Garey v. Kelvinator Corp.

271 N.W. 723, 279 Mich. 174, 1937 Mich. LEXIS 730
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1937
DocketDocket No. 85, Calendar No. 39,137.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 271 N.W. 723 (Garey v. Kelvinator Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garey v. Kelvinator Corp., 271 N.W. 723, 279 Mich. 174, 1937 Mich. LEXIS 730 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Btishnell, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment entered in favor of plaintiff upon a verdict by a jury for $21,975 on a claim of $35,000 for legal services rendered to Nizer Corporation, a Maryland corporation. All the liabilities of Nizer, according to plaintiff’s declaration, were assumed by Kelvinator Corporation of Michigan, then known as Electric Refrigeration Corporation, when it acquired the assets of Nizer.

Four questions are involved:

1. If he be a creditor of the Maryland corporation, can plaintiff maintain an action at law against the Michigan corporation under the terms of a certain written agreement between the two companies?

2. Was plaintiff’s claimed agreement with Nizer illegal and contrary to public policy?

3. Did the trial court err in admitting as a part of'the proof of plaintiff’s employment and the value thereof certain letters written by former officers and directors of Nizer?

4. Was the jury’s verdict excessive, contrary to the weight of the evidence and the product of prejudicial and improper argument by plaintiff’s counsel?

*178 The enforcement of a refrigerating ordinance of the city of New York was in the hands of the fire department. The ordinance provided for a right of appeal from the orders of the fire commissioner to the board of standards and appeals. The Nizer Corporation built and sold to the public automatic refrigerating cabinets, charged with sulphur dioxide, and intended for storing ice cream, etc. The use of this type of machine was made economically impracticable by the ordinance, although the Nizer unit, if approved by the fire commissioner, might come within the exemptions of the code.

Plaintiff, an attorney located in New York City, claims that he was retained to protect the interests of Nizer in the drafting and passage of a new refrigerating code, while defendant says that he was retained to handle certain complaints and notices having to do with ordinance violations, for which he was paid in full.

During the. fall of 1926, while plaintiff claims that he was performing the services in question, Nizer sold all of its assets, except $10,000 in cash, to Kelvinator, then known as Electric Befrigeration Corporation, in consideration of the surrender and cancellation of all of Nizer’s outstanding stock then owned by Electric, except a small amount, and Electric’s written agreement to pay and discharge all of Nizer’s liabilities.

Defendant argues that plaintiff, as a third party beneficiary to this agreement, does not have an action at law on his claim, but must seek his relief, if any, in equity, citing Pearce v. Schneider, 242 Mich. 28; Tapert v. Schultz, 252 Mich. 39; Peoples Savings Bank v. Geistert, 253 Mich. 694, and other authorities therein mentioned.

*179 Plaintiff argues that he may maintain an action at law under the authority of Shadford v. Railway, 130 Mich. 300, and Morlock v. Mount Forest Fur Farms of America, Inc., 269 Mich. 549.

The retention by Nizer of $10,000 in cash at the time of transfer of all its other assets, the surrender and cancellation of 252,925 shares of its 253,087 shares of issued class B common stock and the decrease of its authorized capital stock to 200 shares of class B common stock, left the assets of Nizer so small in comparison to its former size as to make the argument untenable that Nizer’s creditors must either seek redress from the reduced assets or file a bill in equity. Agreement with this argument Avould ignore certain decisions of this court and the plain terms of Electric Refrigeration’s written obligation which reads in part:

“Electric Refrigeration Corporation, a Michigan corporation (hereinafter called the ‘obligor’), for itself and its successors and assigns, hereby assumes and agrees to pay or cause to be paid or otherwise discharge or cause to be discharged from all obligations and liabilities, whether firm or contingent, of every name, nature and description (including, but without limiting the generality of the foregoing, liabilities for tort and liabilities for taxes), according to their tenor outstanding on the day of the date hereof of Nizer Corporation, a Maryland corporation (hereinafter called the ‘vendor’); and the obligor further agrees faithfully to perform, according to the terms thereof, all contracts .and agreements existing at the date hereof, heretofore lawfully undertaken and made by the vendor, but only to the extent that the vendor would be required to perform the same.”

Whatever refinements may exist in the law of creditors’ rights arising out of agreements to purchase, *180 merge or consolidate corporations, the Morlock Case, supra, states the rule by which these parties are bound under the facts in the instant case. The conclusion in the Morlock Case was reached by reasoning from Grenell v. Detroit Gas Co., 112 Mich. 70, 72; Chase v. Michigan Telephone Co., 121 Mich. 631, 634; Shadford v. Railway, supra, and Howell v. Lansing & Suburban Traction Co., 146 Mich. 450. On page 559 of the Morlock opinion, we adopted 8 Thompson on Corporations (3d Ed.), p. 157, § 6074, which states:

“"Where a corporation purchased the assets of another and expressly agreed to pay its debts, the creditors of the latter may sue such purchasing corporation on the contract as a contract made for their benefit.”

Appellant contends that George Realty Co. v. Gulf Refining Co., 275 Mich. 442, which denied a legal action to a creditor of the selling corporation, limits and restricts the operation of the rule in the Morlock Case, and that the reasoning of the George Realty Case should be applied here. Defendant points out that in the Morlock Case all of the assets in the selling company were transferred to the buying company and payment was made in stock, while in the George Realty Case, only a part of the selling company’s assets were transferred and payment was made in cash rather than stock. Appellant contends that because of a similarity of facts, the George Realty Case is controlling.

In the instant case, plaintiff alleged in his declaration :

“That sometime subsequent to the matters herein-before set forth defendant Kelvinator' Corporation, which at the times aforesaid owned all or practically *181

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Bluebook (online)
271 N.W. 723, 279 Mich. 174, 1937 Mich. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garey-v-kelvinator-corp-mich-1937.