Franco v. J. D. Streett & Co.

360 S.W.2d 597, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 623
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 10, 1962
DocketNo. 48729
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 360 S.W.2d 597 (Franco v. J. D. Streett & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franco v. J. D. Streett & Co., 360 S.W.2d 597, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 623 (Mo. 1962).

Opinion

HOLLINGSWORTH, Judge.

This is an action in equity, wherein plaintiff, Janet S. Franco, formerly the owner of 130 shares of 1215 shares of the common stock of J. D. Streett & Company, Incorporated, outstanding from 1943 until February, 1955, seeks to recover her alleged pro rata share of properties and profits allegedly lost to the company by reason of the alleged fraudulent misappropriation by certain of its officials and directors of an alleged corporate opportunity to acquire and thereafter to own and operate for and on behalf of the company certain towboats and barges theretofore owned and operated by Erlbacher Brothers, a towing enterprise located at Cape Girardeau. Trial of the case resulted in a judgment in favor of defendants, from which plaintiff has appealed. The amount in dispute exceeds $15,000 and this court has jurisdiction.

■J. D. Streett & Company, domiciled in the City of St. Louis, herein frequently referred to as the “Oil Company”, was a wholesale marketer of petroleum products which it purchased from refiners wherever an advantageous price could be had, then transported, formerly by railroad tank cars and later by river barges, into the central Mississippi River Valley and sold to independent jobbers, farm bureaus and others. The enterprise, which later became known as J. D. Streett & Company, was founded in 1884 and was owned and operated by James D. Streett until his death in 1917. He had two children: defendant J. Clark Streett and Florence Streett Shields, plaintiff’s mother. J. Clark Streett had four children: J. Clark Streett, Jr., J. Douglas Streett, Rolla W. Streett and Maud Streett Gordon. (J. Clark Streett, Jr., said to be a resident of Texas, although named a party defendant in this action, was never served with process and never appeared in the case.) Florence Streett [599]*599Shields had two children: a daughter, the plaintiff herein, Janet Shields (who married Paul Franco), and a son, George H. Shields, III. Following the death of James D. Streett in 1917, J. Clark Streett and George H. Shields, Jr., (Florence Streett Shields’ husband) operated the business on a partnership basis until it was incorporated on December 23, 1919, under the name of J. D. Streett & Company, Incorporated. George H. Shields, Jr., died in 1928.

The defendants in the original petition were J. D. Streett & Company, Inc., J. Clark Streett, Kenneth C. Baker, J. Douglas Streett, J. Clark Streett, Jr., Rolla W. Streett, Maud Streett Gordon, Marian B. Patton, individually and as executrix under the will of Harper C. Patton, deceased, and John R. Patton, trustee under the will of Harper C. Patton, deceased. J. Clark Streett (at trial time an aged and infirm man) died after trial and submission of the case and the executors of his estate were substituted as defendants in his stead.

The petition alleged that from January 1, 1943, to and through February 4, 1955, plaintiff owned 130 shares of 1215 shares of the issued and outstanding common stock of the Oil Company (J. D. Streett & Company, Inc.); that defendants J. Clark Streett, Kenneth C. Baker, Rolla W. Streett, J. Douglas Streett and Harper C. Patton constituted the board of directors of the Oil Company from 1943 through July 7, 1953; that thereafter until the death of Harper C. Patton in October, 1954, said persons constituted five of a total of seven members of the board of directors; that since the death of Harper C. Patton the four survivors of the original five constituted a majority of the board of directors — which varied at different times from five to seven; that at all times material J. Clark Streett was chairman of the board, Kenneth C. Baker was president and general manager and Harper C. Patton (until his death), Rolla W. Streett and J. Douglas Streett were vice-presidents of the company; that from 1929, the date of George H. Shields’ death, until 1955, plaintiff’s mother and plaintiff relied on and placed special confidence in J. Clark Streett and his sons, Rolla W. Streett and J. Douglas Streett, to operate the company in the best interest of all of the shareholders, as a result of which plaintiff and her mother gave proxies to J. Clark Streett and signed other instruments at his request without question or independent advice and entrusted him with certificates of stock endorsed in blank, of which reliance and confidence J. Clark Streett and his sons, Rolla W. Streett and J. Douglas Streett, and Kenneth C. Baker and Harper C. Patton had full knowledge; that in January, 1944, and prior thereto the company was dependent upon Erlbacher Brothers Towing Company for the transportation of its products from points on the river to terminals in the St. Louis area, which facilities were vital to the company’s business; that prior to August, 1943, defendant Baker and Harper C. Patton received knowledge that the Erlbacher Towing Company was for sale; that in 1943, Baker, Patton, J. Clark Streett, Rolla W. Streett and J. Douglas Streett entered into a conspiracy to take advantage of plaintiff and her mother to deprive the shareholders other than themselves of the opportunity to acquire Erl-bacher Brothers’ equipment and to operate it for the benefit of the conspirators; that pursuant to the plan of the conspirators a partnership was formed between Baker, Patton and Rolla W. Streett to purchase and operate the Erlbacher equipment under the name of Streett Towing Company for the exclusive transportation of the products sold and distributed by the Oil Company; that in December, 1943, said conspirators, through J. Clark Streett, without advising plaintiff or her mother of the foregoing facts, requested plaintiff to sign, and she signed, a paper wherein she, as a stockholder, agreed to authorize Baker, Patton and Rolla W. Streett, who as partners had formed the Streett Towing Company, to have dealings and contracts with the Oil Company; that thereafter Streett Towing Company purchased a substantial portion [600]*600of the Erlbacher equipment, using Oil Company funds to pay the cash down payment; that thereafter the conspirators used assets and facilities of the Oil Company to operate the Towing Company, and charged it unreasonable prices for towing; that in so acting, the conspirators violated their duties as officers, directors and fiduciaries; that in 1946, Streett Towing Company was incorporated, and that Rolla W. Streett, without consideration, divided his one-third stock ownership therein equally with his defendant brothers and sister; that Harper C. Patton died October 7, 1954; that prior to February 4, 1955, Baker, in furtherance of the conspiracy, negotiated the sale of all of the stock of both the Oil Company and the Towing Company to Cities Service Oil Company; and that when plaintiff entered into the contract to sell her stock in the Oil Company to Cities Service she was not aware that the stock of the Towing Company was likewise being sold, nor that the conspirators had any interest therein. Plaintiff then prayed that a constructive trust be impressed upon all of the distributions of profits realized from the Towing Company and the proceeds from the February, 1955, sale of its stock, and that she recover her pro rata (130/1215) share thereof.

Motions to dismiss were filed in behalf of all defendants and were sustained as to all defendants except plaintiff’s uncle, J. Clark Streett, and her cousins, Rolla W. Streett and J. Douglas Streett.

The answer of defendants J. Clark Streett, Rolla W. Streett and J.

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Bluebook (online)
360 S.W.2d 597, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franco-v-j-d-streett-co-mo-1962.