Duncan Shaw Corp. v. Standard MacHinery Co.

196 F.2d 147, 33 A.L.R. 2d 1050, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 4293
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 22, 1952
Docket4615
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 196 F.2d 147 (Duncan Shaw Corp. v. Standard MacHinery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duncan Shaw Corp. v. Standard MacHinery Co., 196 F.2d 147, 33 A.L.R. 2d 1050, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 4293 (1st Cir. 1952).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a final judgment for the defendants, entered after a trial without a jury, in a suit by two New York corporations against a Rhode Island corporation and an individual citizen of that State. Three causes of action are alleged. Each of the two plaintiffs alleges that the corporate defendant failed to perform its obligations under a certain tripartite contract under seal to be described presently, and the plaintiff, Shaw Standard Corporation, alleges that the individual defendant, Robert F. Moyer, failed to perform his fiduciary duty as one of its directors. As *149 relief the plaintiffs seek damages totaling well over $3,000 exclusive of interest and costs, and also an injunction restraining the defendant Moyer from continuing his alleged violations of fiduciary duty.

Federal jurisdiction based upon diversity of citizenship and amount in controversy under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1) is clearly established, and this court’s appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 is obvious.

The following facts are undisputed.

The plaintiff, Duncan Shaw Corporation, which for simplicity we shall call Shaw hereinafter, was organized under the laws of New York in 1946 primarily to engage in the business of designing, selling and distributing builders’ hardware; locks, latches, hinges and the like. The business associates who formed the corporation had in mind, designing and marketing a line of hardware which they thought could 'be manufactured by new and economical techniques, and in the spring or early summer of 1947 they were actively in search for someone interested in manufacturing their products for them. Their search ended when they met the defendant Moyer, who was the president, a director, and a substantial stockholder in the defendant, Standard Machinery Company, a Rhode Island corporation, which apparently for a number of years had been in the business of manufacturing machine tools of one kind or another, and which at that time was interested in embarking upon the manufacture of a line of consumer goods but reluctant to develop a selling organization of its own for such wares.

During the summer of 1947, the leading officials of the two corporations held several conferences, sometimes in New York and sometimes in Rhode Island, and eventually reached agreement on the basic terms of a contract which they thought would be advantageous to both corporations. Had the two corporations merely entered into a contract, and proceeded with their transaction, this case would be a simple one. Instead, however, Moyer proposed, and the officers of Shaw agreed, that the stockholders of Shaw and Standard should organize a third corporation as an intermediary through which the other two corporations would transact their business with one another. It appears from the evidence that it was thought that a third intermediate corporation would provide a means of raising new capital for the venture, and for equitably distributing anticipated profits between the stockholders of Shaw and Standard, and perhaps that it would also achieve certain income tax advantages.

This, and numerous other contractual details which had already been orally agreed upon were embodied in a letter from one Gillmore, vice president of Shaw, to one McCabe, a director of and counsel for Standard, dated August 20, 1947, which Moyer, as president of Standard, “accepted” toy endorsement on August 29, 1947. Thereupon in conformity with the agreement already reached the plaintiff Shaw Standard Corporation, to be referred to sometimes hereafter as S.S., was organized under the laws of New York. The stock in this latter corporation, also in accordance with prior agreement, was to be privately issued to the stockholders of the two other corporations— the stockholders of Standard taking half of the stock in the new corporation, and the stockholders of Shaw taking the remaining half, so that ownership of the new corporation would be equally divided between the two groups. In fact, however, although the Standard group of stockholders took and paid for their half of the S.S. stock, not all of the Shaw group paid for the S.S. stock allotted to them, so some of their stock remained unissued. Nevertheless actual control of S.S., also as previously agreed upon, was placed in the Shaw group by means of an assignment by Moyer of 10% of his personal stock in S.S. to Gillmore, the vice president of Shaw, under a voting trust. At Shaw Standard’s initial stockholders’ meeting five directors were elected. The Standard group elected two directors, Moyer afrd another, both of whom were also directors of Standard. Thus the defendant Moyer was the president, a director, and a stockholder of Standard, and also a director and a stockholder of Shaw Standard. The Shaw group elected three di *150 rectors, two of whom were also directors of Shaw. As a result, although the two end corporations, Shaw and Standard, had no common directors, the new middle corporation, Shaw Standard, had two directors in common with Standard and two directors in common with Shaw.

Early in September 1947 officials of the three corporations signed the tripartite written contract under seal upon which this suit was brought. It clearly appears that the contract was executed on behalf of the two New York corporations, Shaw and Shaw Standard, in New York. The evidence does not clearly establish whether it was executed on behalf of the Rhode Island corporation, Standard, in New York or in Rhode Island. The place of execution, however, is of no consequence in the view we take of the Rhode Island law as will appear hereafter. The separate notarized acknowledgments appended to the contract recite that the seal of each -corporation was “affixed by order of the Board of Directors of said corporation,” and that the official who signed on behalf of each corporation “signed his name thereto by like order.” It was stipulated by the parties, however, that as a matter of fact this was not so with respect to Standard, but that actually “there was no vote or resolution a-t any meeting of directors or stockholders of Standard Machinery Company that specifically had reference to the execution of the subject contract or had to do with the ratification of that contract.” 1

It is not necessary to recite the terms of the contract in detail, because the breach of contract issue which was tried in the court below is not before us on this appeal. In its essence, however, the contract provided that Standard would manufacture Shaw’s hardware line, and sell exclusively to the intermediate corporation, Shaw Standard, at prices fixed by application of an agreed formula, and that the latter would sell, also according to an agreed price formula, exclusively to Shaw which in turn would sell the line on the open market. To accomplish this Shaw agreed to grant Shaw Standard a license under all of its (Shaw’s) patents, issued and pending, with the power to sub-license Standard, and Shaw also agreed to disclose all of its unpatented models and plans to Shaw Standard provided that they would not be disclosed to any one else without Shaw’s consent.

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Related

Standard MacHinery Co. v. Duncan Shaw Corp.
208 F.2d 61 (First Circuit, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
196 F.2d 147, 33 A.L.R. 2d 1050, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 4293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-shaw-corp-v-standard-machinery-co-ca1-1952.