44 P. 662 | Cal. | 1896
This cause was tried by the court, and findings and judgment were for the defendant; and the plaintiff appeals from the judgment and an order denying its motion for a new trial.
The plaintiff is a corporation, organized under the act of the legislature known as the “Wright act,” for the purpose of supplying water for irrigating the lands within the district so organized. The defendant is a corporation organized
Prior to this sale the defendant purchased thirty-five shares of stock in its own corporation, at a sale thereof for a delinquent assessment, and which stock had been transferred to the defendant corporation upon its books, and had not been reissued. Twenty-five thousand dollars of the bonds received from the plaintiff were applied in part to the payment of an indebtedness to an individual, and in part as a commission for negotiating the sale. Another portion of the bonds was set aside to meet other "liabilities of the defendant, and the remainder of the bonds were distributed to its stockholders as a dividend, the amount of the dividend being $200 per share. This action was brought by the plaintiff to compel the delivery to it of said thirty-five shares of stock in the defendant corporation, and to recover the dividend thereon of $200 per share, payable in the bonds received from the plaintiff, together with the interest paid by the plaintiff thereon, claiming that said stock was personal property belonging to the defendant at the time of the sale, which was not excepted therefrom, and which, by the sale, passed to it under the general clause of the conveyance above quoted.
Suppose the property which the defendant concedes was sold, conveyed and delivered to the plaintiff was of the actual value of $150,000, no more and no less. If all the stock of the defendant corporation had been in the hands of individual stockholders, the plaintiff would have acquired no stock, but would have property the exact equivalent in value of the money or bonds paid. If we now suppose that, at the time of the purchase, one-half of the stock, of the defendant corporation was in its treasury, having beep purchased, as these thirty-five shares were, at sales for delinquent assessments, it would follow, upon plaintiff’s theory, that, though it got, under its purchase, $150,000 worth of other property, it would also have acquired one-half its stock, and would be entitled to participate in a dividend of $200 per share, to be paid out of the identical bonds they paid for the -property, thus getting back into plaintiff’s treasury one-half of the purchase price paid, as well as property of the value of $150,000. In other words, they would practically get defend
It is also contended that defendant ratified the sale. The ratification of the sale is clear, but the ratification did not extend to anything not included in the conveyance, and therefore did not reach the stock. Appellant discusses several rulings of the court upon questions of evidence, but these alleged errors were not specified in its statement on motion for a new trial. However, we have examined them, but find therein no ground for a reversal. These questions went to the point whether during the negotiations any mention was made of these shares. Upon the face of the agreement and conveyance, we are obliged to hold that the stock in question did not pass, and the appellant, therefore, could not be prejudiced by evidence that no mention was made of it during the nego
We concur: Vanclief, C.; Belcher, C.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.