Drs. Brown, Carter & Sauls v. Sauls

418 So. 2d 706
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 28, 1982
Docket82-124
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 418 So. 2d 706 (Drs. Brown, Carter & Sauls v. Sauls) 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.

Bluebook
Drs. Brown, Carter & Sauls v. Sauls, 418 So. 2d 706 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

418 So.2d 706 (1982)

DRS. BROWN, CARTER & SAULS, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Dr. J. Lane SAULS, et ux., Defendants-Appellants.

No. 82-124.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

July 28, 1982.
Rehearing Denied September 15, 1982.

*707 Hargrove, Guyton, Raney & Barlow, Billy R. Pesnell and David R. Taggart, Shreveport, for defendants-appellants.

Leithead, Scott, Boudreau & Myrick, Everett R. Scott, Jr., Lake Charles, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before SWIFT, DOUCET and LaHAYE[*], JJ.

SWIFT, Judge.

The plaintiff, Drs. Brown, Carter & Sauls (A Professional Medical Corporation),[1] filed this suit against Dr. J. Lane Sauls and his wife for specific performance of a stock purchase agreement and for an accounting by Dr. Sauls of any monies received by him and owed to the corporation. From a judgment rejecting plaintiff's demand for an accounting but granting plaintiff's demand for enforcement of the stock purchase agreement, the defendants have appealed.

On November 15, 1971, a stock purchase agreement was entered into by the plaintiff corporation and its shareholders, Dr. Etienne R. Brown, Dr. Henry S. Carter and Dr. J. Lane Sauls, and their wives. The parties to the agreement stipulated that upon the termination of a shareholder's employment, the corporation would buy and the affected shareholder would sell all the shares of stock held by that stockholder at a price computed as follows:

"The purchase price for each share of the capital stock of the Corporation shall be its book value as of the end of the calendar month in which death, termination of employment or retirement occurs, or the end of the calendar month following the aforesaid twelve month period of permanent disability, which book value shall be determined by the accountant for the Corporation from its books and records without attributing any value to any good will of the Corporation or any outstanding accounts receivable. The purchase price as determined in accordance with the foregoing provisions, shall be payable by the Corporation to the Stockholder or to his surviving spouse and heirs or to his succession representative or curator if inderdicted (sic), as the case may be, within sixty (60) days following the valuation date as hereinabove provided."

By written notice on February 1, 1979, Dr. Sauls terminated his employment with the plaintiff corporation effective March 16, 1979. At that time he owned 80 shares of the corporation's outstanding 240 shares of capital stock. By letter dated February 27, 1979, the plaintiff acknowledged receipt and acceptance of Dr. Saul's resignation and informed him that Ralph Johnson, the corporation's accountant, had been requested to determine the book value of the capital stock in accordance with the agreement.

In a letter dated April 20,1979, Mr. Johnson reported to the corporation that on March 31, 1979, excluding the effect of receivables and good will of the corporation, the net assets amounted to $90,183.32 and the book value per share of stock was $375.76. On April 23, 1979, the corporation notified Dr. Sauls of the evaluation and of its willingness to pay him $375.76 per share for his 80 shares upon delivery of the stock certificates. Subsequently, the plaintiff acknowledged an error in the previous computation of book value due to the omission of an item of prepaid rent in the amount of $3000.00. The inclusion of this item increased the original book value determination by $12.50 per share to $388.26.

Dr. Sauls disagreed with Mr. Johnson's evaluation and did not deliver his stock to the corporation. On June 7,1979, the plaintiff corporation filed the present suit.

Dr. Sauls has not questioned the validity of the stock purchase agreement, but merely challenges the correctness of Mr. Johnson's determination of the book value of the stock. The defendants, based on the testimony *708 of two accountants engaged by them (Messrs. Wayne Wilson and Peter Bratlie), contend that Johnson omitted several assets of the corporation from his evaluation and that the true book value of the corporation on March 31, 1979, was $935.25 per share.

The court after trial agreed with the defendants' position in several respects and found the book value under the stock purchase agreement to be $471.69 per share as of the valuation date. However, in reaching this figure, it rejected their contentions that the following items should have been included as assets in the computation:

1) Leasehold improvements in the amount of $19,045.00.
2) Prepaid insurance in the amount of $5,083.08.
3) Prepaid rent in the amount of $70,000.00.

The judgment granted specific performance of the purchase agreement and awarded seven per cent interest from the date of judicial demand on the difference between the sum offered by the corporation to the defendants before the filing of suit and the amount finally determined to be the purchase price of the stock.

The issues raised by this appeal are whether the trial court erred in failing: 1) to include the above assets in its determination of the book value of the stock; and 2) to award interest on the whole amount of the correct purchase price and if so from what date.

In the Succession of Jurisich, 224 La. 325, 69 So.2d 361 (La.1953), our supreme court said that the term "book value" in a similar agreement was the value of an asset as reflected by the books of account of the company, as distinguished from the actual or market value of the asset. Of course, the business records must be kept correctly and consistently according to reasonable accounting principles and practices.

In omitting the aforementioned three items from its determination of the book value of the stock, the trial court in the present case assigned clear and convincing written reasons for its decision. We approve and adopt as our own the following portions of the opinion:

"The remaining items in dispute, leasehold improvements, prepaid insurance. and prepaid rent, are of a different nature than the items that have been considered. They involve corporate expenditures made in previous years and expensed on the books and records, but which Dr. Sauls and his accountants contend were corporate assets on March 31, 1979. These items were never recognized by the corporation as assets and they were never carried on the books and records as such. Accordingly, they were not included in Mr. Johnson's computation of book value.

"The alleged leasehold improvements, prepaid insurance and prepaid rent were `discovered' by Messrs. Wilson and Bratlie during their two day examination of all the books and records of the corporation. Based on their findings, and believing that such action was required by the generally accepted accounting principles that apply to the cash system of accounting, Wilson and Bratlie included those three items as assets of the corporation. The accountants maintain that, in determining book value from corporate books and records, if there is deviation from generally accepted accounting principles, the books and records must be revised and corrected in accordance with the applicable accounting principles. They contend that is what they have done in this case.

"Plaintiff corporation argues that the provisions of the stock purchase agreement do not require or permit an audit of all the books and records of the corporation and make no requirement that the books and records be maintained according to generally accepted accounting principles or in any particular manner.

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