Hield v. Thyberg

347 N.W.2d 503, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1333
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 27, 1984
DocketC3-83-511
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 347 N.W.2d 503 (Hield v. Thyberg) 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
Hield v. Thyberg, 347 N.W.2d 503, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1333 (Mich. 1984).

Opinion

SIMONETT, Justice.

Although the trial court properly allowed plaintiff to use parol evidence to explain the purpose and vary the term of a written contract, we conclude, on the facts of this ease, that plaintiff should have been required to prove his case by clear and convincing evidence. We reverse for a new trial.

On June 10, 1977, plaintiff-respondent Willard R. Hield sold his half interest in a corporation, Beauticians Supply, Inc., to defendant-appellant Edwin R. Thyberg, owner of the other half interest. The sale was accomplished by a written document entitled “Assignment,” signed by Hield, which provided in part:

For and in consideration of Fifteen Thousand Dollars ($15,000.00), Willard R. Hield, of Minneapolis, Minnesota, does hereby assign, order and transfer to Edwin R. Thyberg, of Sioux Falls, South *505 Dakota, all of my right, title and interest in Beauticians Supply, Inc., a corporation, including but not limited to any and all advances made by me to the said corporation and all of my common shares of capital stock * * ⅜.
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The undersigned assignor hereby acknowledges that the assignee assumes • no other personal liability toward assign- or * * *.

The $15,000 was paid at the time the assignment was signed by Hield. Sometime thereafter, Hield transferred his stock certificates to Thyberg.

In January 1979, plaintiff Hield sued defendant Thyberg, alleging in his complaint that he had sold his corporate shares “for a total consideration of $50,000, $15,000 cash at closing and $35,000 in a promissory note.” Plaintiff further alleged that Thy-berg, by agreeing to pay $50,000 and then refusing to perform, had committed fraud. The case was tried to a jury. Over defendant’s objections, plaintiff was permitted to testify that defendant, indeed, had agreed to pay an additional $35,000 for the corporate stock. Defendant denied any such agreement. The trial court dismissed the fraud allegations, but submitted the contract issue to the jury. The jury resolved the fact issues in favor of plaintiff and, pursuant to the verdict, judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff and against defendant for $35,000 plus 6% interest from June 10, 1977. Defendant Thyberg appeals from the judgment.

The issue is whether the parol evidence rule applies. If it does, plaintiff is bound by the $15,000 agreed consideration set out in the written document and can collect no more. If the parol evidence rule does not apply, there is evidence to sustain the jury’s verdict that the true consideration was $50,000, not $15,000. We conclude that parol evidence may be used here but under a higher burden of proof.

When the case was called for trial, the trial court denied defendant’s motion to exclude parol evidence and allowed plaintiff’s evidence to be received. 1 At the close of all the testimony, defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was denied, the trial ■ court observing, “I have grave reservations about this particular lawsuit and I have no hesitancy about stating it.”

The parol evidence that came in was essentially as follows. Negotiations for the sale of Hield’s interest in the corporation to Thyberg began in the spring of 1977. Beauticians Supply, Inc., was a South Dakota corporation with separate divisions operating in Sioux Falls and Minneapolis. (Prior to 1975, the two divisions were separate corporations, but in that year they were merged into the one South Dakota corporation.) Thyberg was active full time in the business and had made a success out of the South Dakota operation. The Minneapolis operation was losing money. Indeed, in the spring of 1977, a bank in Minneapolis threatened to foreclose its mortgage of about $72,000, a mortgage which Hield personally guaranteed. Hield, himself, was not active in the business, except in a very general supervisory way. He had inherited the company from his father, and his main occupation was stockbroker. At the time of the transactions in question, Hield had serious personal and financial problems and needed cash.

On April 18,1977, Thyberg said he would purchase Hield’s stock for either $10,000 or $15,000 plus an additional sum paid over a period of 5 years, not to exceed $72,000 plus interest, depending on the profitability of the business and the ability of the corporation to use the net operating loss carryover created by the poor performance of the Minneapolis division. Papers were to be drafted by the corporation’s attorney, John Flaten, after more data was gathered. *506 On May 16, with the bank pressing for payment, Thyberg indicated to attorney Flaten that the April understanding “was still in place.”

The key date is June 10, 1977. On that day defendant Thyberg came to Minneapolis to close the deal with plaintiff Hield. Thyberg brought with him the typed “Assignment” paper previously mentioned, which had been drafted by his attorney in Sioux Falls with a blank space provided for insertion of the amount of consideration. Thyberg and Hield held three meetings on that day — at 8 a.m., then about 11 a.m., and finally again at 5 p.m. Hield testified that Thyberg agreed to pay $50,000, $15,000 down and the balance by a demand note which Thyberg would send as soon as he got back to Sioux Falls. Hield testified that Thyberg was intending to get an SBA loan and consequently did not want the $35,000 to show on his balance sheet. With this understanding, Hield says he had his secretary type in the blank space a $15,000 consideration, plus an indemnity provision at the bottom of the paper. He then signed the assignment and accepted Thy-berg’s check for $15,000. Thyberg testified that at the 8 a.m. meeting, he did, indeed, say that payment of a sum in addition to $15,000 “might be a possibility,” and that “[i]f there was any other way I could raise any more money, I would,”— but that this depended on whether the business would be profitable and would be able to use the tax loss carryover. It was Thy-berg’s position that after these preliminaries, however, he offered to pay only $15,-000 plus agreeing to save Hield harmless on his personal guarantee of the bank mortgage. Thyberg said he would have elected to liquidate the company if these terms had not been agreeable to Hield.

We have the testimony of one other witness, John Flaten, a Minneapolis attorney then representing the corporation. Flaten met with Hield in his law office about 9:15 a.m. on June 10. He also had a telephone conversation with Hield (with Thyberg by Hield’s side) about 11 a.m. Flaten kept notes of these two conversations. At the 8 a.m. meeting, Hield showed Flaten the assignment document and, according to Fla-ten’s notes, “Bill [Hield] indicated that Ray [Thyberg] had offered a flat $15,000 cash at closing without any further consideration." Thyberg apparently was claiming that his prospective lender in Sioux Falls would not agree to any different payment arrangement. Flaten’s notes show that Hield thought the company, if liquidated, might net $70,000 to $90,000 subject to a $20,000 advance owed Thyberg. Flaten suggested to Hield that he should attempt to negotiate for more money, with any sum over $15,000 to be paid on an installment basis, and to get an indemnity clause for his personal guarantee on the bank loan. During the 11 a.m.

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Bluebook (online)
347 N.W.2d 503, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hield-v-thyberg-minn-1984.