Atkins v. W. A. Harriman & Co.

69 F.2d 63, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3431
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 1934
DocketNo. 166
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 69 F.2d 63 (Atkins v. W. A. Harriman & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkins v. W. A. Harriman & Co., 69 F.2d 63, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3431 (2d Cir. 1934).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The suit was by bill in equity to set aside two contracts, together constituting an accord and satisfaction and settling the accounts of the parties arising from the following facts: In 1928 the plaintiff, an accountant, brought to the attention of the defendant, a banking corporation, an industrial company, the S. R. Dresser Mfg. Co., as a good possible investment. The parties agreed that if the defendant got all the shares of the Dresser Company, it would “rc-organize” it, a euphemism for watering its stock, and that they should divide the profit on the sale of the new shares. The plaintiff was to get one-fifth of the “originating profit,” defined as the difference between the price paid by the defendant (or as the plaintiff insists, by a “purchasing group” made up of tlxe defendant and himself), and that price which the underwriters of the issue, the “banking group,” were to guarantee. In this, as generally in such undertakings, there was to be a third class, the “selling group/’ buying the shares at a higher price than that guaranteed and selling to the public at a still higher. Each of these two classes would find a profit in the “spread” between the price at which it got the shares and that at which it passed them on. The defendant was to be free to take as many shares as it wished as a member of the “banking” and “selling” groups; the price to the “banking group” was to be $44.-50. So far as the shares were not sold under “banking group” guarantee, but the defendant sold them outside, the actual profit was to be the basis of the settlement.

The defendant did get all the Dresser shares and began the flotation of a new issue in November and December, 1928. 100,000 A-shares and a like number of B-shares were to be issued at once; the A-sharos were offered to the “banking group” at $44.50 as agreed, and to the “selling group” at $46, which was to sell to its customers at $48; the market was to be maintained for six months at the expense of the “banking group.” The offering did not prove very attractive; subscriptions by the “banking group” amounted by the end of December to only 20,700 A-shares. On the defendant’s books a subscription of 40,000 shares was entered, to which was added by a special arrangement 12,000 taken up by one Carl Dresser, one of the former shareholders. Besides these, other former shareholders subscribed for 6,900 shares and the “selling group” took 3,925 more without previous underwriting. Thus by the end of December, 3928, 83,525 had been subscribed, if tlxe defendant’s subscription be included; and as by February 5, 6,500 more were added, on February 19, 1929, the score was 90,025 all told.

Meanwhile the plaintiff had decided to anticipate his share in the venture if he could, and asked a present settlement though the time had not yet come for it. After some preliminary negotiations the parties came to an agreement on February 19,1929. The defendant stated that the cost of the shares had been $3,934,000, including a deposit of $38,-000 to protect the old shareholders against their income taxes. Against this it declared that it had sold 66,433 shares at $44.50, amounting to $2,956,000; 33,567 shares remained which for the purposes of the settlement it took at $40. This made a total of $4,298,000 and a profit of $364,000 of which the plaintiff's share was about $73,000. Ho was to take this in 1,838 A-shares at $44.50. [64]*64The defendant had also been selling B-shares, all of whose proceeds were profit. These amounted to $472,000, of which the plaintiff’s share was $94,000, which was similarly to be converted into 2,122 shares of A-stoek, making 3,761 shares in all. These the plaintiff was to accept and not to sell for six months; the rest of the B-shares the defendant would account for later. If the unsold A-shares brought more than $40, the defendant would make up the difference; if less, the plaintiff. The plaintiff got the prescribed shares, and at the end of six months, being in need of money for a new venture, began to sell them on the market. The defendant, learning of this, wrote him that if he kept on, it would no longer support the market as it had been doing. After some negotiation the parties concluded the second and final settlement on October 11,1929, by which the defendant took the remainder of the plaintiff’s A-shares, 2,-561, at $34, and all obligations between the parties were released. This completed the accord and satisfaction.

The suit is based upon the theory that the defendant stood in a fiduciary. relation to plaintiff, but the issue seems to us immaterial. Having undertaken to state the account of its transactions in the shares, it was bound to state them truly, fiduciary or not; it had said that the 66,433 shares had been sold at $44.50, and the agreement cannot stand if that was substantially untrue. Conversely, if the statement was true, the plaintiff must lose, for the defendant might settle with him, even though a fiduciary, provided it truly disclosed all material facts. The challenge is to the number of shares sold and to the price in the case of 17,325 of them. The defendant reached the number 66,433, by deducting from 90,025 two items; 22,537 and 1,055. The first was the unsold balance of its subscription of 40,000 which it merely charged back upon its books; the second were shares taken off the market in order to support the price. The more important of the two is the’first, and its correctness turns upon what the parties meant when they limited the amount to be divided between them to “originating profits,” and yet allowed the defendant to become a member of the “banking” and “selling groups.” If the defendant must have announced itself as a member of either group, thus becoming bound to the other members of that group as they became bound to it by their subscriptions, it never became a member of the “banking group” at all. The subscription entered on its books, assuming that the employee who made it was authorized to do so, it never communicated to the other inem-bers, and it certainly was not bound to them. If there was no “originating profit” unless it was so bound, the defendant was liable for a profit upon 17,463 shares sold by it, not at $44.50,' but at whatever it got, for these shares were not in that case sold under the underwriting at all. This the plaintiff does not assert, and wisely, for it would not be tenable. The defendant was manager of the underwriting and the natural meaning of the contract was that it might enter itself in any group in the way customary in such flotations. So far as appears, managers may make a subscription which does not bind them. On the other hand, if the contract only meant that the defendant might become a member by merely writing a subscription on its books, it may be argued with some plausibility that, at least for the purpose of the contract, that ought to be taken as a definitive election to underwrite to that amount. We think not, for if so, the defendant would be charged with an unreal profit; and certainly the parties meant to share actual, not paper, profits. Taking the contract as a whole, we hold that the defendant was to be permitted to limit the actual profits by treating itself as a member of the “banking group” to such an extent as it chose. This did indeed put the plaintiff in its hands, but that was not unfair. As to other members of the “banking group,” the clause was unnecessary anyway for actual and “originating” profits were inevitably the same; the defendant could get nothing but the $44.50, for which the underwriter accounted to it. ■ If, however, it sold shares itself, it would bo clearly unfair to treat what it got as all profit; for it included those services for which the other two groups were to receive $3.50.

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Bluebook (online)
69 F.2d 63, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkins-v-w-a-harriman-co-ca2-1934.