295 P. 1026 | Cal. | 1931
The plaintiff, a California corporation, commenced this action against the defendants, who were its former directors, to require the latter to repay into the treasury of the corporation the sum of $19,551.76, alleged to have been the money and property of the corporation which had been illegally withdrawn from its treasury through the action of the defendants while they were the directors of the corporation, and which were alleged to have been so withdrawn and expended under the circumstances set forth in the plaintiff's second amended complaint. The original complaint was filed on March 21, 1924. The demurrer of the defendants to the second amended complaint was based upon two main grounds: First, that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; and, second, that the plaintiff's cause of action as alleged therein was barred by the provisions of subdivision 4 of section 338, section 359, and subdivision 1 of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The trial court sustained the demurrer upon each of said grounds and entered judgment in the defendants' favor upon the declination of the plaintiff to further amend. The plaintiff appealed from this judgment to the District Court of Appeal, First District, Division Two, which reversed the judgment and ordered the demurrer to be overruled. (San Leandro Canning Co., Inc., v.Perillo et al.,
[2] When this cause was before the appellate tribunal upon the former appeal it was expressly though quite too briefly stated in its decision that the cause of action set forth in the plaintiff's complaint was not barred at the time of the commencement thereof by any statute of limitations. The unexpressed reason for this ruling was doubtless that set forth in the complaint, to the effect that during the course of the transaction out of which this controversy arose *487
and for a period of time up to within three years prior to the date of the commencement of the action the defendants were the directors of said corporation, and as such were in the full control of its affairs and finances. These averments of the complaint having been for the purposes of said decision taken to be true, it would follow, under what we deem to be a well-settled principle of law, that the statute of limitations does not commence to run against unlawful acts and expenditures made by or under the direction of the directors of the corporation while they were in full control of its affairs and of the expenditure of its funds. (City of Oakland v. Carpentier,
[4] When this matter was before the appellate court upon the former appeal that tribunal undertook to indulge in a course of reasoning the effect of which was to arrive at the conclusion that as to the averments of the complaint *488
with respect to payments made to the directors Pelton and Faustina and to certain brokers within the limit of the fifteen per cent allowed to be paid as commissions under the terms of the permit to sell its stock issued by the Corporation Commissioner the plaintiff was not entitled to recover the same in this form of action, even though it should be made to appear, as by the averments of the complaint it was made to appear, that said sales were made and said commissions paid in violation of the provisions of the Corporate Securities Act and of the permit issued thereunder, for the reason that the persons making such sales had not received the requisite certificate which would entitle them so to do. With this portion of the aforesaid opinion of the appellate tribunal this court was, however, apparently in disagreement, since upon petition for hearing in this tribunal it was held that while the decision of the District Court of Appeal reversing the former judgment of the trial court was correct in other respects which rendered it proper that the petition for hearing should be denied, this court proceeded to state (SanLeandro Can. Co., Inc., v. Perillo,
It seems clear to us that in thus limiting the plaintiff's proofs herein and in thus holding that as to the largest part of the plaintiff's cause of action it was barred by the provisions of the aforesaid statute of limitations, and in thus confining the recovery of the plaintiff to the sum of $4,306.67, the trial court has acted not only in disregard of the law of the case with respect to the application of the statute of limitations, but also in disregard of the intimations of this court as to the proof which the plaintiff was entitled to make under the averments of its complaint, and as to the amount of recovery to which the plaintiff might be entitled upon the making of such proof. [5] It is urged, however, by the respondent that the corporation having been granted a permit to make sales of a certain amount of its treasury stock upon the terms and conditions stated therein it was the right and duty of the individual directors *490 of the corporation to engage in making such sales without the necessity of procuring the broker's certificate required by said permit in order to conform to the Corporate Securities Act. This much may be conceded to be true, but it does not therefore follow that said directors because of the existence of such right and the performance of such duty would be entitled to withdraw from the funds and property of the corporation commissions for making such sales of stock in violation of the terms of the permit, which in conformity with the provisions of the Corporate Securities Act provided: "Nor shall any commission or compensation be paid in connection with any sale made within this state except to an agent or broker holding a certificate from the commissioner of corporations, then in effect, authorizing him to act as applicant's agent." To pay or receive commissions from the treasury of the corporation in violation of this provision of the permit and of the provisions of section 14 of the Corporate Securities Act would be clearly an unlawful act, and to thus disburse the funds and properties of the corporation a wrongful and illegal disposition thereof. Had the plaintiff been permitted to make its proffered proofs as to the circumstances and conditions under which sales of said corporate stock were made by the two directors essaying to make the same, and as to the withdrawal of the sum total of such commissions from the treasury of the corporation in payment of such commissions, the trial court would have been enabled to make findings conformably to our intimations in denying a hearing after the former decision.
The appeal herein having been prosecuted by the plaintiff from the limited form and amount of the judgment in its favor, it is ordered that the judgment shall be and the same is hereby reversed, with direction to the trial court to proceed with a retrial of the issues involved in this cause in conformity with the views expressed in this opinion.
Shenk, J., Seawell, J., Langdon, J., Preston, J., Curtis, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied. *491