Bowman v. Gum, Inc.

193 A. 271, 327 Pa. 403, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 579
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 23, 1937
DocketAppeal, 137
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 193 A. 271 (Bowman v. Gum, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowman v. Gum, Inc., 193 A. 271, 327 Pa. 403, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 579 (Pa. 1937).

Opinions

Opinion bx

Mr. Justice Barnes,

This is the second appeal of the defendants * to this Court in the present case. A statement of the facts of this litigation is contained in the opinion of Mr. Justice Linn, speaking for this Court, in Bowman v. Gum, Incorporated, et al., 321 Pa. 516, but it is necessary to repeat them in part, so that the issues here involved may be understood.

The proceeding was instituted by a stockholder’s bill for the appointment of a receiver for the defendant, Gum, Incorporated, a Pennsylvania corporation (hereafter called Gum). The company was incorporated on June 7, 1932, for the purpose of manufacturing and selling chewing gum, succeeding to a business of the same character conducted by the plaintiff individually. *406 The defendant Gum is a solvent corporation and had total assets on August 31, 1936, of approximately $300,-000.

In a general way the difficulties of this once well managed corporation are due to dissensions between two interests, each owning one-half of its capital stock, and each determined to impress its will upon the management of the corporation. A deadlock has resulted in corporate affairs due to the inability of the factions to agree upon the source from which gum base, the principal ingredient used in the manufacture of chewing gum, should be purchased, and the price to be paid therefor.

Three of the individual defendants, namely, Canning, Hamilton and Barker, are financially interested in Sweet’s Laboratories, Inc. (hereafter called Sweets), a corporation which manufactures and sells gum base. They are directors of Sweets, and at the same time Hamilton and Barker hold directorships in Gum. It is from Sweets that Gum has purchased its base since its organization, with the result that it has become the largest customer and outlet for its product.

In 1936, plaintiff, who was then the president of Gum, as well as the owner of one-half of its stock, began to experiment with bases made by other companies, procurable at less cost. This action, which threatened the business of Sweets, was met by retaliatory measures on the part of defendants, resulting in the ouster of the plaintiff as president, and the assumption of the management of the company by Hamilton and Barker.

The issue between the two factions is whether Gum must purchase its requirements of base exclusively from Sweets at a price fixed by the latter, or whether it may obtain its supplies in the open market on a competitive basis.

It is contended that the reason for Sweets’ investment in the shares of Gum, and the extension of a large credit to the company was that all base used by Gum would be purchased from Sweets, and this understanding was ae *407 cordingly incorporated into the minutes of the organization meeting of directors held June 7, 1932. The plaintiff, on the other hand, contends that this resolution was conditioned upon an oral agreement with Sweets that the price charged Gum would he no greater than that prevailing in the open market for a similar quality base. He asserted that the company can obtain its requirements of gum base from a concern called the Dreyfuss Company, whose product is superior in quality to that supplied by Sweets, at the price of 20 cents a pound as against 34 cents a pound charged by Sweets. As the parties were unable to adjust their differences, resort was had to this litigation.

The plaintiff filed this bill alleging fraudulent mismanagement by Hamilton and Barker and a conspiracy by the several defendants to control and operate Gum for the sole benefit of Sweets, resulting in irreparable injury to the corporation and its shareholders. The court below after a preliminary hearing appointed a temporary receiver for Gum, but the order making the appointment was on appeal vacated by this Court. It was our opinion that while the evidence failed to sustain the charges of conspiracy, it did indicate that the dissensions among the shareholders and their inability to break the deadlock possibly made out a case within the Business Corporation Law of 1933, P. L. 364, sections 1107-9. The record was therefore remitted for further proceedings, without specifically limiting the parties or the court below, if the plaintiff requested leave to amend his bill, in order to state a cause of action within the applicable sections of the Business Corporation Law.

Upon the return of the record to the court below, and before plaintiff filed a petition to amend his bill, a directors’ meeting of Gum was held on July 9, 1936. On that day the directors of the company were six in number. S. J. Hamilton, John O. Barker, and Walter T. Fahy were representatives of Sweets upon the board, and Harold J. Conner, J. Warren Bowman (the plain *408 tiff) and William B. Rudenko were directors representing the interest of plaintiff. All directors were present at the meeting. Plaintiff presented a resolution directing the officers to make no further purchases of gum base from Sweets until the price charged therefor was reduced from 34 cents to 20 cents a pound, and that, until such reduction was made, all base be purchased from the Dreyfuss Company. The vote upon the resolution followed factional lines, as Conner, Bowman and Rudenko voted for the resolution, while Hamilton, Barker and Fahy voted against it. Mr. Rudenko thereupon moved that the votes of Hamilton and Barker be disregarded as both were pecuniarily interested in Sweets and were disqualified to vote upon the resolution. Mr. Fahy, as chairman of the meeting, declined so to rule, held the vote to be a tie, and the resolution lost. An objection to the ruling was noted upon the minutes of the meeting, it being contended by plaintiff that the resolution had been carried by a vote of three in favor to one against it. The company continued its purchases of gum base from Sweets at the price of 34 cents a pound.

On September 29, 1936, the plaintiff filed an amended bill, praying for relief under the pertinent sections of the Business Corporation Law. In due course the defendants answered to the merits. On the same day that the amended bill was filed a rule was granted upon the defendants to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue, enjoining further purchases of gum base from Sweets. It came before the Court for hearing on October 2, 1936, and on December 28, 1936, the court below entered a decree directing “. . . That Gum, Incorporated, its officers, agents and employees be, and they are hereby enjoined and restrained from purchasing such base as is needed for the manufacture of their product from Sweet’s Laboratories, Inc.”

The defendants have appealed to this Court from the entry of that decree, contending (1) the plaintiff should not have been permitted to amend his bill; (2) the de *409 cree constitutes an improper interference with the internal management of a solvent corporation; (3) the plaintiff should have been required by the court to furnish security when the restraining order was entered.

We need not discuss at length the complaint of the defendants that it was error to allow the plaintiff to amend his bill. The right to amend is a broad one. As the present Chief Justice said in Trabue v.

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Bluebook (online)
193 A. 271, 327 Pa. 403, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowman-v-gum-inc-pa-1937.