J. R. Simplot Co. v. Dallas Rupe & Son, Inc.

369 P.2d 445, 78 Nev. 111, 1962 Nev. LEXIS 98
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1962
DocketNo. 4422
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 369 P.2d 445 (J. R. Simplot Co. v. Dallas Rupe & Son, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. R. Simplot Co. v. Dallas Rupe & Son, Inc., 369 P.2d 445, 78 Nev. 111, 1962 Nev. LEXIS 98 (Neb. 1962).

Opinion

[112]*112OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, C. J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of Dallas Rupe & Son, Inc., hereinafter referred to as Rupe, in the sum of $110,000 against J. R. Simplot Company, hereinafter called Simplot, for a commission for obtaining purchasers of $5,500,000 of Simplot’s bonds. Simplot’s defenses to the action and its grounds assigned for reversal are hereinafter discussed at length. We have decided that the assignments of error are without merit and that the judgment must be affirmed.

Rupe, a Texas investment banking corporation, and Simplot, a Nevada corporation with manufacturing, processing, mining, agricultural and timber interests, tentatively agreed in June 1958 that Rupe would raise a $4,500,000 loan for Simplot for a 2 percent commission on the amount thus raised. On September 2, 1958 a written “preliminary underwriting agreement” was entered into, reciting Simplot’s desire to liquidate its presently outstanding funded indebtedness, and to raise additional operating capital and to negotiate the sale of $4,500,000 first-mortgage bonds, and that Rupe agreed to sell or underwrite the sale of such bonds secured by a first mortgage and chattel mortgage on [113]*113all its real and personal property. Right of prepayment of $1,000 or any multiple thereof on any semiannual interest-payment date after 60 days’ written notice was permitted on a 5 percent penalty basis within one year and reduced at the rate of one half of 1 percent for each year thereafter, with no prepayment penalty after ten years. Prepayment of larger sums under certain specified conditions was permitted without penalty. The bonds were to bear interest not in excess of 5% percent, payable semiannually, with interest on past due payments at 8 percent. “The Bankers shall submit the application for such loan on a basis of interest at the rate of 5 y2 per centum per annum but in the event they conclude that they are unable to sell such bonds at such interest rate, they shall notify the Company that in their opinion it is necessary to increase such interest rate offered on the bonds to a rate not in excess of 5%% per annum and upon the approval of the Company, the Bankers shall be authorized to increase such offered rate.” Provision was made for the physical form of the bonds, the selection of a trustee, and that the bonds should contain such terms, conditions, provisions, and covenants “and such other special provisions which may be made a part of a further and supplementary underwriting agreement and shall be mutually agreed upon by the parties hereto.” It provided for submission and examination of abstracts of title and . that the obligation of Rupe to purchase the issue should be subject to the approval of its counsel as to validity.

Paragraph 7 is as follows: “Bankers agree that they will use the facilities of their organization to offer said bonds for sale to their customers, but in the event they fail to effect the sale thereof within ninety days from date hereof, the Company may, at its option, terminate and cancel this agreement and the parties hereto shall thereupon have no further obligation to each other under the terms hereof. However, in the event the Bankers notify the Company within said period of time that they have underwritten or have sold such issue of bonds, this agreement shall remain in full force and effect. Any such underwriting or sale shall be evidenced [114]*114by a written commitment signed by some financially responsible insurance company or other'financial institution or institutions, copy of which shall be delivered to the Company by the Bankers.”

Paragraph 12 of the agreement reads in part as follows : “Contemporaneously with the delivery of a written commitment as provided for in Section 7 hereof, the Company shall pay to the Bankers as compensation for services rendered by them in connection with the sale of such bonds, a sum equal to two per cent (2%) of the principal amount of such bonds, * * *.”

The parties entered into' a written supplemental agreement November 6, 1958, increasing the amount of the proposed bond issue to $5,500,000. At the same time they agreed upon “other special provisions” contemplated by the original agreement. They included numerous provisions to be recited upon the face of the bonds. Such matters, however, present nothing involved in this appeal.

On November 26,1958 the parties entered into a written “Extension of Preliminary Underwriting Agreement,” section 1 of which reads as follows: “Section 7 of such Preliminary Underwriting Agreement is hereby revised to provide that in the event the Bankers fail to effect the sale of the First Mortgage Bonds referred to in such agreement on or before the 15th day of January, 1959, the Company may, at its option, terminate and cancel such Preliminary Underwriting Agreement and all amendments and supplements thereto, and the parties hereto shall thereupon have no further obligation to each other under the terms thereof. Each reference in such Preliminary Underwriting Agreement to such original period of ninety days shall hereafter be read to mean a reference to the period of time ending at the close of business on the 15th day of January, 1959.” Time for Rupe’s performance was accordingly extended to January 15, 1959. The provision with reference to written commitments was not altered.

On March 13,1959 Simplot telephoned Rupe and notified him that the agreement was terminated. This was [115]*115confirmed in a letter of March 16,1959, advising: “Pursuant to the provisions of Section 7 of the Preliminary-Underwriting Agreement * * * we desire to give you notice of termination and cancellation of said agreement.”

In its specification of errors in its appeal from the judgment awarding a commission to Rupe, Simplot asserts that the lower court erred in finding that Rupe had performed its contract. It asserts that there was no compliance with that part of paragraph 7 of the original agreement above quoted requiring written commitments “signed by some financially responsible insurance company or other financial institution or institutions, copy of which shall be delivered to the company [Simplot] by the bankers [Rupe].” Analyzing this contention, Simplot refers to the amounts that were to be purchased by the four lenders supplied by Rupe as follows:

American National Insurance Company.--------------------------------------------- $1,500,000

Northwestern National Life Insurance Co--------------------------------------------------------- 800,000

Seattle First National Bank____________________ 1,800,000

Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company.-------------------------------------------- 1,400,000

Total____________________________________________________________ $5,500,000

Taking these in order, Simplot attacks each one as failing of compliance with paragraph 7 of the agreement. It asserts that American National made nothing but a conditional agreement to participate. American National’s letter was as follows: “This is to let you know that the Finance Committee of the American National Insurance Company has approved at their meeting this morning a participation up to $1,500,000 in the first mortgage loan to the J. R. Simplot Company amounting to $5,500,000. This loan is contingent upon the interest rate on the bonds which we purchase being not less than 5%%, as well as other terms and conditions being worked out along the lines of previous [116]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
369 P.2d 445, 78 Nev. 111, 1962 Nev. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-r-simplot-co-v-dallas-rupe-son-inc-nev-1962.