DeCarvalho v. Gonsalves

262 A.2d 630, 106 R.I. 620, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 964
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 23, 1970
Docket640-M. P
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 262 A.2d 630 (DeCarvalho v. Gonsalves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeCarvalho v. Gonsalves, 262 A.2d 630, 106 R.I. 620, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 964 (R.I. 1970).

Opinion

*621 Kelleher, J.

This is a stockholder’s suit in which the plaintiff, in seeking an accounting and injunctive relief, alleges that the individual defendants have violated their fiduciary duty as directors of one corporation by conspiring to divert profits, business opportunities and good will from the corporation in which the plaintiff holds stock to a second *622 corporation in which the individual defendants are the majority stockholders. We have at the defendants' request, issued certiorari to review the legality of the order of the Superior Court entered pursuant to Rule 34 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure directing the individual defendants and one of the corporate defendants to produce an extensive variety of business and financial records for the inspection and reproduction by the plaintiff, his attorneys and his accountants.

The defendants are two individuals- — -Henry Gonsalves and Joseph Lewis — and two Rhode Island corporations— Gonsalves Import-Export Corporation and Henry Gonsalves Co. Hereafter, we shall refer to the plaintiff and the two individual defendants by their last names and to Gonsalves Import-Export Corporation as “the import corporation” and to Henry Gonsalves Co. as “the sales corporation.” In our consideration of this cause, we have read with considerable care the depositions of all three individual litigants.

In 1947, Gonsalves and Lewis became partners in a wholesale grocery business which had been originally established some years prior to this time by Gonsalves. The partners sold their goods to numerous retail stores located in Rhode Island, Connecticut and Massachusetts. One of the specialties carried by the partnership was a line of fish, cheese and olive oil imported from Portugal. The partners purchased these items from importers located in New York and Boston. Sometime in 1950, one of the importers who supplied the olive oil decided to bypass the partnership and sell directly to the retailers. This occurrence confronted Gonsalves and Lewis with the problem of obtaining a new source of supply. The partners thereupon turned to DeCarvalho for assistance.

At this particular time DeCarvalho was a citizen of Portugal living in Rhode Island and he had been designated as the Portuguese Consul for this state. The partners felt *623 that DeCarvalho was the one person who could establish the necessary rapport with the Portuguese exporters so that they would be assured of a continuous flow of foods which played a somewhat important part in the partnership’s activities. Accordingly, the import corporation was organized on July 18, 1950. All three men invested $5,000 in the corporation and each received 100 shares of stock. Each man became a corporate director and an officer. DeCarvalho was the corporation’s president and secretary. The record shows that thereafter the necessary European contacts were made and the imports began to arrive at the corporation’s plant.

During the ensuing seven years, the partnership continued its distribution and sale of food products. In December 1957, the partnership was incorporated under the name of the sales corporation. Gonsalves and Lewis became the directors and officers of the new corporation. DeCarvalho’s sole financial interest was in the import corporation. His corporate income was derived from a fiscal arrangement whereby the partnership, and later the sales corporation, would purchase the goods from the import corporation and then sell the imports to the retailers and periodically the partners or the sales corporation would remit 12% per cent of the gross retail sales amount. Seven and one-half per cent of this amount was allocated equally to the three directors and the remaining five per cent was used by the parties to pay the costs of distributing the goods including transportation and delivery expenses. The trucks that delivered the imports to the retail outlets were owned by the partnership.

This arrangement continued unchanged for 11 years. During this period of time, DeCarvalho attended and graduated from law school. He became a member of the Rhode Island Bar in 1960. In 1961, a new policy was evolved whereby the import corporation became the exclusive food *624 broker for the sales corporation. All imports were to be sold to the sales corporation for a commission of five per cent of the invoice cost of the goods. Later, this commission was reduced to four per cent and finally in 1966, it reached the level of 2.5 per cent. DeCarvalho was given the commission as payment for the various services, legal and otherwise, he performed for the corporation. While DeCarvalho admits that in 1965 or 1966 there was a small year-end distribution of the import corporation’s surplus between the stockholders, he contends that Gonsalves and Lewis have, by the use of false representations and by virtue of their interlocking directorates, siphoned off profits and various other benefits which rightfully belonged to the import corporation. This action was begun in April 1967.

The individual defendants deny that the sales corporation or the partnership ever competed with the import corporation. They claim that the import corporation has never sold its products directly to any of the customers served by the sales corporation. DeCarvalho, they say, attended all regular meetings of the corporation’s board of directors and that he concurred in all the financial arrangements made between the two corporations. In his deposition Gonsalves stated that the sales corporation had gross sales in each of the years 1965 and 1966 of over a million dollars. He contends, however, that the sale of food imports is just one phase of the sales corporation’s operations.

Before considering the merits of the instant petition, we would note that DeCarvalho’s motion to produce was heard at a time when Rule 34 required a showing of “good cause.” On March 10, 1969, the Superior Court adopted a recommendation made several years ago by the Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure of the Judicial Conference of the United States when the court amended Rule 34 and deleted therefrom the requirement that the moving party have “good cause” to inspect the desired documents. We *625 shall therefore examine the correctness of the order to produce defendants’ records in the light of the amended rule. See Novogroski v. O’Brien, 106 R. I. 490, 261 A.2d 283.

The portions of the disputed order which are pertinent to this proceeding read as follows:

“Ordered:

“1. That the said Defendants and each of them forthwith produce and permit the Plaintiff, his attorneys and accountants, or any of them, to inspect and to copy:
“(a) Each or any of the following books and documents of said Henry Gonsalves Co.

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Bluebook (online)
262 A.2d 630, 106 R.I. 620, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decarvalho-v-gonsalves-ri-1970.