Heit v. Bixby

276 F. Supp. 217
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedAugust 7, 1967
Docket64 C 118(1)
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 276 F. Supp. 217 (Heit v. Bixby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heit v. Bixby, 276 F. Supp. 217 (E.D. Mo. 1967).

Opinion

276 F.Supp. 217 (1967)

Charles HEIT, Plaintiff,
v.
W. H. BIXBY et al., Defendants.

No. 64 C 118(1).

United States District Court E. D. Missouri, E. D.

August 7, 1967.

*218 Ackert & Tompkins, St. Louis, Mo., and Pomerantz, Levy, Haudek & Block, New York City, for plaintiff.

Bryan, Cave, McPheeters & McRoberts, St. Louis, Mo., for defendants Bixby and others.

Guilfoil, Caruthers, Symington, Montrey & Petzall, St. Louis, Mo., for defendants Blumeyer and others.

Armstrong, Teasdale, Kramer & Vaughan, St. Louis, Mo., for defendants St. Louis Fire & Marine Ins. Co. and others.

W. D. Rund, St. Louis, Mo., for defendant General Contract Finance Corp.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

HARPER, Chief Judge.

The following is a glossary of abbreviations which, for the sake of convenience, will be used throughout this memorandum opinion and order:

GCFC—General Contract Finance Corporation
SLFM—St. Louis Fire and Marine Insurance Company
SLIC—St. Louis Insurance Corporation
ICSL—Insurance Company of St. Louis
Insurors—General Insurors, Inc.
WFM—Washington Fire and Marine Insurance Company
The Group—St. Louis Insurance Group (consisting of WFM, ICSL and SLFM)

This is a stockholder's derivative action in which the plaintiff, Charles Heit, a citizen of New York, is suing on behalf of GCFC, a Missouri corporation, against the individual defendants, W. H. Bixby, Frank C. Blumeyer, John W. Bowyer, Jr., Walter E. Burtelow, David R. Calhoun, George H. Capps, John L. Gillis, Edward G. Holtzman, Edward D. Jones, Chris J. Muckerman, Louis J. Orabka, A. H. Perry, Frederick G. Reiter, C. Harold Schreiber, Max P. Shelton and Stuart H. Smith, all Missouri citizens, and the corporate defendants, SLFM, SLIC and Insurors, all Missouri corporations. Four other individuals, Gwynne Evans, Roscoe Hobbs, Paul Jamison and Mike A. Moran, and ICSL were also named as party defendants in the original complaint filed on March 19, 1964.

*219 ICSL was dropped from the amended complaint filed on March 31, 1966.

On July 14, 1967, by leave of court, all of the parties stipulated to the dismissal without prejudice of Evans, Hobbs, Jamison and Moran.

The facts are before the court by way of oral testimony, stipulations of fact, admissions, answers to various interrogatories and numerous exhibits. This court has jurisdiction by way of diversity of citizenship and amount. The plaintiff's stock ownership in GCFC is conceded by all parties to have existed since April 19, 1961. (This court has already restricted any recovery to which the plaintiff might be entitled on behalf of GCFC to events occurring subsequent to this date. See Memorandum Opinion and Order filed in this action on February 8, 1967.)

The period of this lawsuit runs from April 19, 1961, the date the plaintiff first purchased stock in GCFC, to February 18, 1964, the date of the sale of GCFC's insurance interest in ICSL, to the defendants SLFM and SLIC. (This is more fully explained hereinafter.)

The facts disclose that in the early 1930's the defendant Insurors (then fifty percent owned by the defendant Muckerman) formed an insurance subsidiary, the defendant SLFM. Following its incorporation, and during the period of this lawsuit, SLFM was a wholly owned subsidiary of the defendant SLIC. SLFM was formed with the idea that it would have no officers or staff of its own, but would depend upon Insurors, who possessed the facilities, management and operation. Insurors hired and paid all of its employees and designated all of the officers of SLFM, and completely managed SLFM for a management fee.

In 1940, GCFC's predecessor formed an insurance subsidiary, WFM, to handle automobile insurance on cars which it financed. From the time of its organization until January 22, 1964, GCFC and its predecessor owned one hundred percent of WFM. WFM, like SLFM, had no staff or officers of its own. Insurors, at the request of GCFC's predecessor, agreed to manage WFM, hire and salary its employees, designate its officers, etc., for a management fee as it was then doing for SLFM. When this agreement was made it was made on behalf of Insurors by Blumeyer and Muckerman. They were told that the business was captive business and GCFC's predecessor only wanted management and that no part of the management fee was to be paid to anyone as a commission.

In 1950, WFM and SLFM jointly organized another insurance company, ICSL, and again, like WFM and SLFM before it, ICSL was without management of its own. From the date of its organization until the sale on February 18, 1964, GCFC and its predecessor directly and indirectly through its one hundred percent ownership of WFM, owned fifty percent of ICSL. WFM, ICSL and SLFM became known as the St. Louis Insurance Group (The Group). The Group, since none of its company parts had management of their own, was completely managed by the defendant Insurors for six percent of the gross premiums written by the Group as a whole during the period here involved.

The defendant Insurors continued to manage WFM and ICSL as part of the Group throughout the period of this lawsuit.

During the period of this lawsuit the defendant Muckerman was number one in command and the defendant Blumeyer was number two in command of the defendant Insurors, and both were ten percent shareholders. During the same period Blumeyer was a vice-president of GCFC, and both he and Muckerman were directors of GCFC. Both Blumeyer and Muckerman were officers and directors of WFM and ICSL, and SLFM (The Group) as well as officers, directors and shareholders of the defendant SLIC. The other individual defendants were all directors of GCFC at varying times throughout the period of this lawsuit.

The six percent fee paid by WFM and by ICSL for WFM's and GCFC's interest therein for management was split between *220 the defendant Insurors and the defendants Blumeyer and Muckerman, Insurors taking sixty percent thereof, and Blumeyer and Muckerman taking forty percent (twenty percent apiece) thereof. The forty percent was paid to Blumeyer and Muckerman as if it were a brokerage commission for business generated by them, and it did not appear on Insuror's books as income to Insurors. The amount of money which the plaintiff is seeking on behalf of GCFC with respect to the forty percent commissions during the period in suit is $563,689.00. The defendants concede that this figure represents the amount of money Blumeyer and Muckerman received under the forty percent arrangement attributable to GCFC's ownership of WFM and ICSL during the suit period.

The forty percent commission paid to Blumeyer and Muckerman was a well guarded secret. Only the defendant Perry had firsthand knowledge that such an arrangement existed, and even he did not know the exact percentage being taken. The defendant Burtelow became suspicious of the arrangement in 1951 after he was told by one Leo Kueper, an accountant who had inspected Insuror's books, that such an arrangement probably existed. Kueper inadvertently was shown the one set of Insurors' books which reflected the forty percent being turned over to Blumeyer and Muckerman. Immediately after Burtelow got this information he passed it on to Arthur Blumeyer, father of defendant Blumeyer, and president and chief operating officer of GCFC's predecessor.

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Bluebook (online)
276 F. Supp. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heit-v-bixby-moed-1967.