Hamilton v. Junction City Mining Co.
Hamilton v. Junction City Mining Co.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiffs, claiming to be the beneficiaries of a trust mentioned in a certain instrument dated April 14, 1934, brought this action seeking to establish and enforce said trust. The subject matter of the trust consisted of certain shares of the common stock of defendant Junction City Mining Company, a corporation, formed in 1934 by defendant Sorensen, together with the dividends which had accrued thereon. Said shares had not been issued by said corporation and the dividends thereon had not been paid prior to the commencement of this action. After the filing of answers and cross-complaints by various defendants, an offer of compromise was made and accepted pursuant to the provisions of section 997 of the Code of Civil Procedure and a judgment was thereupon entered on June 7, 1939, directing the defendant Junction City Mining Company to issue the stock and to pay the accrued dividends to defendant Mary E. Smith, as trustee. This judgment terminated the litigation as to de
The background of this litigation is found in the financial failure of a mining corporation known as Madrona Dredging Company and the attempts of various persons interested in said corporation to recoup some of their losses. That corporation was formed about 1926 for the purpose of dredging for gold at a location on the Trinity River. Joseph Pensó, who is not a party to this action, sold stock in said corporation to various persons who are parties to this action. After the corporation ceased operations about 1930, an unsuccessful effort was made to rehabilitate it. Defendant Mary E. Smith was not a stockholder but was a creditor of the corporation in a sum in excess of $50,000. She held a deed of trust upon the realty and a chattel mortgage upon the equipment of the corporation to secure the indebtedness. She stated that she would have to foreclose whereupon several stockholders talked with her concerning a possible sale of the property to a prospect who had been previously mentioned by Joseph Pensó. She was agreeable to a sale and expressed the hope that enough could be realized so that others might benefit by it. She apparently did not desire to have any dealings with Joseph Pensó and therefore certain stockholders got in touch with Joseph Pensó and sought his assistance. They advised him that any purchaser would have to deal directly with defendant Smith. No purchaser was found at that time and defendant Smith foreclosed and became the owner of all the corporate property.
Thereafter Pensó worked for several years with the financial assistance of plaintiffs, who were residents of Chico, and later with the financial assistance of other persons, who were
During Pensó’s negotiations with Sorensen, the latter agreed to pay Pensó a “commission” or “compensation” of 13 per cent, which arrangement was known to defendant Smith. The understanding was that of this 13 per cent, 6 per cent was to go “to the people in Stockton that finished the financing, and seven per cent to the Chico people.” Mr. Sorensen agreed to pay the 6 per cent in cash. When this 6 per cent was later paid, Pensó received $1,600 out of the sum paid and the balance went to the “people in Stockton.” This litigation involves only the remaining 7 per cent. The 7 per cent was provided for in the agreement of April 14, 1934, after a conversation between Pensó, defendant Smith and the attorney for Sorensen. It was understood by all that the 7 per cent was “to take care of the people in Chico” and Pensó so advised plaintiffs.
The agreement of April 14, 1934, was the option agreement executed by defendant Smith and Sorensen. The only portion of said agreement which is pertinent here read as follows:
“That in event he (Sorensen) forms a California corporation and assigns to said corporation this agreement or all of the properties and rights purchased under this agreement, that immediately after the transfer to said corporation of this agreement or of all of said properties and. rights, that there will be issued to Smith as Trustee seven (7) per cent of all of the issued common stock of said corporation to be formed by Sorensen, which stock will when issued be fully paid and non-assessable, and if the Division of Corporations of the State of California shall not require that said*226 stock be escrowed, then the certificates representing said shares shall, immediately upon their issuance, be delivered to Smith as Trustee, and if said transfer to said corporation is not made, then Smith, as Trustee, shall have a seven (7) per cent interest in the operation conducted with the properties and rights purchased.”
It should be noted here that the written agreement of April 14, 1934, did not set forth the precise terms of the trust or specify the names of the beneficiaries thereof. Sorensen thereafter formed the Junction City Mining Company. He transferred his option contract to said company and thereafter the sale by defendant Smith of the former Madrona property to said company was consummated in the latter part of 1934. A permit was obtained for the issuance of 7 per cent of the stock of the corporation to defendant Smith, as trustee, but, as above stated, the stock was not actually issued until after this action was commenced by plaintiffs.
