Forstner v. Speidel

1 F.2d 988
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 17, 1924
DocketNo. 172
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 F.2d 988 (Forstner v. Speidel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forstner v. Speidel, 1 F.2d 988 (D.R.I. 1924).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity for an accounting, brought in this court on the ground of diverse citizenship.

The plaintiff claims under a contract called “the Automatic Gold Chain Company contract,” executed on April 16, 1913, in Germany, in the German language, between parties who then were all German citizens, but have since become citizens of the United States. The parties differ as to the translation of the document, but for the purposes of the case we may use the Defendants’ Exhibit F, which is as follows:

“Agreement between Messrs. Albert Spoidel and Edwin Speidel of Pforzheim, owners ox the Automatic Gold Chain Co. in Providence, on the one hand, and Mr. Wilhelm Forstner, of Pforzheim, partner in the firm of F. Speidel Co., in Providence, on the oilier hand, the following agreement has been made to-day:

“Article 1. Mr. Willi. Forstner will participate as a silent partner in the Automatic Gold Chain Co., in Providence, as well as in possible allied firms, with 20% (twenty per eent.) in the capital, profits, and losses.

“Art. 2. The silent partnership of Mr. Wilh. Forstner in the Automatic Gold Chain Co. ceases with first of July, 191.7, and Mr. Wilh. Forstner will have Ms capital paid back in four equal yearly installments, the first of wMeh is to be paid July 1, 1918, and all bearing interest of 5 per cent., payable semiannually. This return of Ms capital may also be made earlier.

“Art. 3. The Automatic Gold Chain Co. agrees, as long as it may exist and one off Messrs. Albert or Edwin Speidel is partner, to pay to Mr. Wilh. Forstner or to his legal successor, who must be actively interested in the firm of F. Speidel Co., in Providence, after July 1, 1917, 10% (ten per eent.) of the future net profits of the Automatic Gold Chain Co. or of its allied firms, provided the net profits amount to at least M. 300,000 (three hundred thousand marks). If the net profits do not total this amount, neither Mr. Wilh. Forstner nor his legal successor shall be entitled to any share in the net profits.

“Art. 4. If before the expiration of the partnership agreement of the firm F. Speidel Co., in Providence, the Automatic Gold Chain Co. should be liquidated or get into other hands, whereby Mr. Wilh. Forstner would lose Ms 10 por eent. share according to article 3, Mr. Edwin Speidel agrees to cede 5% (five per cent.) of Ms silent partnership in the firm of F. Speidel Co., in Providence, to Wilh. Forstner while Mr. Wilh. Forstner agrees to pay to Mr. Edwin Speidel a sum equivalent to that share of the capital.

“Art. 5. The parties agree that Mr. Wilh. Forstner shall receive every month a copy of the balance sheet and upon request be allowed to inspect" the inventory sheets and yearly balance sheets. The payments to Mr. Wilh. Forstner shall be made at the same time as payments are made to Messrs. Albert and Edwin Speidel.

“Art. 6. The capital paid in cannot be reduced without the consent of all partners.

“Art. 7. At the end of each fiscal year the books shall be balanced.

“In taking inventory the following deductions shall be made: 10 per cent, for the cost price of patents; 12 per eent. for machinery; 20 per cent, for furniture and fixtures.

“The net profits may be paid out as soon as the requirements of the business so allow.

“Art. 8. In case Mr. Wilh. Forstner or Ms brother, Walter Forstner, should die dur[990]*990ing the duration of this agreement, and there is no legal successor to the surviving Mr. Forstner in the firm of F. Speidel Co., in Providence, then any possible share in the net profits will cease with the year of death of the surviving Mr. Forstner, as provided in Article 3, without any indemnity to the heirs.

“The present agreement was made in two copies and signed. Mr. Forstner as well as the Automatic Gold Chain Co. received each one copy.

“Pforzheim, April 16, 1913.

“[Signed] Wilhelm Forstner.

“Albert Speidel.

“Edwin Speidel.”

As the differences in translation and in •interpretation arise principally out of Article 3, the original German text of that Article is presented as follows:

“No. 3. Die Automatic Gold Chain Co. verpflichtet sieh, solange dieselbe besteht und einer der Herren Albert oder Edwin Speidel darin beteiligt ist, Herren Wilh. Forstner oder dessen Reehtsnachfolger, welcher an der Fa. F. Speidel Co. in Providence aktiv beteiligt sein muss, vom 1. Juli 1917 ab vom ferneren Reinverdienst der Automatic Gold Chain Co. oder deren Schwesterfirmen 10% (zehn Prozent) auszubezahlen, fur den Fall, ■ dass der Reinverdienst mindest M. 300,000 (dreihunderttausend Mark) betragt. Sollte der Rein verdienst diese Summe nicht erreichen, so hat Herr Wilh. Forstner oder dessen Reehtsnachfolger keinen Anteil am Reinverdienst zu beanspruchen.”

Under Article 3 the plaintiff seeks an accounting for 10 per cent, of the net profits made by the Automatic Gold Chain Company after July 1, 1917. The defendants contend that this agreement was terminated by the dissolution of the firm of F. Speidel Company, of Providence, -as a result of the declaration that the plaintiff, William Forstner, was an alien enemy, and of the seizure by the Alien Property Custodian of his interest in the firm of F. Speidel Company, and by the subsequent sale of the assets of that company.

The defendants contend that under Article 3 the right to the 10 per cent, profits is expressly conditioned upon the continuance of the plaintiff, William Forstner, as an active partner in the firm of F. Speidel Company, and that upon the dissolution of that firm the performance of this condition became impossible, and also that the consideration for the promise of the defendants to pay the 10 per cent, profits had completely failed.

It seems to me that the substantial points in the case may best be understood by first considering the defendants’ contention that the consideration for the agreement to pay 10 per cent, was that the plaintiff should continue in the firm of F. Speidel Company and by his continuance in that firm render valuable aid to the Automatic Gold Chain Company.

The contract in question grew out of an agreement between persons who were copartners in the F. Speidel Company for a division of the business of that established company and the formation of the Automatic Gold Chain Company, which should carry on a portion of the business formerly conducted by the F. Speidel Company. By an agreement of the same date, April 16, 1913, a translation of which appears in Defendants’ Exhibit H, it was provided that the Automatic Gold Chain Company “will engage in the1' manufacture of articles made exclusively of gold, platinum, and platinum plated material, and that the F. Speidel Company will manufacture articles made exclusively of plated materials, silver, and base metals.”

There are some specific provisions which, for the purposes of this case, are not important: There were also provisions against competition between the F. Speidel Company and the Automatic Gold Chain Company; also a provision for mutual aid in mercantile and technical activities; and a grant by the firm of F. Speidel Company to the Automatic Gold Chain Company of a license to use the Fester patent in America.

As the plaintiff, William Forstner, was a member of the firm of F.

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Bluebook (online)
1 F.2d 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forstner-v-speidel-rid-1924.