Hensel v. US ELECTRONICS CORPORATION

251 A.2d 828, 1969 Del. Super. LEXIS 300
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 7, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 251 A.2d 828 (Hensel v. US ELECTRONICS CORPORATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hensel v. US ELECTRONICS CORPORATION, 251 A.2d 828, 1969 Del. Super. LEXIS 300 (Del. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

OPINION

O’HORA, Judge.

For approximately fifteen years plaintiff herein, an attorney, was employed by the United States Government, in various high executive positions. Upon his resignation from his last position, in 1955, he became a member of the Board of Directors of the defendant, U. S. Electronics Corporation, a Delaware corporation, of which one Leon Frenk is president, a director, and majority shareholder.

Following a December 3, 1965 meeting of defendant’s Board of Directors, plaintiff’s resignation from the Board was imminent, but plaintiff and defendant had been unable to agree upon certain legal fees which plaintiff claimed were due to him. The parties finally reached an agreement, embodied in a writing signed, sealed and dated February 16, 1966, the pertinent parts of which are as follows:

“1. In November, 1955, Hensel was given by Frenk, without cost to him, certificate No. 3 representing 85 shares of the common stock, without par value, of Electronics. Certificate No. 3 is registered in the books of the Company as being in Hensel’s name and is still held by him.
2. In 1956, Hensel became Chairman of the Board of Directors of Electronics and, except for a short intervening period, served as such and gave Electronics legal advice thereafter * * *.
3. Electronics, through its wholly owned subsidiary American Aircraft Engineering Corporation (hereinafter called “American”), acquired, * * * under a contract with the Air Force of the Republic of Chile a promissory note * *
6.Hensel and Electronics now desire formally to sever, terminate and satisfy all relationships between them, including that of Hensel being a stockholder of Electronics.
10. Hensel simultaneously herewith also wishes to sever, determine and terminate all other business relationships heretofore existing between Hensel and Frenk, including, but not limited to, Mundial Trade Corp., World Recovery Corp., Western Tube Division and Technical Equipment Corp.

*830 NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing and the promises hereinafter set forth, the parties herein agree as follows:

a. Hensel agrees to sell, transfer and set over, and does hereby sell, transfer and set over, to Electronics 85 shares of the common stock of Electronics represented by certificate No. 3 for the price of $26,500 payable as follows:
(i) the sum of $10,000 upon the execution and delivery of this agreement, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged by Hensel; and
(ii) the sum of $16,500 payable * * * on December 31, 1966 * *
c. As full compensation for any services rendered to date by Hensel to Electronics and to Frenk, including any person or corporation associated with or related to Frenk, Electronics does hereby transfer, assign and set over, and agree to use its subsidiary, American, * * * to transfer, assign and set over to Hensel all its and their right, title, interest and ownership to and in the Chilean Note and all claims related thereto, without recourse.
f. Hensel does hereby exonerate, release and discharge Electronics, American, Frenk, Mundial Trade Corp., World Recovery Corp., Western Tube Division and Technical Equipment Corp., from any and all claims, debts, and demands whatsoever which he may have or could claim or demand as a result of Hen-sel’s relationship existing between Hensel and Frenk, his executors, heirs, or assigns, or with any of said corporations or their assigns, to the date of these presents.”

As of May 12, 1967, the $16,500 balance provided for in Paragraph 10. a. (ii) of this agreement, had not been paid. Hen-sel therefore instituted an action in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware against defendant to recover the sum due. To induce plaintiff’s forebearance, defendant executed and delivered to plaintiff a promissory note for $16,500 at 6% interest, half of which was due and payable on October 1, 1967, and half of which was due and payable on December 30, 1967. In return, plaintiff voluntarily dismissed his suit. When defendant failed to meet the terms of its note, this suit was instituted thereon.

Defendant resists judgment against it by raising the defense of failure of consideration. It contends that Frenk never gave plaintiff the 85 shares of stock outright, but that, instead, he transferred the stock subject to a condition that Hensel would either exercise an option during his directorship to purchase the stock at its current book value or else return the stock upon his resignation as a director. In support of this contention defendant offers various affidavits, among them affidavits by Russell Bolton, Executive Vice President of the National Savings and Trust Company in Washington, D. C, and by Arthur E. Tarantino, a practicing attorney in Washington, D. C. These men were both offered directorships in defendant in 1955. Bolton accepted the position and received 85 shares of stock which he returned to Frenk upon resigning from the Board, his option to purchase the shares never having been exercised. Tarantino declined to become a director, although he knew of the option to purchase 85 shares of stock. Additional support for defendant’s postition comes from the minutes of the December 3, 1965 meeting of defendant’s Board of Directors, which reflect that plaintiff acknowledged Frenk’s ownership of the stock which he, plaintiff, was holding merely as a trustee.

Plaintiff here moves for summary judgment on the note.

Plaintiff’s theory is that, apart from the question of the true ownership of the *831 stock, any dispute between defendant and himself regarding this issue was settled and an accord reached when plaintiff accepted defendant’s promissory note in return for dismissal of his earlier suit in the District Court. To test the compatibility of this theory with the law of this jurisdiction, it is necessary to examine the holding in State for Use of Warner Co. v. Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co., 9 A.2d 77 (Del.Super., 1939). There the plaintiff had contracted in writing to furnish the defendant with concrete, for which the terms of payment were 30 days net cash and a 5% discount for cash paid prior to the 15th of each month. Although defendant paid nothing until after three months from delivery, it nevertheless claimed the discount, apparently because the discount had been allowed under similar circumstances in the parties’ prior dealings. The plaintiff, after accepting defendant’s check labeled “in full payment” sued for the remainder of the net price. In rejecting defendant’s assertion that an accord and satisfaction was reached by cashing of the check, the Court said:

“We must therefore see whether the claim of the plaintiff was subject to a bona fide dispute on the part of O’Con-nell so as to invoke the doctrine of accord and satisfaction. The dispute must be an honest, genuine, or bona fide dispute advanced in good faith and resting on a substantial basis * * * or founded on some reasonably tenable or plausible ground.

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Bluebook (online)
251 A.2d 828, 1969 Del. Super. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hensel-v-us-electronics-corporation-delsuperct-1969.