Gottlieb v. Mead Corp.

137 N.E.2d 178, 72 Ohio Law. Abs. 353, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 336
CourtMontgomery County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedOctober 8, 1954
DocketNo. 101570
StatusPublished

This text of 137 N.E.2d 178 (Gottlieb v. Mead Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gottlieb v. Mead Corp., 137 N.E.2d 178, 72 Ohio Law. Abs. 353, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 336 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

OPINION

By MARTIN, J.

PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

Plaintiff, a Mead Corporation stockholder, brings this derivative action against defendants, directors and/or stockholders of The Mead Corporation and/or The Mead Sales Company, and against The Mead Corporation and The Mead Sales Company, to enjoin an alleged wrongful appropriation and diversion of the sales and purchasing functions and the resulting business opportunities and profit, from The. Mead Corporation to The Mead Sales Company and its stockholders, to require an accounting, and for other relief.

Defendants deny that there was any wrongful appropriation or diversion of the purchasing or sales functions and profits of The Mead Corporation, and claim, among other things, that all transactions between The Mead Corporation and The Mead Sales Company were performed honestly, in good faith, and for the best interests of The Mead Corporation.

Plaintiff, during and since the trial hereof, has withdraw, abandoned, modified, or changed a number of her original claims made in her amended petition because of lack of proof or proof to the contrary, and consequently plaintiff, as hereinafter detailed, has abandoned in part and greatly modified the relief requested.

GENERAL FINDING

Since this Court has no doubt whatsoever from the evidence and the law as to what finding should be made on the merits, it would be unfair to leave any inference to the contrary by deferring its general finding to the end of this decision.

Therefore, after extensive and intensive consideration of the evidence and the law applicable thereto, the Court finds that the plaintiff has completely and wholly failed to make out 'a case against defendants, or any of them on any and all theories of law invoked by plaintiff’s amended petition, urged by plaintiff’s counsel, or suggested by the evidence, and finds generally for the defendants and against the plaintiff on all the issues made up on the merits.

[355]*355The following will summarize the respective contentions of the parties, the evidence bearing thereon, and the findings of the Court supporting the above general finding.

CLAIMS IN THE PLEADINGS

Plaintiff originally brought this action allegedly in the right and on behalf of The Mead Corporation and its stockholders to enjoin the defendant, The Mead Sales Company, and the other defendants, from continuing to appropriate the sales and purchasing functions of The Mead Corporation, and to enjoin the alleged resulting diversion or siphoning off of profits or monies by The Mead Sales Company from The Mead Corporation through Mead Sales buying paper products from and selling supplies to The Mead Corporation, and to require The Mead Sales Company and its stockholders to account to The Mead Corporation for profits and monies allegedly diverted.

Plaintiff claims that defendant, George H. Mead, an officer and director of Mead Corporation, dominated and controlled the other Mead Corporation Directors, and that he and other defendant Directors and stockholders of The Mead Corporation, and/or the The Mead Sales Company, acting in concert pursuant to a plan or scheme, (conspiracy), appropriated and diverted to The Mead Sales Company the sales and purchasing functions of Mead Corporation, and diverted to themselves as stockholders of Mead Sales opportunities for profit and profits of The Mead Corporation in the form of discounts or commissions on paper products bought from and supplies sold to The Mead Corporation. That the individual defendants directly, and indirectly through their and their families’ stockholdings in and control of the defendant, Mead Investment Company (which owns stock in The Mead Sales Company) — own approximately 50% of The Mead Sales Company stock.

Plaintiff claims The Mead Corporation had the resources, personnel, and the means, and was in a position to sell for itself or through a wholly owned subsidiary, its own products at the same prices obtained by Mead Sales without paying commissions thereon. That the demand for Mead products has ' for years been greater than the supply, and that little or no sales effort was required to market them. That selling its paper products, and buying its raw materials and supplies were necessary functions belonging to The Mead Corporation, and that all the profits to be derived therefrom belonged to The Mead Corporation. That the Mead Sales Company has wrongfully appropriated these functions and the business opportunities which were presented to The Mead Corporation from about 1921, when the Sales Company was formed, to the present time.

Plaintiff further claims that the price set forth in The Mead Corporation’s outstanding option to buy eighty percent of The Mead Sales Company stock is excessive, that the Directors failed to have it reduced and failed to exercise the option in the interest of the corporation.

Plaintiff finally claims that The Mead Corporation Directors acted in bad faith and were grossly negligent in the above respects, and as a result breached their fiduciary duties to the Corporation and its stockholders. Plaintiff contends that a demand by her upon Mead Corporation Directors to correct the situation or to bring this action would [356]*356have been futile, as they participated in the plan of diversion and would not have complied.

The defendants, The Mead Corporation, The Mead Sales Company, and Mead Investment Company, deny generally and specifically plaintiff’s claims charging diversion of profits, of bad faith, domination and control by George H. Mead or by any individual defendants, of the actions of The Mead Corporation Directors in dealing with The Mead Sales Company; deny that defendant, The Mead Sales Company, made large profits from The Mead Corporation business; and deny that the failure of The Mead Corporation to exercise the option to purchase the Mead Sales Company stock resulted in any damage to The Mead Corporation.

Said defendants claim that all transactions between The Mead Corporation and The Mead Sales Company were performed honestly and in good faith; that they were fair to and in the interest of The Mead Corporation; that the directors and officers of The Mead Corporation acted honestly and in good faith, and in the exercise of their best judgment; and that the decisions made by them and the actions taken pursuant thereto were in the best interests of The Mead Corporation.

Defendants further claim that full information concerning the partial distribution of The Mead Corporation products through The.Mead Sales Company and the stock holdings of The Mead Investment Company in The Mead Sales Company and in The Mead Corporation, and the respective stock holdings, if any, of the Directors of The Mead Corporation in each of said companies, have been matters of public record and knowledge for many years, the same having been set forth in full in registration statements filed by The Mead Corporation with the Securities and Exchange Commission in 1937 and subsequent thereto; and further was fully disclosed in other publications and public records long prior to the commencement of this action, and that in consequence plaintiff is guilty of laches and is estopped and barred from maintaing this action.

Defendants further claim that this action, in any event, is barred by both the four year and ten year limitation statutes of Ohio.

The remaining individual defendants, excepting Charles R. Van de Carr III, who was dismissed as a party defendant, have asserted similar defenses

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Bluebook (online)
137 N.E.2d 178, 72 Ohio Law. Abs. 353, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gottlieb-v-mead-corp-ohctcomplmontgo-1954.