of settling the affairs of said corporation, and for the benefit of the creditors and stockholders thereof, granted, conveyed and assigned to plaintiff . . . all interest in or to the lease hereinbefore set forth, and the- moneys unpaid thereon. ’ ’
No brief has been filed on behalf of respondents. We are informed, however, by appellant’s brief that the demurrer was sustained upon the theory that the assignment to plaintiff by the trustees of the defunct corporation transferred no right that plaintiff can assert in this action.
The amendment of 1907 to the act of 1905 (Stats. 1905, p. 493 ; Stats. 1907, p. 746, sec. 10a) provides that upon the forfeiture -of a corporate charter the directors then in office “are deemed to be trustees of the corporation and stockholders, . . . and have full power to settle the affairs of the corporation. ’ ’
The title to property owned by a corporation at the date of its demise does not pass to the directors who become trustees to settle its affairs. The corporation having ceased to exist, it no longer is capable of holding title or possession. The property formerly owned by it belongs to the persons who were its stockholders at the time it ceased to be a corporation. The directors who, upon the dissolution, become trustees for the corporation and stockholders, receive by the forfeiture only what the statute gives them, and that is a power over the property, not the title, and the "right of possession, for without the right of possession they could not settle the corporate affairs.
(Rossi
v.
Caire,
The general rule is that in the absence of fraud, collusion, or abuse of discretion, the donee of a power of sale under an instrument executed by a private person, as, for example, an executor to whom his testator has donated such a power, may exercise it without the interposition of any court whatever. No license or authority from, nor, in the absence of statutory requirement, confirmation by, any court is necessary. The hand of the donee of a power of sale under an instrument executed by a private individual may be arrested by the courts only when he fraudulently intends to sell in breach of his trust. (31 Cyc. 1183 ;
Matthews
v.
Capshaw,
Subject to the universally recognized rule of construction that, in interpreting legislative grants, it should be held that nothing passes but what is granted, expressly or by necessary implication, in clear and explicit terms, we know of no reason why a legislative grant of a power of sale for the benefit of the stockholders and creditors of a dead corporation, any more than the donation of a power of sale by a private individual, should be subject to supervision by the courts, in the absence of some statute expressly providing therefor. As the court said in
Rossi
v.
Caire,
Judgment reversed.
Sloane, J., and Thomas, J., concurred.
