Burton v. PET, INCORPORATED

509 S.W.2d 95
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 13, 1974
Docket57168
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 509 S.W.2d 95 (Burton v. PET, INCORPORATED) 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
Burton v. PET, INCORPORATED, 509 S.W.2d 95 (Mo. 1974).

Opinion

SEILER, Judge.

Pet, Incorporated, a Delaware corporation (hereinafter referred to as Pet), purchased the business of St. Louis Lithographing Corporation, a Missouri corporation (hereinafter referred to as Litho) by exchanging 56,000 shares of Pet’s stock, then selling at 44% per share, for all the outstanding stock in Litho. The controversy is whether plaintiff, John G. Burton, who was in the business of finding buyers for and negotiating the sale of businesses, was entitled to a fee on the sale. Burton sued Pet, Litho, and the four individual defendants who owned the capital stock of Litho, claiming he was entitled to a fee of $105,000. Specifically, Burton alleged that Litho and the individual defendants orally employed him to procure a buyer. As to Pet, Burton alleged that in consideration of his agreement to limit his activities in finding another competing purchaser, defendant Pet promised that if they purchased Litho, they would see that he was paid his fee, and that, with the knowledge and consent of Litho and the individual defendants, he did so limit his activities.

Trial before a jury resulted in a verdict in favor of Litho and the individual defendants and against Pet, with plaintiff’s damages being assessed at $45,000 plus interest. No appeal was taken by plaintiff as to Litho or the individual defendants, but Pet appealed from the adverse judgment against it. On appeal, as at trial, Pet contends the contract between Burton and Pet was against public policy because it called for Burton to violate the duty he *97 owed Litho and that the agreement being void, the law should leave the parties where it found them and deny any recovery to plaintiff. Plaintiff responds that the contract was not against public policy, but that even if it were, plaintiff is entitled to recover because the parties were not in pari delicto.

We are of the opinion that plaintiff’s own evidence, as set forth below, shows that he cannot recover and that the court should have sustained Pet’s motion for a directed verdict at the close of the case.

Looking only to plaintiff’s case and disregarding the contrary testimony from the defendants, these facts appear: Since 1948, plaintiff had been in the business of negotiating sales and mergers of businesses. His office was in St. Louis. In August 1967, Ralph Thomsen, president of Litho, talked to plaintiff about selling the company. Litho was considered a specialty company. It specialized in making liquor and wine labels for bottlers and distillers. The business was well established, made a good profit, and the stock was closely held. 1 Plaintiff expressed the opinion, after examining financial statements, that the company should bring between two and two and a half million dollars on an exchange of stock basis, with the possibility of an arrangement for additional compensation after the sale, if the earnings of the business increased in the first four or five years after the acquisition. Plaintiff also informed Thomsen of his fee schedule.

No definite employment was. agreed upon at this first meeting, but thereafter plaintiff wrote various corporations, saying he was in touch with a company which might be of interest and describing in general terms Litho’s specialty, annual sales, net profits, stock ownership, and stating an asking price. One of the first companies plaintiff talked with was Pet. This was on November 21, 1968 at Pet’s St. Louis headquarters. Pet’s response, however, was negative and plaintiff had no further contact with Pet until events described later herein.

One company which showed strong interest was Bemis Company of Minneapolis, Minnesota (hereinafter referred to as Be-mis) and Thomsen gave written authorization for plaintiff to represent Litho in the Bemis negotiations. Plaintiff testified he had some 15 to 20 contacts with the Bemis people on behalf of Litho.

On April 29, 1969, the Bemis vice-president called plaintiff to make arrangements to meet with Thomsen. Plaintiff arranged a meeting in St. Louis for May 12, 1969. He suggested to Thomsen that they get together to “review the procedure” before the Bemis people arrived and also furnished Thomsen with figurep as to net sales, net profits and earnings per share on Bemis for the first quarter of 1969. While plaintiff did not know what Bemis was prepared to pay for Litho, he testified he had been talking price with them and they were coming to St. Louis knowing that the asking price for Litho was between three and a quarter to three and a half million dollars. It was plaintiff’s expectation that the May 12 meeting would result in the “two boss men” shaking hands on an agreement, which in his usual experience, meant that the deal would close.

In the course of two or three telephone calls with Thomsen about this time, plaintiff was told by Thomsen that “Pet was very, very hot at that moment”, that the Litho people were much interested in making a deal and he (Thomsen) was anxious to get Bemis to St. Louis if Bemis was interested. Plaintiff told him about the May 12 meeting. Plaintiff testified that Thom-sen told him to “stay away from Pet”, that he (Thomsen) was handling that and would keep plaintiff informed.

Plaintiff instead, however, telephoned the person at Pet to whom he had talked in his original contact with Pet on November *98 21, 1968, reminded him about it, and that if Pet made a deal he expected a finder’s fee. Plaintiff confirmed this by letter, reiterating that he brought Litho to Pet, that in the meantime he had been trying to place Litho elsewhere, and that in case Pet acquired Litho he wanted a reserve set up in the closing contracts to cover his fee. On cross-examination, plaintiff testified he had no conversation with Pet since his original contact of November 21, 1968, had done nothing about selling Litho to Pet in the interim and that the Pet-Litho negotiations were getting “hotter and hotter” without him.

Two days later, on May 1, 1969, plaintiff had a telephone call from Richard S. Jones, senior vice-president of Pet and a former practicing lawyer. Jones and plaintiff were long time friends and frequently lunched at the same table at a luncheon club. Plaintiff gave the following testimony in relating the telephone conversion :

“When he called he said, ‘Jack, we have got your letter,’ and he said that, ‘We are in deep negotiations,’ and he said ‘We recognize you in this particular deal. We also know you have got another contact,’ and I said ‘Yes’, and he said, ‘Can you hold him off?’ I said, ‘He will be down here on the 12th, and if you can get your homework’ — or some remark made like that I made — ‘done, get the deal wrapped up by then. That is the situation.’ He said, ‘Okay, I will get to work’ and I did not do anything from then on.”

On cross-examination as to what his attitude toward contacting Bemis would have been had Pet not agreed to pay him a fee, plaintiff said:

“A. If Jones had called up and said, T am not paying you any fee ... or something like this ... I would certainly have had a lot different attitude toward the Bemis Company. I’d have gotten them down here and gotten them going a lot faster.

“Q. Do you think you could have closed that deal in five days ?

“A. I would have done a lot more than I did ... I know I would have tried.”

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509 S.W.2d 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-v-pet-incorporated-mo-1974.