In 1938, there was considerable correspondence between the Corporation Commissioner and defendant Smith regarding the permit for the issuance of this stock to defendant Smith as trustee. The commissioner advised defendant Smith that the file did not disclose for whom she was acting as trustee and that the commissioner’s information was that the stock remained unissued because of the claim that the consideration for the agreement had not been received by the company. Defendant Smith replied that “There was a large indebtedness against the former company at the time of my foreclosure and a group of people advanced money for the sale of the property and the proceeds of this 7 per cent will reimburse them for advances and help pay the indebtedness.” Later in the correspondence, defendant Smith wrote, “I am not prepared to make a list of names and amounts under the trusteeship . . . ,” and still later she wrote, “This whole arrangement was entirely voluntary on my part and I reserved the right to approve the bills.- The trust covers any bills against the former dredging company which have my approval.” It will be noted that defendant Smith’s first reply stressed the beneficial interest of a group of people who “advanced money for the sale of the property” while her later reply made no mention of that group, but stressed a claimed reserved right on her -part to make the creditors
The main issue presented to the trial court, as set forth in plaintiffs’ brief and conceded by defendants to be there set forth with “admirable clarity,” was “whether this trust arose from property rights of Joseph Pensó in favor of those who advanced money to him, or whether it came from property of Smith and was held by her for the benefit of such creditors of Madrona Dredging Company as she saw fit to favor.” The trial court decided this issue in favor of plaintiffs and entered its judgment accordingly.
On this appeal, defendants contend that the evidence is insufficient to establish a trust in favor of plaintiffs. Defendants apparently now concede that a trust was created as they state in their briefs, “That she (defendant Smith) is a trustee is not disputed by us” but they claim that certain of the appealing defendants rather than plaintiffs were the beneficiaries of the trust. In other words, the gist of defendants’ contention is that the evidence was insufficient to establish that plaintiffs were beneficiaries of the trust which was admittedly created. We find no merit in this contention. It is entirely clear that the subject matter of the trust represented a portion of the compensation which Sorensen had agreed to pay to Pensó in connection with the sale transaction. It is also clear that the persons intended and indicated at all times by Pensó as beneficiaries of that portion of his compensation were the group in Chico who had advanced money to him to assist in making the sale. This group included plaintiffs and certain defendants, all of whom were decreed by the trial court to be the beneficiaries.
The somewhat unusual method adopted in creating the trust, having as its subject matter a portion of the compensation of Pensó, is explained by the evidence. Defendant Downing, one of those decreed to be a beneficiary, was one of a group who urged defendant Smith, when she was threatening foreclosure to permit the group to get Pensó to attempt to make a sale of the property. She consented and the group sought Pensó’s help and offered him and thereafter gave him financial assistance for that purpose. It was defendant Downing who later “first asked Miss Smith to act as trustee and protect the Chico people.” This was apparently agreeable to Pensó, who arranged with Sorensen and defendant Smith to
The evidence shows that while Pensó was present during the negotiations for the agreement of April 14, 1934, all persons present, including defendant Smith, agreed that the 7 per cent provision of the agreement was “to take care of the people in Chico ’ ’ and it is a reasonable inference from the evidence that defendant Smith and Sorensen as well as Pensó then understood and agreed that the persons who were to be the beneficiaries of the trust thus created were the persons in Chico who had advanced money to Pensó in connection with the sale transaction. The purpose of the trust was obviously to have the trustee receive the subject matter of the trust, to-wit: a specified portion of the compensation due from Sorensen to Pensó to be represented either by 7 per cent of the stock of a corporation which might be formed or “a seven per cent interest in the operation conducted with the properties and rights purchased, ’ ’ and to have the trustee distribute the same to the beneficiaries at such time as the distribution thereof might become feasible. At the time the trust was created, it was not certain that a corporation would be formed or, in the event a corporation should be formed, that a permit to issue the stock would be granted by the Corporation Commissioner without requiring that the stock be escrowed. Hence, the creation of the trust as indicated was a convenient means of providing for the handling of the interests of the several beneficiaries, each of whom was entitled to only a proportionate interest.
