Flannery Bolt Co. v. Greenslade

26 F. Supp. 502, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1419
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 3, 1938
DocketNo. 3193
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 F. Supp. 502 (Flannery Bolt Co. v. Greenslade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flannery Bolt Co. v. Greenslade, 26 F. Supp. 502, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1419 (W.D. Pa. 1938).

Opinion

SCHOONMAKER, District Judge.

This is an action in equity, by which the plaintiff, a corporation, is seeking to [503]*503recover from defendants certain patents, applications, and inventions which the plaintiff contends are in equity the property of the plaintiff-corporation. The case was heard on bill, answer, and proofs. We have filed herewith our findings of fact and conclusions of law indicating that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief prayed for. A brief résumé of the facts in the case may be stated as follows:

The plaintiff is a Delaware corporation organized in November, 1926, to succeed to the business and assets of another Delaware corporation of the same name, which had been organized in 1921, and is referred to as the 1921-Corporation to distinguish it from the plaintiff in this case. The defendant, J. Rogers Flannery, had been the sole stockholder of the 1921-Cor-poration as well as its president and a director. His wife, Adelaide Friday Flannery, and one Franklin H. Allison, were also officers and directors of the 1921-Cor-poration, Mrs. Flannery being its vice-president and Allison, its secretary and treasurer. When the plaintiff was organized, it acquired all the business, properties and assets of the 1921-Corporation, including its name, paying therefor $1,500,-400 in cash, and twenty-five thousand shares of its common stock. The plaintiff, on its organization, had five directors, four of them being the defendant, J. Rogers Flannery; his brother, James J. Flannery, Jr.; his wife, Adelaide Friday Flannery; and Franklin H. Allison. J. Rogers Flannery then became the president of the plaintiff-corporation while his wife became the vice-president, and Allison, its secretary and treasurer.

The plaintiff, from that time until the present, like its predecessor, the 1921-Cor-poration, has been engaged in the business of manufacturing and marketing locomotive staybolts and accessories, including a standard apparatus for testing the condition of staybolts. One of its most important products is a flexible staybolt which is designed to hold in place the boiler-sheets of steam locomotives. These stay-bolts require a periodic examination to determine their, condition, and several devices have been suggested from time to time for the purpose of testing them. The test now used is the so-called hydrostatic test, which has been made standard by the Bureau of Locomotive Inspection. The staybolts which have been manufactured by the plaintiff and its predecessor have a so-called “telltale hole” running through the length of the bolt. To supplement this test, the plaintiff has provided a so-called electric tester, which comprises a long slender probe with a handle, in which is built a suitable indicating device. The probe is inserted in the tell-tale hole of a stay-bolt being tested, and when it reaches the end of the hole, an electrical circuit is completed, as is indicated by a flashing light or meter on the handle of the tester. Both the plaintiff and its predecessor have from time to time experimented with other devices for ascertaining the condition of its staybolt, and for the purpose of that experimentation, employed as a physicist to make experiments, the defendant in this case, Grover R. Greenslade.

From the time of the organization of the plaintiff-corporation until June, 1932, J. Rogers Flannery, Adelaide Friday Flannery, Franklin H. Allison, and James J. Flannery, Jr., composed a majority of the board of directors of the plaintiff, and conducted its affairs. J. Rogers Flannery controlled a majority of the stock from the standpoint of voting power. In June, 1932, Adelaide Friday Flannery and James J. Flannery, Jr., resigned their offices with the plaintiff-corporation, which was followed in August of that year by the resignation of Allison. The defendant, J. Rogers Flannery, continued as president and director until June 28, 1933, when he resigned.

In November, 1933, the plaintiff brought an action in equity in this court at No. 2856 against the defendant, J. Rogers Flannery, to recover various sums of money which he had misappropriated and converted during his term of office. That case was tried and a decree was entered in this court, Flannery Bolt Co. v. Flannery, 16 F.Supp. 803, directing the defendant, J. Rogers Flannery, to account to the plaintiff for a sum in- excess of one million dollars; but up to the present time the plaintiff has -been unable to obtain an accounting for more than $4500.11. The purpose of the present action is to trace certain tax-refund moneys belonging to the plaintiff, which the defendant, J. Rogers Flannery, -misappropriated into certain patents and inventions which were developed by the use of moneys thus misappropriated. These tax-refund claims grew out of certain claims made by the 1921-Corporation for the refund of certain taxes paid by it, which became the property of the plaintiff by virtue of its acquiring all the assets of the 1921-Corporation. The [504]*504largest refund in amount was $170,460.07, which the defendant, J. Rogers Flannery, collected through the 1921-Corporation under circumstances which this court held in the case of the plaintiff against J. Rogers Flannery at No. 2856 Equity established that said tax-refund was the property of the plaintiff, and that such refund had been misappropriated by the defendant, J. Rogers Flannery to his own use. The net proceeds of this fund, after allowing the expenses of collecting, was $158,115.06. That refund the defendant, J. Rogers Flannery, collected through the medium of the 1921-Corporation, and immediately converted into United States Treasury bonds. In the early part of 1933, J. Rogers Flannery became aware the refund would be paid, and had the directors of the 1921-Corpora-tion authorize Allison to receive it, sending Allison to Washington, D. C., on the night of June 28, 1933 (the day Flannery resigned as president and director of the plaintiff-corporation), to receive the tax-refund in person. The refund-cheque was cashed on June 30, 1933, by the Liberty National Bank in Washington; and Allison at once purchased $170,000 face amount of United States Treasury bonds, due 1951-1955, in negotiable form and payable to bearer. These Treasury notes were received in Pittsburgh by mail on July 7, 1933; and the directors of the 1921-Corpo-ration then met and authorized Allison to turn the bonds over to Paul J. Friday, an attorney who had represented the plaintiff-corporation, and who is Mrs. Flannery’s' brother. Friday received th.es» Treasury notes on July 7, 1933, and lodged them in his individual safety-deposit box. These Treasury-notes were from time to time taken out of Friday’s safety-deposit box and cashed under the direction of J. Rogers Flannery. Among the dispositions of this money, $50,000 was paid to the defendant, American Stentex Corporation for the consideration of the issuance of five hundred shares of its preferred stock, and two hundred and fifty shares of its common stock to the 1921-Corporation; $8000 thereof was used to purchase from J. Rogers Flannery twelve hundred shares of Reynolds Spring Company, which was delivered to the 192LCorporation, and by it ultimately turned over to the defendant, Pittsburgh Dry Stencil Company, for stock of the latter company. In addition, $21,000 proceeds of said refund were turned over to thé defendant, Pittsburgh Dry Stencil Company, as consideration (with the twelve hundred shares of Reynolds Spring stock) for one hundred shares of the preferred stock, and two hundred shares of its common stock; and $50,000 thereof was turned over to J. Rogers Flannery as alleged-compensation for his services. This $50,-000 was handed by J. Rogers Flannery to his wife, Adelaide Friday Flannery.

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Related

Maas v. Maas' Adm'r
255 S.W.2d 497 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1952)
Flannery Bolt Co. v. Flannery
119 F.2d 601 (Third Circuit, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Supp. 502, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flannery-bolt-co-v-greenslade-pawd-1938.