Henry Simons Lumber Co. v. Simons

44 N.W.2d 726, 232 Minn. 187, 1950 Minn. LEXIS 745
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 17, 1950
DocketNo. 35,240
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 44 N.W.2d 726 (Henry Simons Lumber Co. v. Simons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry Simons Lumber Co. v. Simons, 44 N.W.2d 726, 232 Minn. 187, 1950 Minn. LEXIS 745 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

Loring, Chief Justice.

This is an action to compel specific performance of a contract relating to the sale of corporate stock. Findings and order for judgment were for plaintiff. Defendant moved for amended findings and conclusions of law or in the alternative for a new trial. Both motions were denied. The case is before this court on appeal from the whole order denying the alternative motions.

This suit is by a Minnesota business corporation against one of its common shareholders. Of 3,984 common shares outstanding [188]*188at the time herein material, defendant held 743. Plaintiff is a “family corporation,” all its common shares being owned by defendant, his brothers, and his father’s estate. On May 18, 1935, plaintiff and its common shareholders entered into and duly executed a written contract wherein the common shareholders as parties of the first part and plaintiff as party of the second part, in consideration of their mutual promises, agreed to detailed provisions governing the sale of common stock by the individual shareholders. The essence of this agreement is that before any common shareholder can sell his stock to an outsider he must first offer the stock to plaintiff, which shall have what amounts to a right of first refusal. After a refusal by plaintiff, the selling shareholder must then give a right of first refusal to the other common shareholders. Upon their refusal, he may then sell to an outsider. The exact provision of the agreement, which is important in the present case, reads as follows:

“It is further agreed that in the event that any holder of- any of the common shares of Henry Simons Lumber Company desires to dispose of the same or any part thereof, he shall not transfer or dispose of the same to any person, firm, or corporation unless or until he has first complied with the provisions hereof, and given to the party of the second part and to the remaining first parties an opportunity to purchase the stock as herein provided.”

The contract makes the following provisions for fixing the sale price of stock sold under the agreement:

“The purchase price of said stock shall in all cases be the fair value of said shares as mutually agreed upon by and between the parties, but in the event that the fair value of said shares cannot be mutually agreed upon by and between the parties, then said purchase price shall be fixed and determined as being the book value of said shares on the December 31st immediately preceding the date when said shares are purchased, less any dividends declared since said December 31st.”

[189]*189There are other detailed provisions in the agreement which, although important in other respects, are not pertinent in this case. The above-described agreement relates only to the common stock of plaintiff.

By a letter of March 19, 1948, defendant offered to sell his 743 shares of common stock in plaintiff and his one share of stock in Simons, Inc., a subsidiary of plaintiff, at prices of $224 and $124.53 respectively.2 By a letter of March 30, 1948, plaintiff and its subsidiary replied to defendant’s letter with a counteroffer to buy defendant’s common stock in plaintiff and in the subsidiary at prices stated therein to represent “book value.”3 On April 20, 1948, a meeting was held at which the officers and directors of plaintiff4 met with defendant. The matter of defendant’s offer to sell his [190]*190stock to the corporation was discussed at this meeting. Defendant opened the discussion by saying that he was not satisfied with the offer in plaintiff’s letter of March 30. The president of plaintiff, Mr. Alex H. Simons, told defendant that the price offered in the letter of March 30 was “book value.” Mr. L. R. Simons, vice president of the corporation, told defendant that plaintiff was offering book value and that he could “take it or leave it.” Defendant then left the meeting.

July 20, 1948, the board of directors of plaintiff met and passed a resolution to tender to defendant the book value of his stock in plaintiff and to demand that he assign this stock to plaintiff pursuant to the 1935 agreement. July 27, 1948, in accordance with this resolution, plaintiff tendered to defendant the price of $170.84 per share for his common stock in plaintiff, or a total of $126,934.12 for the 743 shares. Defendant refused this tender and refused to surrender his stock. Plaintiff then brought the present action on the theory that the two letters referred to above constitute an offer to sell and a notice of election to purchase under the provisions of the agreement entered into in May 1935. Relying on these letters as placing the 1935 contract in operation, plaintiff seeks specific performance of the agreement with reference to defendant’s 743 shares of common stock.

In this case, counsel on both sides have devoted a great amount of time and space in their oral arguments and briefs to a discussion of whether the 1935 agreement is or is not invalid as an unreasonable restraint on alienation of corporate stock. Because of ambiguities in the agreement, this matter is fairly debatable. Those provisions of the agreement which specify proceedings to be taken after a shareholder has made an offer to sell under the agreement are so far ambiguous that it is left uncertain as to how long the corporation can restrict the alienation of the offered shares before it must make a final binding commitment to purchase. We do not, however, consider it necessary or desirable to resolve these ambiguities and to pass upon the validity of the agreement in this decision, [191]*191since we have decided that the negotiations involved in this litigation were entirely outside the 1935 agreement.

At the outset, it will be helpful to recognize that the manifest purpose of the 1935 agreement, as stated in the briefs of both parties, is to preserve to the Simons family the ownership of the common stock in plaintiff corporation. The agreement manifests no design to serve as a method whereby any of the shareholders can be forced to sell their shares for a consideration less than they are willing to accept. The agreement was obviously designed to prevent a sale to an outsider so long as the corporation or its remaining shareholders were willing to buy at an agreed fair value or at book value. So long as a shareholder is unwilling to sell for the price offered by plaintiff, be it book value or otherwise, no purpose of the agreement calls upon the shareholder to sell. By the terms of the agreement, shareholders are precluded from selling to an outsider until such time as they have made an offer to the corporation and its other shareholders and such offer is made in terms of the agreement. Therefore, no purpose of the agreement is defeated if a shareholder makes an offer not in accordance with the agreement and the corporation or its shareholders reject such an offer expressly or by counteroffer. A leading decision in this state on agreements of the kind involved in this case holds that unless a shareholder makes an offer to the corporation within the provisions of the agreement a rejection of the offer or failure to accept it does not entitle the offering shareholder to sell to an outsider, and that any sale made under such circumstances can be set aside as against a non-bonafide purchaser of the stock with notice of the agreement. Model Clothing House v. Dickinson, 146 Minn. 367, 178 N. W. 957.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.W.2d 726, 232 Minn. 187, 1950 Minn. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-simons-lumber-co-v-simons-minn-1950.