Geiger v. Hansen

519 P.2d 699, 214 Kan. 83, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 600
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 2, 1974
Docket47,107
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 519 P.2d 699 (Geiger v. Hansen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Geiger v. Hansen, 519 P.2d 699, 214 Kan. 83, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 600 (kan 1974).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fontron, J.:

This action was filed to recover a balance of $42,500 claimed to be due on a contract for the sale of corporate *84 stock. The plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Geiger, recovered judgment in the lower court and the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Hansen, have appealed.

Mr. Geiger commenced the operation of a grain elevator in Everest,. Kansas, in about 1933. For a good many years Mr. Hansen was employed as assistant manager and bookkeeper for the business. He was apparently a valued and trusted employee, as well as a friend, and relations between the Geigers and the Hansens were cordial. In 1962 Mr. Geiger determined to incorporate the business under the style of F.. H. Geiger Grain, Inc. Seven hundred fifty shares of capital stock were issued, seven hundred forty-five shares being issued to Mr. and Mrs. Geiger and five shares to Mr. Hansen.

Sometime prior to January 2, 1964, the Geigers and the Hansens entered into discussions for the sale and purchase of the elevator. The negotiations culminated in a written agreement dated January 2, 1964, for the sale of seven hundred forty-four shares of Geiger stock to Mr. and Mrs. Hansen, with Geiger retaining one share. The business was valued at $110,000, making the stock worth approximately $145.85 per share. The total purchase price of $110,000 was payable $25,000 in cash and the remainder in ten annual payments of $8500 each on the second day of January of each year beginning January, 1965. The agreement called for the reissue of the Geigers’ stock, less one share, in the names of Mr. and Mrs. Hansen, and that the certificates be placed in escrow with the Union State Bank of Everest. It was agreed that two hundred shares should be released as security for the initial $25,000 down payment and that additional shares would be released to secure the subsequent annual payments on a prescribed basis. Reference will be made to other pertinent provisions as this opinion progresses.

Following execution of the agreement, so the record reflects, Mr. Hansen was elected president of the corporation. Mr. Geiger became vice-president, Mrs. Hansen took over the chores of secretary-treasurer, and the Hansens assumed active management of the elevator business. In 1966 the corporate name was changed to Hansen Grain Inc. The shares of stock were reissued in the new name and placed in the file cabinet at the elevator office.

Difficulties began to beset the company late in 1968 and eventually led to a receivership in the District Court of Brown County, Kansas, from which the company has never emerged so far as the *85 record reflects. The Hansens made the principal payment due January 2, 1969,, but they defaulted in the interest payable at that time and the contract has been in default ever since. The petition in the present lawsuit was filed July 23,1970.

The Hansens have not denied that they have defaulted in payments due under the contract, but they have filed a counterclaim in the amount of $33,750 which they premise on the following clause found in the contract:

“It is further agreed between the parties hereto that if default is made of any of the payments as set out herein, or for a period of 60 days after due date, then this contract shall be null and void and all of the stock issued in the names of the said parties of the second part shall be cancelled by F. H. Geiger Grain, Inc. and re-issued by F. H. Geiger Grain, Inc. in the name of the parties of the first part and said parties of the first part shall pay to said parties of the second part 50% of the amount paid on the principal of this contract, less amount borrowed (plus interest) by said parties of the second part from Union State Bank of Everest, Kansas, or any other loan agency or participating bank where said common stock of F. H. Geiger Grain, Inc. has been placed as security for monies borrowed.”

In response to the counterclaim the Geigers filed a reply asserting the following defenses:

“5. Further answering defendants’ Counter-Claim, plaintiffs allege that the provision in the contract relating to a 50% refund to defendants in the event of default, the terms of which are fully set out in numbered paragraph 4 of defendants’ Counter-Claim, was not intended by either party of the contract, to run for the life of the contract, and that said contract should be reformed on the grounds of mutual mistake.
“6. Further answering defendants’ Counter-Claim, plaintiffs allege that defendants are not entitled to the relief they seek in said Counter-Claim for the reason that defendants have grossly diminished the value of the corporation, by misappropriation of funds, and personal loans from said corporation, and that the contract did not contemplate that plaintiffs should have to repurchase the corporation for any sum, while said corporation was owed large sums of money by defendants, or was in a bankrupt condition by reason of said loans to defendants, and mismanagement by defendants.”

A number of the findings made by the trial court appear pertinent to the issue on which we believe this case must turn:

“6. All the payments made on this contract to the plaintiffs were made by the Hansen Grain Inc. except perhaps the last payment. These payments under the terms of the contract were the responsibility of the defendants individually.
“10. On October 15, 1969, the defendants made an assignment to Olin Mathieson Chemical Corporation of all their rights in the agreement. . . . At this time the Hansen Grain Incorporated was indebted to Olin Mathieson *86 Chemical Corporation Inc., in the amount of approximately $130,000.00 as shown by their claim filed in the Receivership case. . . .
“16. The forfeiture clause which is the basis for the defendants counter claim was inserted in this agreement at the request of the plaintiff, F. H. Geiger.
“17. The testimony of F. H. Geiger and Harry E. Miller, one of the attorneys who prepared the agreement was that this clause was inserted for the protection of the defendant, Jean M. Hansen, in the event that if something happened to Mr. Hansen, Mrs. Hansen would not be able to operate the elevator.
“18. This assumed that the elevator would be a going corporation, and not an insolvent corporation.
“22. On May 31, 1969, loans by the corporation to shareholders totalled $62,571.45.
“23. The defendants have not repaid the corporation this indebtedness. These loans have not been repaid by the defendants.
“25. The defendants testified that they did not bargin (sic) or ask for the default clause as is contained in the agreement between the parties . . .”

In material part the trial court concluded:

“3. The default clause was inserted in the agreement ony for certain purposes as set out in the findings of fact and the testimony of the parties was admitted to show this intention.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
519 P.2d 699, 214 Kan. 83, 1974 Kan. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geiger-v-hansen-kan-1974.