188 P. 837 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *17 This is an action brought by the trustees of a defunct corporation to ascertain and to have adjudicated the amount due from each of the 248 defendants other than the corporation defendant, as subscribers, owners, and holders of shares of stock of the defendant Midway Southern Oil Company of Long Beach, and to have and recover judgment against each of the defendants herein for the amount found to be due plaintiff, not to exceed, as to any defendant, the amount found due from said defendant, and for general relief.
The second amended complaint is in two counts. Each count is based upon a judgment recovered by plaintiff against said corporation defendant — the Midway Southern Oil Company of Long Beach. There was a specific denial of each and every material allegation of this complaint, upon which the action was tried. Trial was had before the court without a jury, and findings were entered in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $4,727.84, with interest, adjudicating "that in no event are the plaintiffs entitled to a judgment against any defendant in an amount to exceed eighty cents (80c) per share upon the number of shares owned by such defendant," and fixing the limit of liability as to each defendant, beyond which plaintiff could not proceed in any event, in exact dollars and cents. There was a motion for a new trial, which was denied. The appeal is from the judgment so entered, and is taken by but thirty-two of the defendants named herein.
Many points are urged by appellants for the reversal of the judgment herein, and they will be considered in the order presented. The first point urged constitutes an attack on findings VI and VII, as not supported by the evidence.[1] It is urged by appellants that there was "no *18
evidence of intentional fraud . . .; the land in this case was taken solely for mining purposes. There was no certainty as to what would be obtained from it, any more than if the parties had purchased a prospect for any other mineral substance and formed a company to develop the property by a discovery of the minerals in it"; and hence, that "it is the value of the property in the condition it is in at the time of the exchange, the value as known to the parties and as they honestly believed it to be, that determines the liability, at least where there is no subsequent increase in value nor any intentional fraud." This is only another way of arguing that "incorporators of mining companies should be permitted to violate the law and deliberately deceive the public, but incorporators of manufacturing enterprises should not; and this notwithstanding the truth that the same specific statute grants no greater power to one than the other, and fixes the same liabilities upon the stockholders in each." With such contention we cannot agree. A mere cursory perusal of the record will, we think, disclose the fact that these findings are amply supported by the evidence. In support of their contention appellants urge that the case of In re South Mountain C. M. Co., 5 Fed. 403, is in point. We do not think so. The supreme court of this state has repudiated the doctrine therein enunciated in cases such as the one at bar ever since its decision of the case of VermontMarble Co. v. Declez etc. Co.,
[2] Appellants further urge that "the defendants are transferees, and not liable." For our present purpose we think it needless to differentiate, distinguish, or try to show the fine technical variations or shades of meaning between the words "stockholder" and "subscriber," in view of the *19
fact that both the supreme court of this state and this court have said that "the same liability attaches to transferees as original subscribers. By purchasing from the original subscribers the transferees assumed, as a matter of law, all the liabilities that the transferors of the stock to them were under, and took it subject to all their obligations." (Perkins v. Cowles,
[3] It is next urged that "plaintiffs did not rely upon the capital stock of the corporation in extending credit," but, on the contrary, that "the plaintiff company extended credit wholly upon its own representations of results that could be obtained from the use of its drilling rig and upon the understanding that the defendant corporation had no funds; that certain of its stockholders should furnish necessary funds to start the work; that a log or report of the work would be furnished, and that sales of stock would furnish the funds necessary to pay for the drilling of the well and payment for the rig." In other words, as we see it, this contention, for all practical purposes, simply amounts to a claim that plaintiffs are estopped to set up their complaint because of the purported facts contained in the statement just quoted. We know of no law, and none has been called to our attention, that supports such contention. Assuming for the present that the statement is true, still that condition itself is impotent to relieve these defendant stockholders from liability in this case. [4] Certain it must be, that no citation of authorities is needed to support the statement that when credit is extended to a corporation it is done so under the presumption that the capital stock that is issued has been or will be paid for in full if necessary to pay creditors, and that where capital stock has not been paid for in full, the creditors, if they are unable to collect directly from the corporation, are entitled to seek to satisfy their judgment out of the unpaid portion of such subscribed and issued capital stock. It is held in Sherman
v. Harley,
[5] It is also a contention of these appealing defendants that the books of the defendant corporation were inadmissible in evidence, having been admitted over defendants' objection that it had not been shown by the books "that they truly show the amount of the capital stock issued by this corporation, or that they correctly show the names of the subscribers or holders of the capital stock which was authorized under the charter of the corporation." The answer to this is found in the evidence of the witness Brooks, who testified that he was the first secretary of the defendant *21 company, and identified the very books against which the objection was directed as the books of the defendant corporation during the time he was such secretary. Presumptively, until shown to be otherwise, these books continued to be the books of the company. (Code Civ. Proc., subd. 32, sec. 1963.) This, therefore, was a sufficient showing to support the correctness of the court's ruling.
The language of the supreme court of this state, in the case of Knowles v. Sandercock,
Of the seven defendants who answered, joining issues on the foregoing alleged fact, the evidence did not support the allegations of the complaint as against two of them — Cody and Shippey — and hence, in the findings and judgment each of them was eliminated as not being stockholders at the time of the commencement of this action. As to the remaining five contending defendants, there can be no doubt, we think, about the correctness of respondents' contention. The findings are amply supported by the evidence. There was some little conflict in some of the evidence on this issue, but that has been resolved by the lower court in plaintiffs' favor. This being true, we cannot interfere.
[6] This brings us to the consideration of the last point urged by appellants. It appears from the record that as to certain defendants default had been entered for their failure to answer the first amended complaint, and that thereafter, by leave of court, a second amended complaint was filed, which was not served on any of such defaulting defendants. The second amended complaint, appellants contend, contained an amendment in matters of substance, *23 thereby opening the defaults theretofore entered; and hence, no service having been made of such second amended complaint upon the defaulting defendants, the judgment was improperly entered against them. We have examined both complaints. The first amended complaint was in one count; the second was in two counts. For all practical purposes, the second amended complaint is identical with the first, except that the second count thereof contained, by reference, every paragraph of the first count, except the ninth; and for this it was alleged that the promoters of the corporation had transferred a certain purported oil lease to the company in exchange for all of the stock of the corporation, as fully paid up and nonassessable, and that a valuation upon such oil lease equal to the authorized capital stock of the corporation was so grossly excessive that it would be, as to the creditors, constructively fraudulent, instead of alleging a flat payment of twenty cents per share upon the stock, as set forth in the first count. It is conceded that the test as to whether an amendment opens a default is that if it goes to the substance, the default is opened; but if only to the form, it is not. Did the amendment in this case go to the substance? We think not. The first count of the first amended complaint stating a cause of action, the default admitted the truth of its allegations; and the judgment against the defaulting defendants was no more than an admission of said allegations, which showed the amount to which the plaintiff corporation was entitled. It was, therefore, not necessary to serve said defaulting defendants with the second amended complaint.
Judgment affirmed.
*24Finlayson, P. J., and Sloane, J., concurred.