Alexander v. Johnson Furnace Co.

543 S.W.2d 539, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2233
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 1, 1976
DocketNo. KCD 27725
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 543 S.W.2d 539 (Alexander v. Johnson Furnace Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Johnson Furnace Co., 543 S.W.2d 539, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2233 (Mo. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Chief Judge.

According to respondent Alexander’s motion to amend his pleadings to conform to the evidence, made at the close thereof, this is an action for damages for alleged fraudulent misrepresentation made in connection with a settlement agreement of all disputes between the parties. The judgment, entered upon a jury’s verdict, was for $17,-000.00 in favor of Alexander. There was also a judgment entered against appellant, Johnson Furnace Company (Johnson), on two counts of its counterclaim which are not here in issue. The dispositive issue is whether Alexander proved a case of fraud.

Alexander had been associated with Johnson in various capacities prior to 1960 in which year he became its president. He resigned that position on July 6, 1965. Thereafter, there were attempts to resolve disputes between the parties which culminated in the execution of a “Settlement Agreement and Release” on January 15, 1968. It is not precisely clear in the transcript, which contains a great deal of irrelevant testimony concerning extramarital affairs and marital discord, just what was the nature of the disputes prior to the agreement. It seems, though, that Alexander’s position was that Johnson owed him commissions after his resignation, and that he did not owe personally certain expenditures which he had caused Johnson to make while he was its president — that these expenditures were made for company purposes. It seems that Johnson’s position was that Alexander had improperly charged it for his personal expenses. At any rate, the settlement agreement, January 15, 1968, first recited that “Alexander is indebted to the company, and the aggregated amount of his indebtedness has been in dispute, and whereas Alexander has made claims against the Company, which the Company has disputed, and whereas the parties hereto have agreed to settle their disputes in the manner hereinafter provided, * * Alexander assigned to Johnson a $3,333.33 note of Apartment Builders, Inc., and “2. The Company does hereby release and forever discharge Alexander from all claims of every kind whatsoever which the Company has against Alexander on this date, whether for money owed to the Company by Alexander or otherwise.”, and “3. Alexander does hereby release and forever discharge the company from all claims of every kind whatsoever which Alexander has against the Company on this date, whether for money owed to Alexander by the Company or otherwise.”

Paragraph 3 of the amended petition pleads, “ * * * that defendant made representations to the Plaintiff that all of its claim of every kind whatsoever were being released by the agreement of January 15, 1968, full well knowing the income tax examination of Defendant’s returns would cause claims to be made against the Plaintiff; that Defendant intended Plaintiff to rely upon such representations; that such representations were false and Defendant knew them to be false; that such representations were material to the execution of the release by the Plaintiff; that Plaintiff relied upon such representations in executing the release agreement and was damaged as a direct result, the foregoing amendments in this paragraph being in addition to the allegations initially set forth in paragraphs 9 and 10 of the petition, * Paragraph 9 of the initial petition pleaded that the business expenses involved had been deducted in the corporate returns filed by Johnson which “purposefully and willfully breached its release agreement with said Plaintiff by encouraging the Internal Revenue Service to include such business expense items in Plaintiff’s personal income tax calculations.” Paragraph 10 of the initial petition pleads that the purpose and intent of the release was to settle all controversy and claims, but Johnson “did willfully adopt a course of conduct purposefully designed and calculated to financially in[541]*541jure the Plaintiff and which resulted in his payment of approximately $12,000.00 in interest, tax and penalties (amended to $9,000.00), as heretofore set out and further resulted in requiring Plaintiff to employ legal counsel in order to defend himself from further charges by the Internal Revenue Service and for the prosecution of this action. * *

On June 25, 1968, IRS wrote Alexander and provided him with a list of items which Johnson had paid on behalf of Alexander and his wife. The list included various car, travel and country club expenses, as well as checks for cash and life insurance policies. The IRS letter indicated that the expenses had been disallowed by it as expense deductions of the company (Johnson) and would therefore be chargeable as income to Alexander. Alexander testified that at the time he signed the settlement agreement he had no knowledge of an audit of Johnson by IRS, and no knowledge of any disallowance of any expense deductions of the corporation. He first learned of the disallowances on June 25, 1968. He had a conference with IRS after which it included the disallowed corporate expenses in his income, and taxes were assessed on the amount. Upon the advice of an attorney and because he could not afford to, Alexander did not file a claim for tax refund in federal court. To pay the tax deficiency he mortgaged the home, which was given by agreement to his wife in a 1971 divorce proceeding. She thereafter made payments on the mortgage. She testified that she was the one who obtained the loan to pay the tax deficiency, which she delivered, after IRS informed her that the home would be sold to pay the deficiency.

More specifically, Alexander’s testimony was: “Q At the time you executed that agreement did you know the income tax returns were being audited? A No, sir. Q Did you know that any amounts had been disallowed by the Internal Revenue Service for the years 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, involving expenditures by you on behalf of the company? A No, sir. I wouldn’t have signed it if I had known it.” And, “Q How do you figure you were damaged by the company’s alleged breach of your settlement agreement? A Well, in the first place, all they had to do was pick up the phone when this audit started back in September of 1965 and call me, this was the gentlemanly thing to do, but what they were trying to do was be vindictive and to nail me to the cross.” Other than the allusion by Alexander to the September, 1965 date, there is no testimony as to the time of the IRS audit. That there was, in fact, an audit at some time is established by the testimony of Guy W. Johnson: “Q Did you invite Mr. Alexander to sit in on any of these conferences with the Internal Revenue agents with regard to the disallowance of these company expenses? A I would probably have to say no.”

The settlement agreement speaks only of the release of claims which Johnson had against Alexander. It does not purport to save Alexander harmless from, or even mention, claims which might have been asserted against him by third parties, such as IRS, which arose out of corporate transactions when he was associated with Johnson prior to July 6, 1965. Ordinarily, disallow-ances of deductions by a corporation after audit by IRS will result in more tax liability to the corporation. If that had happened, the settlement agreement would have barred any claim against Alexander resulting from more tax paid by Johnson on the theory that corporate expenses were incurred for the personal benefit of Alexander.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
543 S.W.2d 539, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-johnson-furnace-co-moctapp-1976.