George A. Shwab, Jr., and Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, Surety-Appellee v. Paul R. Doelz, and the Indiana Steel Products Company

229 F.2d 749, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3627
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 1956
Docket17-3624
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 229 F.2d 749 (George A. Shwab, Jr., and Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, Surety-Appellee v. Paul R. Doelz, and the Indiana Steel Products Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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George A. Shwab, Jr., and Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, Surety-Appellee v. Paul R. Doelz, and the Indiana Steel Products Company, 229 F.2d 749, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3627 (7th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

DUFFY, Chief Judge.

The notice of appeal herein states the appeal is “ * * * from that part and so much only of the Order on Motions and Judgment entered * * * on March 10, 1955, as denies the defendants’ motion dated January 27, 1955, for leave to file a supplemental answer and counterclaims against the plaintiff herein * * The notice stated that defendant, The Indiana Steel Products Company, also appealed on a separate ground. To understand the situation in the trial court on March 10,1955, a somewhat detailed description of the then pending litigation is necessary.

Since 1937 one A. D. Plamondon, Jr. had been President of defendant The Indiana Steel Products Company, an Indiana corporation. On February 11, 1953, plaintiff, a resident of Tennessee and a stockholder of defendant Company, brought this suit to restrain the Company and the directors Buchanan, Con-over and Doelz, constituting a majority of the Board of Directors, from removing Plamondon from office, and from otherwise interfering with his functioning as such President. On the day he filed his complaint plaintiff applied for an ex parte temporary restraining order which would provisionally grant him substantially the same in junctional relief as he sought in his complaint. With the application for the temporary restraining order, plaintiff filed a bond in customary form in the penal sum of $25,000 with the Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, as surety. The District Court issued the temporary restraining order without notice to any defendant and directed prompt hearings on the question of the temporary injunction. The motion for preliminary injunction was argued February 18 and 19, 1953, and the temporary restraining order was continued in force until March 10, 1953. On *751 that date the Court denied plaintiff’s motion for a temporary injunction and dissolved the temporary restraining order.

On March 13, 1953, plaintiff filed an appeal to this Court. Three days later plaintiff applied to this Court for an order which he designated as an “emergency temporary restraining order” pending appeal. This motion was denied on March 23, 1953.

On March 24, 1953, the Board of Directors of the Company, by appropriate resolution, removed Plamondon, Jr. from the office as President of the Company, and one Kirsch from office as Secretary, Treasurer and Comptroller of the Company. At the 1953 annual stockholders’ meeting held April 23-25, 1953, the three directors hereinbefore named were reelected as well as two new directors to take the place of Plamondon and one Gillies.

In May, 1953, plaintiff disposed of 1400 of the 1500 shares of the capital stock of defendant Company previously held by him. On May 11, 1953 plaintiff moved this Court to dismiss his appeal on the ground that same had become moot, and on May 19, 1953 an order of dismissal was entered. In September, 1954, plaintiff disposed of his remaining 100 shares of capital stock, and since said date has not been a shareholder of record.

On February 10, 1954, in the District Court, plaintiff moved to dismiss the action without prejudice and without costs, and for cancellation of the bond and for release of the surety thereon. On the same date defendants moved for dismissal of the complaint and for judgment in favor of the Company against plaintiff as principal and against the surety for damages under the terms of the bond. Hearings were held on the question of damages as a consequence of Plamondon remaining in office by force of the ex parte order from February 13 to March 24, 1953, the Company claiming it was entitled to $19,460.82.

On January 17, 1955, the District Court filed its Memorandum of Decision including its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. The Court determined that the defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint with prejudice and with costs should be granted, and that plaintiff’s motion to dismiss the complaint without prejudice and without costs and to cancel the bond should be denied. The Court granted judgment in favor of the Company for damages in the sum of $3,-486.88, which included the item of $2,-756.57 paid by the Company to Plamondon as its President during the effective period of the temporary restraining order.

The District Court directed defendants’ counsel to present, within ten days, an order consistent with its Opinion and Findings. Instead of so doing, defendants moved for leave to file a supplemental answer and counterclaims which presented a malicious prosecution action against the plaintiff. Subsequently, defendants filed a motion for amendment to the Court’s Findings and Conclusions seeking to have the Court retain jurisdiction to determine possible future liability on the bond. The Court denied these motions.

Prior to the oral argument before this Court, plaintiff moved to dismiss the appeal for the reasons: (1) the orders of the Court from which the appeals are taken are not final appealable decisions, (2) no appeal is purported to be taken from the final judgment entered in this cause by the District Court. The motion to dismiss was denied without prejudice to renew same at the time of oral argument. This has been done.

The document signed by the District Judge on March 10, 1955, was entitled “Order on Motions and Judgment.” The first two paragraphs contained the following :

“The motion of defendants for ‘Amendment of and Additions to Findings’ filed February 3,1955, and the motion of the plaintiff for ‘Amendment of Findings and Judgment’ filed February 3, 1955, are denied.
“The motion of defendants Indiana Steel Products Company, Wil *752 liam C. Buchanan, Hubert S. Con-over and Paul R. Doelz ‘For Leave to File Supplemental Answer and Counterclaims’ filed January 28, 1955, is denied.”

The first part of the third paragraph reads:

“Judgment is entered for the defendant Indiana Steel Products Company and against plaintiif George A. Shwab, Jr. and his surety, Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, in the total amount of Three Thousand Four Hundred Eighty-six Dollars and Eighty-eight Cents ($3,486.88), together with costs, * *

Thereafter follows an itemized list of the damages allowed by the Court.

On the same date a separate entry was made in the District Court records as follows:

“And now the Clerk enters judgment, for the defendant, which entry of judgment reads in the words and figures following, to-wit:
“Judgment is hereby entered for the defendant Indiana Steel Products Company and against plaintiif George A. Shwab, Jr. and the Surety Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co. in the total amount of $3,486.88, together with costs, * * * ”,

which was followed by a detailed statement of the items of damages.

It is clear defendants did not appeal from the judgment which was in their favor.

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229 F.2d 749, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-a-shwab-jr-and-lumbermens-mutual-casualty-company-ca7-1956.