Irving Iron Works v. Kerlow, C., Co.

143 A. 145, 103 N.J. Eq. 240, 2 Backes 240, 1926 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 48
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 6, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 143 A. 145 (Irving Iron Works v. Kerlow, C., Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irving Iron Works v. Kerlow, C., Co., 143 A. 145, 103 N.J. Eq. 240, 2 Backes 240, 1926 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 48 (N.J. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

In this cause, pursuant to decree of this court (affirmed,96 N.J. Eq. 702), the defendants were directed to account to the complainant for profits accruing from the illegal use of certain confidential information obtained by the individual defendants while in the employ of the complainant. The matter was referred to a master and by consent of counsel he selected a firm of accountants to examine the books of the defendant company and report thereon, such report to be accepted as a correct statement of what the books showed, the right being reserved by both sides to cross-examine the accountants, to produce other testimony and to object to the allocation of the various items of the account. These accountants filed their report indicating a profit on "Type M *Page 242 grating" (which is the subject of this controversy) amounting to $35,128.88, designated as "net income in suspense." From this amount the master deducted certain items amounting to $6,009.55, fixing the profits at $29,119.33, for which amount the defendants were to account to the complainant. Exceptions have been filed by either complainant or defendants to every item in the master's report, so that for all practical purposes the matter is now before the court as though no reference and report had been made. The amounts represented by such of the complainant's exceptions as are sustained should be added to the total profits found by the master, and the amounts represented by such of the defendants' exceptions as are sustained should be deducted from those profits.

The complainant's exceptions are as follows:

1 and 2. Amount allowed defendant by master for account of organization expenses, $1,608.67.

3 and 4. Amount allowed defendant by master for agents' equipment, $2,132.53.

5 and 6. Amount allowed defendant by master on account of agents' advances, $2,268.35.

(The above amounts were included by the firm of accountants in the statement of "net income in suspense," but deducted therefrom by the master.)

7 and 8. Allowance for depreciation on machinery, $1,587.26.

9 and 10. Allowance for depreciation on furniture and equipment, $104.26.

11 and 12. Allowance for maintenance and repairs, $2,230.30.

13 and 14. Allowance for fire insurance premiums, $210.50.

15 and 16. Allowance for advertising, $5,170.04.

17 and 18. Allowance for taxes, $664.87.

(These items represent amounts deducted from income by the accountants before setting up the net income in suspense.)

The defendants' exceptions are as follows:

1. Failure of master to allow a deduction from profits for *Page 243 obsolescence and depreciation in addition to amount set up by accountants.

2. The finding of the master that the amount of depreciation set up by accountants included apparatus and machinery discarded on account of obsolescence.

3. The failure of the master to allow a deduction of $8,035.66 for organization expenses.

4. The failure of the master to allow an additional deduction of $1,334.12 on account of agents' equipment.

5. The refusal of the master to allow a credit of $15,441.17 for depreciation on patents.

6. The refusal of the master to allow a credit of $1,720.95 for general patent expenses.

7. The refusal of the master to allow $16,073.09 for expenses of this litigation.

8. The refusal of the master to allow $12,527.40 for expenses of litigation in United States courts.

9. The refusal of the master to allow a credit of $1,097.40 expenses of litigation in New York.

10. The refusal of the master to allow a credit of $792 as expenses of officials of the corporate defendant.

11. Refusal to allow a credit of $232.02 expenses for Canadian patents.

12. Relates to items of $1,587.26 and $104.26 covered by complainant's exceptions and which I understand were deducted by the accountants before setting up the "net income in suspense."

13. Relates to the allowance of net profits as found by the master, defendants claiming that no profits should have been found.

I will consider these various exceptions in the order stated: but this inquiry should be approached with the thought in mind that all doubts should be resolved against a fraud-doer. The court of errors and appeals has found that the defendants "filched" the secret information which resulted in the patents on "Type M grating." The Standard Dictionary definition of "filch" is "to steal, especially slyly." The acts of the defendant which have been condemned were not innocent. *Page 244 The defendants had notice of the complainant's rights from the very inception of their nefarious plan and should be held accountable for all profits on the "Type M grating" from the very beginning. Vulcan Detinning Co. v. American Can Co., 75 N.J. Eq. 542. It follows that none of the defendants' expenditures which were made in strict furtherance of their fraudulent conspiracy should be allowed as a deduction from the income, and that the only deductions which should be allowed are disbursements representing the actual cost of manufacture and sale of "Type M grating;" that is, labor, material and expenses ordinarily incident to such manufacture and sale, but not strict capital expenditures. In the case above referred to defendants were held accountable for profits accruing after suit brought and were allowed a deduction from income for many items of expense incurred prior to the institution of suit. That was because the defendant company had not been organized for the sole purpose of carrying out an illegal conspiracy, and it appeared that the only official of the defendant company who had knowledge of the complainant's rights was the president, and it was held that his knowledge would not be imputed to the defendant corporation. But here the defendants Bunker and Lown "filched" from the complainant secret processes and information for the specific purpose of utilizing which the defendant corporation was organized and of which corporation these individuals were the main factors. The corporation itself, therefore, acted with guilty knowledge from the very beginning, and under such circumstances should be held accountable for all profits not only from the date of the commencement of the suit but from the very beginning of its corporate existence.

COMPLAINANT'S EXCEPTIONS.
1 and 2
Organization Expenses.
The total amount expended for organization expenses as shown on the books was $8,035.66, and of this amount the master allowed $1,608.67 as a deduction from profits on the *Page 245 theory that the organization expenses should be amortized over a period of years. This would ordinarily be entirely proper, but where a corporation has been organized for a specific illegal purpose (to carry out an illegal conspiracy to ruin another's business, as here), none of the expenses incident thereto should be allowed as a deduction from the income in determining profits illegally made. In the present instance all of the organization charges were incurred in forwarding the conspiracy against the complainant, and if these expenses were allowed it would be, in effect, compelling the complainant to pay for its own undoing, and this thought is emphasized by the fact that included in this expense is a total of $4,850 for officers' salaries, all of which was paid to the defendants Bunker and Lown, who were the originators of the conspiracy which has been condemned.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Warren v. Century Bankcorporation, Inc.
1987 OK 14 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1987)
United Board & Carton Corp. v. Britting
164 A.2d 824 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 A. 145, 103 N.J. Eq. 240, 2 Backes 240, 1926 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irving-iron-works-v-kerlow-c-co-njch-1926.