In re Westec Corp. v. Carpenter

434 F.2d 195
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 20, 1970
DocketNo. 28597
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 434 F.2d 195 (In re Westec Corp. v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Westec Corp. v. Carpenter, 434 F.2d 195 (5th Cir. 1970).

Opinions

WISDOM, Circuit Judge.

This case tangentially relates to the collapse of Westec Corporation, a Texas corporation now in proceedings for reorganization under Chapter X of the Bankruptcy Act. The facts out of which it arises constitute a prescription for corporate collapse: loose stock transactions, a corporate acquisition made to placate and benefit a subsidiary’s principal officer and, allegedly, double payment for an officer’s activities.

Garland Walker asserts a claim of $383,000 against the Trustee in Bankruptcy based on an alleged contract with Westec. The district court disallowed the claim on the ground that no binding contract was entered into between Westec and Walker, denied Walker’s motion for a new trial, and severed the Trustee’s counterclaims, consolidating them with a plenary action previously filed by the Trustee. Walker appealed from these decisions. We affirm.

The case comes to this Court with a poorly developed record. The claimant [198]*198changed the theory of his claim on the day of trial. At the end of the trial he sought an amendment alternatively basing recovery on quantum meruit although he had made no showing of the reasonable value of the services rendered. The claimant failed to show that the president of Westec, with whom Walker dealt, had authority to make the kind of contract alleged or that such a contract on Walker’s part was consistent with his fiduciary obligations as a corporate officer. The president was not brought forward as a witness until after the trial. Much of the difficulty of the case stems from the claimant’s confused recollections which were not cleared up during the trial.

I.

In 1960 Walker moved from Texas to Australia, where he founded a supply company, Seismic Supply Australia Proprietary, Limited. He was managing director and owned thirty percent of the stock. In 1963 Westec1 bought all of Seismic’s stock. Walker received 15,000 pounds for his interest. He continued as chief executive officer and director of the wholly owned subsidiary, receiving an annual salary of $20,000 and 27,027 shares of Westec 2 stock.

In 1964 Seismic acquired 10 percent of Continental Rubber Proprietary, Limited, a small Australian heavy equipment contracting company, in return for loans and a loan guarantee. Later in 1964, an additional financial interest in Continental became available. This was in the form of stock in Export Bit of Canada, a corporation which held the remaining 90 percent of Continental stock. Walker tried to interest Westec in acquiring this stock, but Westec declined because the purchase of minority interests was against its-policy. With the permission of Westec’s president, Ernest M. Hall, Jr., Walker personally purchased 30 percent of Export Bit — which constituted a 27 percent interest in Continental — for 12,500 pounds.3

Continental was in deep financial trouble. Walker spent much of his time, while a full-time officer of Seismic, trying to reinvigorate Continental. Additionally, he lent the corporation about $43,000 of his personal funds. This was in addition to $227,000 lent to it by other shareholders of Export Bit.

In an effort to salvage his investment in Export Bit and to recover the money he had lent to Continental, early in 1965 Walker told Hall that he was going to quit Seismic and go into competition with it through Continental unless Hall made it worthwhile for him to stay with Seismic. He made various demands. One was that Westec acquire Continental, which Walker represented as a good investment for Westec. In addition to receiving remuneration for his equity and creditor interests in Continental, Walker was also to benefit from the transaction because of having arranged the acquisition. The other demands were a no-personal-liability loan of $50,000 to purchase 4600 shares of Westec stock, a 5000 share stock option at $12% a share, and a promise that Walker could shortly return to the United States to live. Hall agreed to these demands.

The Court found that upon the representations and assurances by Claimant that Continental was a good investment, Hall agreed to permit Claimant to attempt to acquire 100 percent of Continental stock. Walker would then exchange this for an undetermined amount of Westec stock. The price Westec was to pay was left completely open, with the understanding that the price would [199]*199depend on what Walker had to pay for the interest and that later there would be adjustments based on profitability similar to those included in a previous Westec acquisition agreement.

The Court found: “For various reasons Claimant did not acquire the Continental Rubber stock personally and the original agreement was mutually abandoned. Furthermore, even if the agreement had not been abándoned, Claimant would have been entitled to no additional compensation since it was tied to future earnings of Continental Rubber, and the Court finds that Continental Rubber had no such net earnings at any time material hereto. Additionally, the so-called agreement was too vague and indefinite to be enforceable.”

In June of 1965 instead of following the original two-step procedure Walker effected the purchase of Continental directly by Seismic. The Court found: “[T]he principal attraction to Debtor in acquiring Continental Rubber was to take advantage of a tax loss. The added advantage was to pacify Claimant by assuring that the loans he had made to the company would be repaid. The stock of Continental Rubber had no real value at the time of the acquisition as the liabilities of the company exceeded its assets by a substantial amount. However, Debt- or’s total outlay was far from nill as it assumed, and subsequently paid, Continental Rubber’s indebtedness to the Export Bit shareholders, including Claimant, in the approximate amount of $270,000.”

Walker wrote Hall on August 12, 1965, seeking remuneration in lieu of the profit he had contemplated under the two-step proposal. He referred to “the problem of compensating (him) for the amount of 12,500 pounds outlayed to obtain a personal interest in Continental Rubber * * Hall responded October 15: “We agree to issue to you 7,000 shares of Western Equities Inc. for your stock investment in Continental Rubber. It is understood that this will be the total paid by Western for 100% of the stock of Continental * * The Board of Directors did not authorize the issuance of the stock to Walker. It did authorize an option to him for the same number of shares.

Walker objected that he had been promised shares “free and clear” rather than an option. Hall pressed him to take the option in its place, as the best that he could arrange for Walker. Hall personally promised in a letter of April 20, 1966, to protect him against any loss by personally guaranteeing to reimburse him for the option price in the amount of $383,250 if the value of Walker’s holdings in Westec did not reach $2.5 million by the end of 1967. Walker accepted and executed the stock option agreement. He continued, however, to seek the 7,000 shares outright.

Between the time Hall wrote offering 7,000 shares outright and the March 15, 1966, Board of Directors’ meeting at which Walker asserts his shares were to be issued, the market price of Westec’s shares sextupled. Walker’s claim for $383,000 is based on the price of 7,000 shares of Westec stock as of March 15, 1966.

On this sequence of events, the Court disallowed Walker’s claim in its entirety. It based this decision on two main grounds.

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