Brown v. Luce Manufacturing Co.

96 S.W.2d 1098, 231 Mo. App. 259, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 171
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 96 S.W.2d 1098 (Brown v. Luce Manufacturing 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
Brown v. Luce Manufacturing Co., 96 S.W.2d 1098, 231 Mo. App. 259, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 171 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is a suit to recover the amount of a dividend in the sum of $1630.89, alleged to have been declared by the defendant in favor of the plaintiff on its corporate stock.

*260 The petition is in three counts. The case was tried by all parties as a suit in equity and resulted in a judgment in favor of defendant. Plaintiff has appealed.

The facts show- that defendant, a corporation manufacturing luggage in Kansas City, desiring to employ a superintendent of its factory, sought out plaintiff in June, 1928, to engage his services in that capacity. Plaintiff at that time was employed in the city of Denver. After some negotiations the parties entered into a written contract on July 1, 1928, whereby plaintiff was employed by the defendant for a period of three years, ending on June 30, 1931. The contract provided for a salary of $6000 per year to be paid by the defendant to plaintiff and, further, for the sale by the defendant to plaintiff of 100 shares of its capital stock for the sum of $10,000. The purchase price of the stock was to be paid out of the dividends that might be declared on said stock during the period that plaintiff was employed, which employment was to include any renewals or extension of the time of the employment. "When the total dividends declared were equal to the sum of $10,000 defendant agreed to assign and deliver to plaintiff a certificate for the said 100 shares of stock to be his absolute property. In the event that the contract of employment, or any extension thereof, should terminate, or plaintiff should cease to be employed ■ by the defendant, prior to the time that the dividends so declared on said stock equalled the aggregate sum of $10,000, defendant agreed to pay to plaintiff, in cash, the amount of such dividends so declared during the period of such employment and, thereafter, plaintiff was to have no interest in the 100 shares of stock sold to him. Until said dividends declared aggregated the sum of $10,000 no stock was to be issued to plaintiff and he was not to have any right to vote the same.

It appears that the defendant corporation was a family affair organized in 1928, by Mrs. Luce and her two sons, Milton H. and Lorenzo Luce, who were its sole stockholders; that they also owned the capital stock of a corporation known as the Luce Trunk Company, the two companies being affiliated. These two corporations were considered as the private business of the stockholders and the latter conformed to only such laws and regulations relative to the corporation as was necessary to keep the charters thereof alive.

There was no formal meeting of the board of directors during the time that plaintiff was connected with the defendant and, of course, no minutes were kept of such meetings, but the affairs of the defendant were discussed'informally between the stockholders occasionally, perhaps eight o.r twelve times per year. Lorenzo Luce was in active charge of the affairs of the defendant and Milton H. Luce had charge of the Luce Trunk Company. The mother does not seem to have taken any active part in the management of the concerns, although she held the position of secretary in the defendant corporation.

*261 Lorenzo Luce died in August, 1932. Prior to that time be was president of defendant and Milton H. Luee was vice-president. During bis lifetime Lorenzo Luce received a salary from tbe defendant. Tbe other officers received none. Upon tbe death of his brother Milton H. Luce became president of tbe defendant. Plaintiff remained in the employ of tbe defendant until July 3, 1933, when be was discharged by it for purposes of retrenchment. Tbe company, not having made any profit after the fiscal year ending January 31, 1930, in March, 1931, plaintiff voluntarily accepted a cut in his salary and thereafter accepted several further cuts before his employment terminated. For the fiscal year ending January 31, 1928, the company suffered a net loss of $8000. For the fiscal year ending January 31, 1930, there was a net profit of $42,000. For the fiscal year ending January 31, 1931, there was a net loss of $16,000. For the fiscal year ending on January 31, 1933, there was a net loss of $15,000.

The books of the defendant were audited at the end of each fiscal year by a firm of public accountants. Mr. Lewis, an auditor for the accountants, testified that one of the officers of the defendant, he did not remember who, told him, when the witness made his audit of the books for the fiscal year ending January 31, 1930, to credit plaintiff on the books of the defendant with 4 percent of the net profits of the company for that year, after income taxes had been taken out; that in compliance with this direction, he credited plaintiff on the books of the company with the sum of $1630.89. The officer of the company referred to by the witness Lewis was undoubtedly Lorenzo Luce because Milton H. Luce testified that he did not authorize the credit. However, the latter looked at the statement made by the auditors showing the credit thereon.

Plaintiff testified that he was notified of this credit sometime after it was made and that he spoke to Mr. Lorenzo Luce in reference to it and the latter congratulated plaintiff on having received the credit and said that his only wish was that “in the following years it would be increased.” The only notation on the books of the defendant concerning this credit to the name of the plaintiff was the memorandum ‘ ‘ due to employees. ’ ’ The word ‘ ‘ employees ’ ’ referred to the plaintiff and one Turpin who were the only employees of defendant buying stock by the method indicated. The credit remained upon the books in that manner during the years 1930, 1931 and a portion of 1932. It was removed from the books of the company in the year 1932 at the direction of Milton H. Luce and a notation made that it was credited to the surplus account of the company.

Milton H. Luce testified that he recalled receiving a letter from' the accountants, stating that the credit to plaintiff and Turpin represented “reserve for profits provided in connection with agreements entered into between the Luce Manufacturing Company and R. L. Brown and H. E. Turpin.” The letter stated that, although the sum *262 of $3261.78,- the amount credited to the plaintiff and Turpin, represented eight percent of the net profit for the year ending January 81, 1930, after-the payment of Federal and'State taxes of the defendant, the agreement did not provide for the payment of profits to plaintiff and Turpin for the purchase of their captial stock but rather the application of dividends paid thereon toward the purchase price of the stock and that, as the company had lost money, in subsequent years after the credit was made, in amounts more than enough to offset the profit made during the year ending January 31, 1930, the account should be eliminated inasmuch as no dividend had been declared and no earnings were available from which any dividend might ‘be paid.

1. It is clearly shown that defendant was fully solvent during all of the time plaintiff was employed by it. Its balance sheet dated June 30, 1931, shows that the corporation had liabilitities in a sum a little in excess of $17,000, liquid assets consisting of $39,000 in accounts receivable and $103,000 worth of merchandise. There was no formal dividend declared upon the stock of the defendant, either in favor of plaintiff, Turpin, or any member of the Luce family.

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.W.2d 1098, 231 Mo. App. 259, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-luce-manufacturing-co-moctapp-1936.