20 P.2d 331 | Cal. | 1933
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in an action against the California Land Buyers Syndicate, its directors, and its fiscal agent, to recover real property alleged to have been unlawfully received by the defendant corporation in exchange for shares of its stock, or for other appropriate relief.
At the times involved the defendant California Land Buyers Syndicate was a corporation organized under the *596 laws of the state of Delaware with authority to transact business in this state, and with its principal place of business in San Diego. Its business was to buy San Diego real estate and sell it at a profit. Its fiscal agent was R.L. Stewart, who had an exclusive agency for the sale of the corporation's stock at a commission to him of 20 per cent. Under an amended permit of the corporation commissioner the corporation was authorized to sell units consisting of one investment share and one common share of its capital stock for the sum of $30 per unit, cash.
The plaintiffs were the owners as joint tenants of real property in San Diego consisting of a lot and eight flats. The pleadings admit that the value of this property was $37,500, subject to a mortgage of $7,000. In June, 1929, the plaintiffs deeded their real property to the defendant corporation, subject to the $7,000 mortgage, and received from the corporation certificates representing 1,000 of its investment shares and 1,000 of its common shares in a transaction the details of which were arranged by the fiscal agent, R.L. Stewart, and which inPeople v. Stewart,
It is obvious that the judgment must stand unless the plaintiffs are in pari delicto with the defendant corporation; and, if the plaintiffs are not in pari delicto with the corporation, that it must stand also against the defendants Fletcher and Haskell unless no cause of action was stated and proved against them.
The plaintiffs, at the time of the transaction, were people of about eighty years of age. However, it is not denied that they knew that their property was to be taken in exchange for stock. Furthermore, the pleadings admit that the plaintiffs had seen a copy of the permit issued to the defendant corporation. It is upon these two facts appearing in the record that the appellants base their contention that the case of Domenigoni v. ImperialLivestock etc. Co.,
The defendants Fletcher and Haskell contend that the causes of action stated by the plaintiffs and the theory of the action sound in equity for rescission only and seek a return to them of the property conveyed or the value thereof; therefore, that the plaintiffs may recover only from the party who received the property, which in this case is the corporation. The same defendants also contend that the evidence does not support various findings to the effect that certain statements issued concerning the financial condition, profits and surplus of the corporation, were false and that the defendants well knew their falsity and that said statements, received by the plaintiffs, were issued and published by said defendants, or were relied upon by the plaintiffs; nor the finding that the defendants Fletcher and Haskell participated in the stock transaction involved.
[3] The plaintiffs set up two causes of action, one for the return to them of the real property conveyed or for damages against all of the defendants in the sum of $30,162.28 suffered by the plaintiffs by virtue of the action of the defendants in issuing to the plaintiffs void and valueless *599 certificates of stock, known to the defendants to be void and valueless under the facts alleged in the complaint. The second cause of action was for the same relief based on the alleged fraudulent representations of the defendants as to the business activities and financial condition and the existence of profits and surplus of the corporation. Although the complaint contained allegations of notice and demand and offer to restore the worthless stock, such allegations were unnecessary to the maintenance of the causes of action alleged. The plaintiffs are not restricted to the remedy by way of rescission, but may bring an action for the damages suffered. (Castle v. Acme Ice CreamCo., supra.) Neither is the present action one for money had and received, as in Pollak v. Staunton, supra, relied on by the defendants, wherein judgment was permitted only for the amounts received by the respective defendants.
[4] It is not necessary to consider the sufficiency of the evidence on the questions whether the defendants Fletcher and Haskell were aware of the falsity of the representations with respect to the business activities and financial condition of the corporation, nor whether such representations were in fact false, nor the other matters pertinent to an inquiry on the cause of action based thereon. It is enough to note that the judgment is supported by the findings on the issues raised by the first cause of action and the answer thereto, and that the evidence supports the findings that the defendants Fletcher and Haskell had notice and knowledge that the certificates issued to the plaintiffs were so issued in exchange for real property and with their aid and assistance. The evidence on this phase of the case is that the proposition to exchange the real property for stock was placed before said defendants as directors and the direction for the consummation of the transaction was voted by them. Participation on their part in the issuance of the stock amounts in law to a representation that such stock is valid and genuine, upon which the plaintiffs relied to their damage. (Walker v. HarborRealty etc. Corp., supra; Boss v. Silent Drama Syndicate,
The judgment is affirmed.
Langdon, J., Preston, J., Thompson, J., Seawell, J., Curtis, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.