Clyserol Laboratories, Inc. v. Smith

1961 OK 118, 362 P.2d 99, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 559
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 23, 1961
Docket38888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1961 OK 118 (Clyserol Laboratories, Inc. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clyserol Laboratories, Inc. v. Smith, 1961 OK 118, 362 P.2d 99, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 559 (Okla. 1961).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Vice Chief Justice.

This appeal involves the right of defendant in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, to recover a certain judgment for salary claimed to be due him as manager of the corporation appearing herein as plaintiff in error, but hereafter referred to as defendant.

Plaintiff and his associate, Howard R. Sullivant, were stockholders and directors of the defendant corporation in 1957, when it was having financial difficulties. At a special meeting of defendant’s board of directors, on December 17, 1957, plaintiff and Sullivant presented to it a proposal, under the terms of which (among others) twenty-five thousand shares of defendant’s stock would be issued to each of them at its par value of $1 per share; one-sixth of said stock’s purchase price was to be paid upon defendant’s acceptance of the proposal, with payment of the remainder deferred as provided therein; plaintiff was to assume active management of the defendant corporation; and the proposal was to become an “agreement”, upon return to plaintiff and Sullivant of a copy of it with defendant’s acceptance endorsed thereon, either on or before January 1, 1958.

According to the minutes of said board meeting, a motion to accept the proposal carried, or was passed, by affirmative vote of all directors present, except R. C. Boyer, who, at that time, was defendant’s manager. According to said minutes, after passage of the motion, a discussion of salaries was had and it was agreed that “ * * * the present salary and allowance authorization for Mr. Boyer remain in effect until 28 February, 1958, and that the salary of Mr. Smith (plaintiff) be determined at a later date.”

*101 Thereafter, as contemplated in the above described proposal, defendant’s acceptance of it was evidenced by endorsement of its president, Mr. John W. Hunt, on or before January 1, 1958. Plaintiff, on the same date, assumed defendant’s management, and he and Sullivant paid the first installment of $8,333.33 on, and received, the additional stock contemplated in said agreement.

Thereafter, according to a letter addressed to defendant’s counsel, the directors met again on January 14, 1958, and passed a motion that plaintiff be paid a salary of $800 per month, effective as of January 1, 1958.

On or about January 31, 1958, one of defendant’s stockholders, W. R. Boyington, instituted Cause No. 143279, in the District Court of Oklahoma County, on behalf of himself and other stockholders, against defendant and its directors, alleging, in substance, under one cause of action, that the hereinbefore mentioned directors meeting of December 17, 1957, was a nullity because valid notice thereof was not issued; that the hereinbefore described agreement with plaintiff and Sullivant was likewise a nullity; and praying that those two individuals be required to surrender into court, for cancellation, the stock certificates they had been issued pursuant to said alleged void agreement. Under a second cause of action, Boyington alleged, among other things, that the defendant corporation was being mismanaged and prayed that a receiver be appointed to take charge of its business and affairs.

On or before institution of Cause No. 143279, supra, plaintiff received from the defendant corporation a check for $790 in payment of his salary as manager for the month of January, 1958 (less an immaterial deduction) ; and, about the same time, he and Sullivant filed an answer in said cause, in which they admitted that the notice given for the board of directors meeting of December 17, 1957, was not in conformity with the corporation’s by-laws, and, among other things, tendered into court the stock certificates involved in that controversy. In a cross petition, they asked that their hereinbefore described agreement with the corporation be cancelled, and that they recover judgment against it for the $8,333.33 they had paid on the stock, as aforesaid.

After a hearing on the appointment of a receiver in said Cause No. 143279, had been scheduled for February 7, .1958, but postponed, and plaintiff’s services as defendant’s manager had terminated on February 10th thereafter, defendant’s directors met on February 12th, in the office of the attorney that had been engaged to defend it in said suit. According to its minutes, the “question before” said meeting was: Will the Board rescind the contract made with plaintiff and Sullivant in view of said suit, and return the money they had paid on their stock, less the above-mentioned $790 previously paid as salary, or continue to fight the suit? By a motion made and passed at this directors’ meeting, it was decided that their previous action of December 17, 1957, “in regard to the employment * * ” of plaintiff and Sullivant “ * * * be rescinded * * * ”; that the stock issued to them “ * * * pursuant to said meeting * * * be returned to the company for cancellation”; that the (approximate) $8,334, that had been paid thereon, be returned to plaintiff and Sullivant, less the above-mentioned $790, according to procedure outlined in the motion. When the latter exchange of money for stock was thereafter carried out, Cause No. 143279, supra, was dismissed with prejudice, on February 20, 1958.

A motion made at a special meeting of defendant’s stockholders on March 3, 1958, to repay, or return to him, plaintiff’s salary for the month of January, and to pay him for part of February, 1958, at the same rate, failed of passage. A week later plaintiff instituted the present action to recover said sums, totalling $1,085.71, from defendant, with interest and costs, plus another sum, now immaterial.

In its answer, defendant pleaded a qualified general denial, and special denials that plaintiff ever took over its active management or that it was indebted to him in any *102 sum. In an amendment to said answer, defendant alleged additionally that the subject contract had been rescinded.

At the trial before the court, without a jury, Mr. Hunt, defendant’s hereinbefore mentioned former president, corroborated the uncontradicted testimony of plaintiff that he had performed the services for which he was seeking payment. It was also established beyond contradiction that plaintiff’s salary claim for January, 1958, was not included in the settlement of Cause No. 143279, supra, and that said cause was dismissed without prejudice to his right, if any, to pursue any remedy he might have to recover on it.

At the close of the evidence, defendant’s motion to amend its pleadings to conform to the proof was sustained, and judgment was thereafter rendered for plaintiff in the sum of $1,085.71, with interest and costs. After the overruling of its motion for a new trial, defendant perfected the present appeal.

For reversal defendant urges the single proposition that the notice for the herein-before mentioned directors’ meeting of December 17, 1957 (at which the proposal that plaintiff be employed as its manager was approved, as aforesaid) was issued only 12 days, rather than the 15 days, prior to said meeting, required for all such meetings by Art. IV, sec. 4 of defendant’s bylaws, and, for that reason, said meeting, as well as the action taken thereat with reference to plaintiff’s employment, was a nullity.

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Bluebook (online)
1961 OK 118, 362 P.2d 99, 1961 Okla. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clyserol-laboratories-inc-v-smith-okla-1961.