Derouen v. Murray

604 So. 2d 1086, 1992 WL 163538
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1992
Docket89-CA-1089
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 604 So. 2d 1086 (Derouen v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Derouen v. Murray, 604 So. 2d 1086, 1992 WL 163538 (Mich. 1992).

Opinion

604 So.2d 1086 (1992)

Leroy DEROUEN
v.
Hudson L. MURRAY.

No. 89-CA-1089.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

July 8, 1992.

*1088 Thomas D. Berry, Jr., Gulfport, for appellant.

James C. Simpson, Jr., Simpson & Simpson, Gulfport, for appellee.

Before ROY NOBLE LEE, C.J., and ROBERTSON and SULLIVAN, JJ.

ROBERTSON, Justice, for the Court:

I.

This action by an unhappy corporate shareholder challenges the propriety of actions of a co-shareholder and fellow officer and director who, after sale of the corporation's principal business operations, thereafter formed a new corporation which acquired the first corporation's assets. The offended shareholder sues individually the said-to-be unfaithful officer and then implicitly asserts derivatively a claim of the original corporation.

The Chancery Court conducted a plenary trial on the merits and dismissed the complaint. Insofar as plaintiff personally claims of and from the defendant, we affirm. On the derivative claims, we reverse and remand.

II.

H & D Seafood Corporation is a domestic corporation organized and existing under the laws of this state and having its principal place of business in Gulfport, Mississippi. At all times relevant hereto — and particularly prior to December of 1982 — Hudson L. Murray and Leroy Derouen were and are each fifty percent shareholders in H & D. Murray was and is the president of the corporation, while Derouen has served as secretary-treasurer. Both Murray and Derouen live on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Murray has but a sixth grade education, while Derouen is a graduate of Mississippi State University in business administration.

Prior to December of 1982, H & D operated an unloading dock and a retail seafood and ice business in the Gulfport area. The corporation operated out of premises situated on the Small Craft Harbor at Gulfport, premises owned by the State and leased through the Mississippi State Port Authority and the Mississippi A & I Board.

On December 9, 1982, H & D sold its business and all assets incident thereto to Lee P. Gutierrez, Jr., of Gulfport. As a part of the purchase price, Gutierrez gave to H & D his notes payable annually at $50,000.00 plus interest beginning December 1, 1983, and continuing for the next three years thereafter. To secure payment of these notes, Gutierrez granted H & D a security interest in all of the business assets it had just purchased. In particular, H & D assigned its leasehold on the Small Craft Harbor premises to Gutierrez, who in turn gave H & D a deed of trust thereon as further security for the first three years of the installment payments.

Following the sale, H & D ceased active business operations. The corporation has continued in existence, insofar as the record reflects, its principal assets consisting of the Gutierrez notes and the security therefor. It appears the corporation has a continuing liability with Farmers Home Administration incident to the purchase of an ice plant formerly a part of the business. H & D remains liable to Farmers Home, although the principal obligation on the indebtedness was assumed by Gutierrez and subsequent purchasers.

Derouen has had no part in the dock, seafood and ice business since December of 1982. Murray, however, went to work for new owner Gutierrez as a salaried employee and essentially managed the business. Matters proceeded apace in this posture for the next eighteen months or so. Gutierrez sought to expand the business and made "some" improvements on the property but, in the end, "did not [sink] a lot of money into it."

In the Summer of 1984, Gutierrez found himself in what he described as a "financial bind." "I had other businesses that weren't doing well, and I just needed to divest myself of this business." About this time, Hudson L. Murray, together with his nephew, James S. Murray, formed a new corporation, M & M Seafood, Inc.

*1089 On July 3, 1984, Gutierrez sold the entire business to M & M for an aggregate consideration of $266,587.25. Gutierrez conveyed all assets of the business to M & M, including a further assignment of the lease on the Small Craft Harbor premises. Among the considerations M & M gave was its assumption of Gutierrez's outstanding obligations on the notes held by H & D. It appears from his testimony Gutierrez thought he had been relieved of any obligations on the H & D notes, though nothing before us suggests H & D gave any such release. At some time not made clear in the record, James S. Murray sold his interest to his uncle, Hudson L. Murray, so that the latter Murray became the sole shareholder in M & M Seafood. The business expanded further over the next year.

In the Summer of 1985, a man named David Mills caused the formation of a corporation known as Seafood and Ice, Inc. As fate would have it, by this point in time, Derouen had gone to work for Mills in an unrelated operation in Cameron, Louisiana, although Derouen knew nothing of what was about to transpire. In late August of 1985, M & M Seafood sold the business and all assets incident thereto to Seafood and Ice, Inc., for an aggregate consideration of $437,250.00. Seafood and Ice assumed all obligations on the H & D notes, although again nothing before us suggests H & D released M & M (or Gutierrez).

It is not entirely clear what Gutierrez paid on the notes to H & D, or when, but we do know that in December of 1983, in disregard of the corporate form, Derouen received $25,000.00 plus interest, a de facto dividend, if you will.[1] In December of 1984, Derouen again received $25,000.00, his fifty percent "share" of the payment due, plus interest. Of note, by this time the business had been sold to M & M, and Derouen knew he was being paid by M & M.

Things did not go so well the following year, for when Derouen approached Murray about "his" December, 1985, payment, he learned Murray was no longer in the business. Murray told Derouen he should look to Seafood and Ice and David Mills for his money. By this time, Derouen and Mills had had their own falling out. In any event, Derouen was not paid in 1985 and, insofar as we can divine, is still owed some $70,750.00 as his "share" of the Gutierrez to H & D notes.

About this same time, December, 1985, Derouen and Murray sought the advice of Thomas Bryan, an accountant, regarding the status of things. During the years since the sale to Gutierrez, Derouen had personally paid the corporation's franchise taxes in order to keep it alive and in good standing and sought his share thereof from Murray. On December 28, 1985, Murray paid Derouen $5,100.00, and Derouen signed and delivered a handwritten release which reads as follows:

RELEASE
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
COUNTY OF HARRISON
I Leroy Derouen do hereby acknowledge recpt of $5100.00 from H.L. Murray as payment in full for any and all debts between us as of this the 28th day of December 1985, for our business dealings dated December 9, 1982, to date.
/s/ Leroy Derouen Leroy Derouen
December 28, 1985

Derouen received nothing further on the Gutierrez notes, and on October 13, 1986, he commenced this civil action by filing his complaint in the Chancery Court of Harrison County, Mississippi, First Judicial District. Derouen named Hudson F. Murray as the sole defendant and charged in outline form the facts described above and demanded of and from Murray

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
604 So. 2d 1086, 1992 WL 163538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derouen-v-murray-miss-1992.