Drenning v. Kuebel, Inc.
This text of 327 So. 2d 571 (Drenning v. Kuebel, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Denis A. DRENNING
v.
KUEBEL, INC., In Liquidation, et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*572 Tucker, Schonekas & Garrison, Gibson Tucker, Jr., and Charles A. O'Niell, Jr., New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.
Montgomery, Barnett, Brown & Read, Patrick J. Browne, New Orleans, for Kuebel, Inc., in Liquidation, The Kuebel Co., Robert G. Kuebel, Kenneth A. Kuebel and Conrad M. Kuebel, defendants-appellees.
Stone, Pigman, Walther, Wittmann & Hutchinson, Phillip A. Wittmann, New Orleans, for Mrs. Jo Ann Kuebel Williams, defendant-appellee.
Before SAMUEL, STOULIG and BOUTALL, JJ.
STOULIG, Judge.
Plaintiff, Denis A. Drenning, a 25% minority stockholder in Kuebel, Inc., filed this suit to nullify a sale of the corporation's primary asset from Omer Kuebel, Jr., as liquidator, to The Kuebel Company, a partnership composed of Robert G. Kuebel, Kenneth A. Kuebel and Conrad M. Kuebel, who collectively held the other 75% interest in the liquidating corporation. Plaintiff's suit to be recognized as owner of an undivided 1/8 (the other 1/8 was owned in indivision by his former wife) interest in the realty and to obtain an accounting of the liquidation was dismissed. Plaintiff has appealed.
Kuebel, Inc., was incorporated in the mid-1960s and its stock was held in equal proportions by defendants, Robert, Kenneth and Conrad Kuebel, and plaintiff, then married to Jo Ann Kuebel, defendants' sister. The corporation acquired immovable property in New Orleans East and constructed a building for the use of Deluxe Check Printers, Inc., at a cost of $200,000, which it borrowed from the Hibernia National Bank. To secure the indebtedness, the corporation signed and all individual stockholders endorsed a $200,000 promissory note, payable over a 10-year period. The mortgagor-lessor pledged and/or assigned the monthly rental of $2,509 received from Deluxe under a 10-year lease, which was sufficient to amortize the obligation and render it self-liquidated, subject to the right in favor of the lessee to cancel after seven years' occupancy.
The leasing agreement went into effect on April 1, 1968 and later that year plaintiff and his wife encountered marital problems which were resolved with a judgment of separation dated December 11, 1968 in a suit initiated by Jo Ann Kuebel Drenning and by a judgment of divorce dated December 15, 1970.
*573 Once plaintiff's marriage was dissolved, defendants tried to buy out the Drenning interest in the corporation and in a separate tract of land they owned individually and in indivision for a nominal price. When plaintiff rejected this offer, the majority stockholders devised a plan to liquidate Kuebel, Inc., for the stated purpose of getting rid of Drenning. On July 6, 1971, Robert G. Kuebel, president of Kuebel, Inc., and Conrad M. Kuebel, secretary, called a meeting for July 19, 1971 to discuss the liquidation. Although an attempt was made to notify Drenning, he did not attend. Parenthetically, it is doubtful whether his 25% voting interest would have changed anything. The Kuebel brothers decided to liquidate and appointed their personal attorney and cousin, Omer F. Kuebel, Jr., liquidator for the corporation.
To avoid double taxation to the corporation and on the individual distribution to each shareholder, the liquidator was required to complete the liquidation and distribute the assets within one year from the time the resolution to dissolve was adopted under 26 U.S.C. § 337. Between July 19, 1971 and July 15, 1972, Omer Kuebel, Jr., as liquidator, did nothing to further the liquidation on his own initiative. He testified he had several casual conversations with either Drenning or Drenning's attorney, the gist of which was either or both would do something about an appraisal.
On July 15, 1972, realizing the deadline for completion was fast approaching, Omer Kuebel, Jr., met with his three shareholder cousins and agreed to sell the principal asset (the realty) to The Kuebel Company, a partnership owned equally by the three Kuebel brothers. To arrive at a fair sale price, the liquidator testified he requested his licensed realtor cousin Kenneth Kuebel to make this determination. This realtor applied one hour of his "expertise" to this project and arrived at a gross valuation of $238,400.[1] From this price the realtor deducted $11,500 (standard broker's commission of 6% on the first $100,000 and 4% on the balance) which left $226,900. The liquidator rounded this figure off at $227,000.
The Kuebel partnership took title July 18, 1972, by paying the liquidator $95,512.47 cash and assuming the mortgage balance of $131,487.53. The first knowledge Drenning received of the sale came in the form of a certified check for $20,390.61, representing his interest in the distribution from the sale of corporate assets after his debt to the corporation was deducted ($24,436.65 minus $4,046.04). We note Omer Kuebel, Jr., in liquidating Drenning's interest in Kuebel, Inc., divested him of his interest in the corporate assets but failed to relieve him of the liability he had incurred as a shareholder. Drenning remained a personal endorser on the mortgage note held by the bank and assumed by The Kuebel Company partnership.[2] Drenning refused to accept the payment tendered to liquidate his interest in Kuebel, Inc.
The record establishes beyond a doubt that the liquidator sold the property for $28,000 less than its market value. This observation is based on the testimony of defendants' own expert realtor who placed the market value at $255,000. Defendants did not predicate their contention that a reasonable price was paid on fair market value. Rather, they used the premise that a quick sale condition prevailed and instructed their expert to project a reasonable price for the realty, assuming it must be sold within 10 days. The appraiser *574 then adjusted the price from $255,000 to $231,500. Without commenting on the relative merits of the expert testimony tendered on value, we accept the figure of defendants' realtor because they are bound by his testimony. This establishes the sale by the liquidator to the Kuebel partnership was $28,000 below market value.
The premise that the liquidator was forced into a distress sale by the inaction of plaintiff and his attorney is untenable. It was not the duty of the minority stockholder to conclude the affairs of the corporation in liquidation. Instead, the liquidator, who was paid for his services, was obligated to sell the assets at the best price available.[3] Had the liquidator not permitted 11 months and 27 days to elapse before attempting any positive action toward disposal of the realty, either by public or by private sale, for its fair market value, he would not have been confronted with a distress sale situation. The crisis, if any, was of the liquidator's making, not the minority stockholder's.
L.R.S. 12:145 charges the liquidator with this responsibility:
"G. In the performance of his duties, each liquidator shall be bound to exercise that care and prudence in the listing, custody, possession, control and disposition of the property and moneys of the corporation coming into his hands, and in the proper accounting therefor, and distribution thereof, as by law is imposed upon fiduciaries."
In Noe v. Roussel,[4]
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327 So. 2d 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drenning-v-kuebel-inc-lactapp-1976.