Bayne v. Jenkins

593 S.W.2d 519, 1980 Mo. LEXIS 351
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1980
Docket61295
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 593 S.W.2d 519 (Bayne v. Jenkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bayne v. Jenkins, 593 S.W.2d 519, 1980 Mo. LEXIS 351 (Mo. 1980).

Opinion

SEILER, Judge.

This is an appeal in consolidated actions by seven husband-and-wife plaintiffs for sums due on their respective promissory notes given by defendant in connection with a sale of securities. Defendant admitted execution of the notes but asserted affirmative defenses under the Missouri Uniform Securities Act, §§ 409.101 et seq., RSMo 1978, and counterclaimed for damages on the ground of fraud. The jury returned its verdict for the defendant on plaintiffs’ notes and also on his counterclaim for the $140,000 in cash which he had paid plaintiffs pursuant to the disputed contract of sale of the securities. The trial court, however, entered judgments for plaintiffs totaling $360,000 on the promissory notes and against defendant on his counterclaims notwithstanding the verdicts. On appeal, the court of appeals affirmed. We sustained defendant’s motion to transfer because of the general interest and importance of the corporate and securities questions presented and we will treat the case as though here on original appeal. Mo. Const, art. V, § 10.

I

Defendant (hereinafter “appellant”) makes various contentions on appeal, but we must first address whether the trial court erred in setting aside the jury verdicts and entering judgment for plaintiffs (hereinafter “respondents”). On this question appellant, of course, is entitled to the evidence and inferences favorable to his verdicts, McAlister v. Urhahn, 492 S.W.2d 19, 20 (Mo.App.1973). We, therefore, will consider the evidence and reasonable inferences favorable to the jury's verdicts and disregard respondents’ evidence except insofar as it supports the verdicts. Gregory v. Robinson, 338 S.W.2d 88 (Mo. banc 1960); Cathey v. DeWeese, 289 S.W.2d 51 (Mo. 1956). As to the promissory notes, appellant asserted affirmative, defenses under the securities law based on respondents *522 making untrue statements of material facts or omitting to state material facts necessary to make the statements not misleading. As to the counterclaims, appellant based these on various fraudulent misrepresentations as to the losses of Clark Manufacturing Company (“CMC”) subsidiaries, the financial condition of CMC parent company and the value and annual rainfall on a certain Mexican ranch.

With this broad sketch of appellant’s claims, we have examined the record in detail and the jury reasonably could have found the following therefrom:

Clark Manufacturing Company was organized as a partnership in 1937 by respondents Otho Clark and Ocie Hughes. Over the years, the other male respondents joined the partnership. In 1963, CMC was incorporated and all of the former partners served on the company’s board of directors until the company merged with Oil and Properties, Inc. (“O&P”) in 1970, with CMC as the surviving corporation, and “went public” with more than 500 shareholders. Appellant Jenkins was a shareholder of O&P at the time the merger with CMC was proposed.

Appellant is a farmer, age 52 at time of trial, with a high school education and no training in accounting, bookkeeping or securities analysis, although he owned controlling interest in a bank in Ft. Scott, Kansas, however, before the circumstances giving rise to this suit. During the time relevant to this suit, he and his family were personally engaged in farming approximately 7,900 acres in Missouri and Kansas. Appellant’s first experience in the purchase of corporate stock was in 1969. One of his first acquisitions was O&P stock. Appellant voted against the merger with CMC at the O&P shareholders’ meeting and thereafter filed suit to enforce his appraisal rights. Appellant was represented in the appraisal action negotiations for settlement by one Harold Kyser, of Butler, Missouri, an attorney who had previously assisted appellant in purchasing several parcels of farm land and was compensated on a transaction basis.

In connection with the negotiations for the appraisal settlement, appellant was invited by the CMC directors to and did visit an 80,000 acre Mexican ranch previously owned by O&P and then owned by CMC. Appellant was furnished with materials describing the ranch, its annual rainfall, and its economic potential which were prepared by the CMC board of directors for the 1971 annual CMC shareholders’ meeting. There was a proposal that appellant would manage the Mexican ranch as part of a settlement of his appraisal action. After seeing the ranch and discussing its potential with his son, who had a degree in agronomy, appellant attempted to purchase the ranch rather than agree to manage it for CMC. Further negotiations resulted in a settlement agreement in October of 1971, whereby appellant became a CMC shareholder owning six percent of the CMC common stock. Otho Clark, then CMC president and chairman of the board, had participated in negotiations for settlement of appellant’s suit. Clark was impressed with attorney Kyser’s performance in the negotiations on behalf of appellant.

At this same time, Clark was having difficulty retaining control of CMC decision-making. After the merger, the board of directors had been reduced from seven to five members, with two seats going to former directors of O&P. Clark later would testify that the merger was the worst thing that happened to CMC, in that the subsidiaries acquired began to break the company financially. Shortly after the merger, an effort had been made by the former O&P directors to remove Clark from the board of directors. Clark approached Kyser, met with him alone and then later with other directors, and decided to put Kyser on the CMC board of directors in an effort to regain control of CMC. Before the February 1972 shareholders’ meeting, both factions within CMC attempted to get appellant’s votes for their slate of candidates on the CMC board of directors. Appellant voted for the Clark-Kyser slate, which was elected, and Kyser became the only director paid for his services, at a rate of $200 per *523 week for his consultation with Clark and other members of the board.

At the time of the February 1972 CMC shareholders’ meeting, the corporation was engaged in the manufacture of small farm machinery. Wholly owned subsidiaries, acquired in the merger with O&P, included a truck line and a 1,000 acre cotton farm in California. Other assets included the Mexican ranch and a new venture, Clark-Bilt Homes, a subsidiary which manufactured modular homes. A packet of information and a letter from the board of directors was mailed out to CMC shareholders in connection with the February 3,1972 shareholders’ meeting. Appellant testified at trial that he relied upon the letter to shareholders and financial statements in this information packet in the purchase of respondents’ securities a little more than a month following the shareholders’ meeting.

Several weeks after Kyser had been elected to the CMC board and after many of the former CMC partners had concluded that their attempt to regain control had failed, Russell Beebe, a CMC director, a former CMC partner, and a Clark ally, approached Kyser about the possibility of selling the interests of the seven former partners for $500,000. Kyser next contacted Jenkins and asked him if he were still interested in buying the Mexican ranch.

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Bluebook (online)
593 S.W.2d 519, 1980 Mo. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayne-v-jenkins-mo-1980.