Intercontinental Communications Construction Coproration, Earl Ohilinger and Winifred Ohlinger v. George Fox, Also Known as George Fox, Jr.

380 F.2d 214, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5812
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1967
Docket15998
StatusPublished

This text of 380 F.2d 214 (Intercontinental Communications Construction Coproration, Earl Ohilinger and Winifred Ohlinger v. George Fox, Also Known as George Fox, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Intercontinental Communications Construction Coproration, Earl Ohilinger and Winifred Ohlinger v. George Fox, Also Known as George Fox, Jr., 380 F.2d 214, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5812 (7th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

SWYGERT, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiffs Intercontinental Communications Construction Corporation, a Puerto Rico corporation, and Earl Oh-linger and Winifred Ohlinger, citizens of Puerto Rico, brought this diversity action for a declaratory judgment and other relief against the defendant, George Fox, a citizen of Illinois. The defendant appeals from a judgment for the plaintiffs in the amount of $6,604 entered by the district court sitting without a jury.

On March 30, 1963, the plaintiffs and the defendant entered into an agreement whereby the plaintiff corporation agreed to purchase the defendant Fox’s one-half interest in the corporation. The agreement provided that the purchase price for the defendant’s stock $75,000, was payable as follows: $22,500 on the closing date, April 13, 1963, and the balance in quarterly installments over a period of two years, the final payment due on April 13, 1965. The agreement also provided, in part, that Fox was to be paid $8,715.40 *216 “to compensate * * * him for all expenses incurred on behalf of” the corporation and $32,700 “purporting to be the amount of money loaned” by Fox to the corporation. The agreement stated that the $32,700 was “subject to audit” and that “if said amount is incorrect, [the corporation] shall have the right to deduct the amount of the discrepancy from any future payments due * * * under this agreement. * * * ”

The plaintiff corporation paid all of the amounts due under the contract except the final installment on the stock purchase. This payment, in the amount of $6,660.78, was deposited with the clerk of the district court in conjunction with the filing of the instant action. In Count I of their complaint, the plaintiffs alleged that an audit of the “loan account” referred to in the agreement of March 30,1963 had disclosed that Fox’s account was overstated. The plaintiffs sought a declaration that they were entitled to deduct the amount of the overstatement from the final payment due Fox. In Count II, the plaintiff Earl Ohlinger alleged that he had been forced, as an accommodating party, to pay the balance of a note executed by Fox. Ohlinger demanded judgment against Fox in the amount of $1,414.34.

The district court found for the plaintiffs in the amount of $5,200 on Count I and in the amount of $1,404 on Count II, and directed that these sums be returned to the plaintiffs out of the money deposited with the clerk of court. This appeal followed.

Count I

The facts which led the district court to conclude that Fox’s loan account on the books of the plaintiff corporation was overstated by $5,200 are relatively simple, but several minor, legally irrelevant conflicts in the evidence have created issues where none actually exist. In our view, accepting the facts as stated by the plaintiffs, the defendant was entitled to judgment on Count I as a matter of law.

Late in October 1961, the defendant Fox travelled to Puerto Rico, seeking an investment opportunity. There he met Earl and Winifred Ohlinger, who were engaged in a promising, but financially-starving, communications construction business in partnership with Anastacios Ortiz. Fox's initial overtures to the Ohlingers were rejected; the Ohlingers instead turned to a friend, Martinez, for operating capital. Martinez became a third partner with Earl Ohlinger and Ortiz. A short time later, the Ohlingers and Ortiz informed Fox that Martinez had agreed to part with his interest in the business for approximately the same amount he had contributed to it. Fox purchased Martinez’ interest for $5,200, and began advancing additional sums to the business to meet its operating expenses.

In November 1961, the Ohlingers and Fox decided to form the plaintiff corporation to carry on the growing business, eliminating Ortiz and repaying his investment. Fox summoned his accountant from Chicago to assist them by instituting a bookkeeping system for the corporation. After consulting with Winifred Ohlinger, who had kept such fragmentary records of the partnership as had been maintained, the accountant prepared a statement of income and expenses for the partnership for the period from October to December 1, 1961, and prepared a beginning balance sheet for the corporation as of December 1.

The corporation was organized with the legal minimum capital of $1,000, half credited to Earl Ohlinger and half to Fox. The remainder of the amounts which Ohlinger and Fox had contributed to the partnership prior to incorporation, and the amount which Ortiz had put into the business prior to incorporation, were reflected in the current Habilites section of the balance sheet as “loans payable.” Fox’s “loan payable” account included the $5,200 paid to Martinez for Martinez’ interest in the business, which in turn represented the amounts contributed to the partnership by Martinez. Thus, $12,- *217 600 1 2appeared as “loans payable — G. Fox, Jr.$3,717.22 2 appeared as “loans payable — E. Ohlinger;” and $8,682.78 appeared as “loans payable — A. Ortiz.” The account listed as payable to Fox is the account held to be overstated by the district court.

The district court found that “Fox was credited with $5,200.00 which he claimed was an advance to the corporation but which was in fact a part of the purchase price he paid to A. Ortiz 3 for his interest in the business.” This finding is erroneous in one respect and misleading in another. Fox did not claim that the $5,-200 included in the loan account on the beginning balance sheet of the corporation had actually been advanced to the corporation. The corporation was in the process of being organized and the business of the partnership was being transferred to it. Fox’s claim was that the “loans payable” accounts set up for Ortiz, Ohlinger, and Fox represented a logical and acceptable way of reflecting the financial contributions which had been made to the partnership, and that Fox was entitled to stand in the shoes of Martinez with respect to the latter’s contribution. The court’s finding also implies that because the $5,200 was actually paid by Fox for the purchase of a partnership interest, this amount could not be treated as a corporate obligation on the books of the corporation. Such an implication begs the question presented. The plaintiffs similarly avoid the issue by contending that the $5,200 “was incorrectly designated as a ‘loan’, since it represented the amount Fox paid for his ownership interest in the corporation.”

The real question is whether it was permissible to reflect on the books of the new corporation, as an obligation of the corporation to Fox, the contributions made to the partnership by the partner whose interest Fox purchased (for an amount corresponding to the partner’s contributions). The answer is yes. The method of accounting employed by Fox’s accountant, in organizing a corporation owned equally by Fox and Earl Ohlinger, to dissolve the existing partnership and to reimburse the partners as their interests appeared was an acceptable method. The “loans payable” accounts set up for Ortiz, Ohlinger, and Fox included the amounts paid by each of them into the partnership, plus $5,200 paid into the business by Martinez, which was credited to Fox. Fox was entitled to receive credit for the latter amount as the assignee of Martinez’ partnership interest.

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Bluebook (online)
380 F.2d 214, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/intercontinental-communications-construction-coproration-earl-ohilinger-ca7-1967.