Gord v. Iowana Farms Milk Co.

60 N.W.2d 820, 245 Iowa 1, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 464
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 17, 1953
Docket48320
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 60 N.W.2d 820 (Gord v. Iowana Farms Milk Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gord v. Iowana Farms Milk Co., 60 N.W.2d 820, 245 Iowa 1, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 464 (iowa 1953).

Opinion

Wennerstrum, J.

— Plaintiff brought an action in equity wherein he sought to have canceled certain shares of stock issued to' the defendants Evelyn Runkel Moore and Helen E. Helble by the Iowana Farms Milk Company, á closely held corporation. He claimed there was issued to these defendants stock in excess of their, pre-emptive subscription rights of an authorized issue and also asked that it be decreed that plaintiff is entitled to exercise his pre-emptive right of purchase in the stock .authorized to be issued in his proportionate share of previously held stock. As an alternate remedy the plaintiff sought to have the defendants Glenn H. Moore, Evelyn Runkel Moore and Helen E. Helble held to account to plaintiff for any profits made' by Evelyn Runkel Moore' and Helen E. Helble by reason of the stock issued and that j udgment be entered against them and in favor of the plaintiff for such sum as may be found to be due him. The trial court held against the contentions of the plaintiff and dismissed his petition. He has appealed.

In the-fall of 1932 the plaintiff, Cleo L. Gord, and the defendants Glenn H. Moore and Helen E. Helble commenced the operation of the Iowana Farms Milk Company as individuals *4 after the acquisition of a dairy business then owned by G. Watson French, a Davenport industrialist. This business was incorporated in November 1932 and at the time of its incorporation Glenn EL Moore was elected president and director and has since continued to so act. Oleo L. Gord was elected secretary and treasurer and director of the corporation and so continued to act until February 1950. He was not re-elected an officer and director at the corporate meeting held at that time. In February 1951 he terminated his employment with the company.

Prior to the acquisition of the dairy business by Moore and Gord the latter had been manager of Iowana Farms then owned by French, who, in connection with his farming operations, also was engaged in the wholesale and retail sale of dairy products in Davenport and near-by cities. Gord was graduated in 19'26 from Iowa State College with a degree of Bachelor of Science in Dairy Industry. Prior to his employment by French in December 1930 he had been employed by several companies engaged in the sale of dairy and kindred products in Iowa and elsewhere. Mrs. Helble, formerly Helen E. Grell, had also been an employee of French as a bookkeeper for some time prior to the acquisition of the dairy business by the Iowana Farms Milk Company. At the time of the incorporation of this company she was elected vice-president and director and has so continued to act up to the time of the trial. The three officers to whom reference has been made constituted the board of directors from the time of the incorporation to February 1950.

The original capital was furnished at the time of the purchase of the dairy by Moore and Gord and a mortgage was given to French on the equipment with provision for small periodic payments. At the time of the incorporation common stock was issued at the established par value of $10 per share. Glenn H. Moore furnished $3500, Oleo L. Gord furnished $1670 and Helen E. Elelble $30. Their respective shares amounted to 67.3%, 32.1% and .6% and so continued in almost this same proportion until November 26, 1949. Immediately prior to this last named date Glenn El. Moore held 715 shares and Evelyn Eunkel Moore, wife of Glenn H. Moore, held 362 shares or a total of 1077 shares. Their respective proportions of the total stock *5 issued was 42.77% and 21.65% or a total of 64.42%. At this same time Oleo L. Gord held 562 shares of common stock or 33.61% and Helen E. Helble 33 shares or 1.97%.

Glenn H. Moore commenced his connection with the dairy industry in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in 1916. During most of the subsequent period until 1932 he was engaged in several dairy enterprises, in some of which his father-in-law furnished a substantial portion of the necessary capital. In April 1932 he was employed in Rock Island, Illinois, by the Peerless Dairy Company. During the summer of 1932 he had conversations with Mr. French, previously mentioned, relative to the acquisition of the French dairy and his milk distribution business. Prior to this time Oleo L. Gord had been in charge of the French dairy offices and its accounts and this arrangement was continued by the new purchasers.

At the time the French dairy was acquired seven milk distribution trucks were in use. Under the new owners the business developed and prospered and in 1937 the dairy corporation began the construction óf a new plant in Bettendorf, a city adjacent to Davenport. The operation of the business continued at the Iowana Farms until February 7, 1938, when the Bettendorf plant was opened. Gord’s duties consisted largely in supervising the distribution of the dairy products. Moore was in charge of production and the finances and was generally the office executive.

The dairy corporation had been promised financial assistance by a Davenport bank to make possible the construction of the new plant at Bettendorf. This arrangement was not carried out because the financial institution concluded it was not advisable to lend money on a one-purpose building. At the suggestion of Glenn H. Moore, Oleo L. Gord went to Chicago and sought financial assistance through the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Funds from this lending agency were finally obtained in August of 1938. This loan was paid off in August 1942. In 1937 or 1938 Elmer A. Runkel, the father-in-law of Glenn H. Moore, bought an entire issue of preferred stock in the amount of $5000. This stock, however, was later given to his daughter, Evelyn Runkel Moore. During the development and growth of the Iowana Farms Milk Company, Mrs. *6 Moore lent to the corporation a considerable amount of money from her individual funds.

The individual business activities of Glenn II. Moore and Cleo L. Gord were also successfully carried on. During the summer of 1941 Gord and Moore acquired what has been referred to as the Ivanhoe Farms for $22,500. They made a down payment of $1500 and a further payment of $2500 on March 1, 1942, and subsequent payments were made until the purchase-price obligation was liquidated. It was purchased on an equal basis. Mrs. Moore lent Gord money so that he could be on an equal basis with Glenn H. Moore in the operation of the farm. The Ivanhoe Farms were sold July 1, 1951, for $75,000, .and equal distribution of this amount made to the two owners.

In 1943 Gord and Moore purchased 185 acres of the Iowana Farms — -a portion of the French property. The purchase price is not disclosed by the record but it was sold in 1950 for $116,000 to the Aluminum Company of America. In connection with the settlement of this transaction, at Gord’s insistence, Moore received $10,000 in excess of an equal distribution of the proceeds of the sale. This additional payment to Moore apparently was made by reason of services rendered by him' in connection with .the operation of this property and its sale. From a study of the record it would appear each partner received $40,000, Moore received an additional $10,000, as previously stated, and of the amount remaining $20,000 was lent to the Iowana Farms Milk Company, the corporation. The disposition of the amount remaining from the proceeds of the sale is not set forth.

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60 N.W.2d 820, 245 Iowa 1, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gord-v-iowana-farms-milk-co-iowa-1953.