Section 2221 of the Civil Code provides that “. . . a voluntary trust is created, as to the trustor and beneficiary, by any words or acts of the trustor, indicating with reasonable cer
In this connection, defendants also contend that “the findings as' to the respective interests of the plaintiffs and some of the defendants are not sustained by the proof. ’ ’ Our review of the record leads us to the conclusion that while no books were kept by Pensó showing the amounts which the various plaintiffs and defendants advanced to him, there was sufficient evidence to show the respective amounts so advanced as found by the trial court. But defendants take exception to the method adopted by the trial court in determining the respective interests of the parties as beneficiaries of the trust. The method adopted by the trial court was to add to the amount advanced to Pensó by each beneficiary the amount previously advanced by such beneficiary to the Madrona corporation. The total amount so advanced to Pensó and to said corporation by all beneficiaries exceeded $64,000 and each beneficiary was decreed to be entitled to share in the distribution of the subject matter of the trust in the proportion that the total advances of such beneficiary bore to total advances of all beneficiaries. It is true that Pensó never advised those advancing money to him of the exact manner in which he intended to protect their interests or of the exact manner in which their respective interests would be determined in any money or property which might be received as a result of his efforts. It is also true that the evidence showed that it was Pensó’s intention to have each
Defendants further contend that “the claim of plaintiffs rests upon an illegal consideration and is therefore to be rejected. ’ ’ This contention is based upon the fact that Pensó was not a licensed real estate broker. We may assume, without deciding, that the fact that Pensó was not a licensed real estate broker, might have affected the right of Pensó to recover any compensation from Sorensen under his original agreement with Sorensen. The fact remains, however, that the portion of .Pensó’s compensation which is involved here has been admittedly transferred in trust to defendant Smith, as trustee, and the judgment from which this appeal was taken was one establishing the rights of plaintiffs and certain defendants as beneficiaries of the trust and was not one establishing any right of Pensó. If Pensó acted as a real estate broker, as claimed by defendants, rather than as an independent operator, as claimed by plaintiffs, there is no showing that plaintiffs knew that Pensó had no broker’s license or that plaintiffs had any reason to believe that he would not obtain any license that might be required. Pensó has long since parted with all claim to the subject matter of the trust and plaintiffs were in no sense in pari delicto with him if he violated the law in contracting for compensation from Sorensen without first obtaining a license. Pensó’s compensation having been paid and the trust having been admittedly created, we are of the opinion that no innocent beneficiary should be deprived of his rights merely because of the
Defendants further contend that “the discretion to distribute the property in a manner to be designated by the trustee is entirely consistent with the existence of a trust.” This contention does not require discussion as it proceeds upon the theory that defendant Smith was the trustor, as well as the trustee, of a trust created out of her own property. This theory was rejected by the trial court and the theory of plaintiffs, above discussed, was accepted. There was ample evidence to sustain the trial court’s findings showing that defendant Smith, as trustee, was not given any discretion with respect to the distribution of the trust property.
Finally defendants contend that “the trial court erred in refusing to make any allowance to the defendant trustee for expenses. ’ ’ But the defendant trustee did not set forth or pray for any expenses in her pleadings and she did not present any evidence on the trial concerning any such expenses. The findings and judgment were filed on August 18, 1941. On the same day, defendant Smith filed an unverified document in the action entitled “Second Account of Mary E. Smith, Trustee,” in which she claimed credit for disbursements amounting to $11.77. On September 2, 1941, defendants filed a document entitled “Defendants’ Memorandum of Costs and Disbursements.” The costs of all defendants, as therein set forth and amounting to $363.78, included, besides ordinary costs of litigation, certain items of taxes and traveling expenses. The judgment provided “That the said trustee pay from said trust property the costs of plaintiffs in this action taxed at the sum of $-, and the costs of defendant Mary E. Smith, as trustee, in this action taxed at the sum of $—-—. ’ ’
We find no error in the refusal of the trial court to provide in the judgment for the trustee’s expenses under section 2273 of the Civil Code as there was no pleading or proof that the defendant trustee had “actually and properly incurred” any expenses in the performance of the trust. Nor does the record disclose any error of which defendants may complain with respect to costs in the action. Plaintiffs were the prevailing parties and were entitled to their costs (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1033). The trial court did provide, however, in the judgment for the payment
The judgment is affirmed.
Nourse, P. J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 19, 1943, and appellants ’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 17, 1943.
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