J. S. Skinner, Jr., Etc. v. W. Bruce White, A. Lamar Reid, Etc., Jefferson National Equities

505 F.2d 685, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 5525
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 1974
Docket73-2695
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 505 F.2d 685 (J. S. Skinner, Jr., Etc. v. W. Bruce White, A. Lamar Reid, Etc., Jefferson National Equities) 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
J. S. Skinner, Jr., Etc. v. W. Bruce White, A. Lamar Reid, Etc., Jefferson National Equities, 505 F.2d 685, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 5525 (5th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

LEWIS R. MORGAN, Circuit Judge:

This appeal is from a judgment of contempt and the attendant sanctions entered against defendants-appellants. The underlying facts are intensely complicated, but will be presented summarily since the issues on appeal concern only the contempt proceeding itself. For reasons stated below, we reverse the judgment of the district court.

The initial complaint was filed on November 1, 1968, by appellee J. S. Skinner, Jr., on behalf of himself and all other owners of interment rights in two cemeteries. The named defendants were W. Bruce White, A. Lamar Reid, Jefferson National Equities Corporation (hereafter “Equities”), Jefferson Memory Corporation (hereafter “Memory”), and certain other corporations not involved in this appeal. State Security Life Insurance Company (hereafter “State Security”) was later joined as a defendant. State Security, the owner of *687 the real property on which the two cemeteries are located, is a publicly held life insurance company. Memory, a subsidiary of Equities, owns 420,000 shares of State Security stock, and prior to the suit operated the cemetery under a management contract with State Security. Memory was the beneficiary of four trusts created to fund the maintenance and care of the cemeteries; White, Reid, and Clarence Bishop, Jr., were directors of Memory. At the time the suit was instituted, Reid was also trustee of the four trusts. The gravamen of the complaint was mismanagement and diversion of assets from the four trusts.

Defendants denied several of the allegations and raised affirmative defenses, but extensive discovery delayed trial for almost three yeax-s. On October 18, 1971, upon commencement of the non-jux-y trial, the district judge announced that he had determined that the suit was maintainable as a class action. Rather than try the case, attorneys for all parties then engaged in three days of settlement negotiations, apparently hoping to produce a mutually acceptable monetary judgment sufficient to fund the four trusts and pay plaintiff’s attorney’s fees and expenses. On October 21, after a brief hearing, the district judge entered findings of fact and conclusions of law. Among the more important provisions were the following:

(1) that Reid would be replaced as trustee by Exchange Security Bank, would turn over to the bank the trust assets, and would be excused from any further accounting;

(2) that since 1964, the assets of the four trusts had been diminished in value and that a contribution by Memox-y of $615,000 would adequately fund the trusts and cover plaintiff’s attorney’s fees;

(3) that one of Memox-y’s chief assets, the 420,000 shares of State Security, was hypothecated for presently existing indebtedness;

(4) that in the event of a future hy-pothecation of Memory’s State Security stock within five years of the date of the decree, Memory would immediately pay $50,000 to the trustee, and in the event of a sale of the stock during the five years, Memory would pay the sale proceeds up to $50,000 to the trustee;

(5) that the trust instruments would be amended to make the trustee subject to futux-e control by the district court.

On November 15, 1972, Skinner petitioned the court to require appellants to show cause why they should not be held in contempt of court for having allegedly violated certain provisions of the 1971 decx-ee. Four specific violations were alleged :

(1) that Equities, rather than Memory, had made the required $50,000 payment to the trustee upon the sale of part of Memory’s State Security stock in October, 1972;

(2) that Memory had filed two law suits which “could substantially affect the effectuation of the decree in this case”;

(3) that Memory had failed to make payments due under the decree;

(4) that Memory had failed to make semi-annual audit reports to the court and trustee as required by the trust instruments attached to the decree.

Shortly after the opening of the contempt hearing, on January 23, 1973, plaintiff’s counsel made an announcement which dramatically altered the course of the proceedings and spawned the issues argued before this court. “Well, these two law suits will disclose some things,” he said,

. which were actions taken at the time that we were negotiating the decree in the case that constitute a fraud upon the court and upon the plaintiff in this case in the entering into of the decree which we say is a contempt of this court.

Over appellants’ protests that they were unprepared to defend themselves against this charge, the court conducted a two-day hearing culminating in a judgment of contempt against appellants. The *688 court’s judgment makes no reference to the four charges in appellee's petition; rather, it appears to rest on a finding of “fraud on the court” in negotiating the October, 1971, decree, and in diverting a portion of Memory’s assets.

As instances of the first type of conduct, the court found that:

(1) The $350,000.00 loan of October 15, 1971 which was collateralized with the stock of State Security Life Insurance Company owned by Jefferson Memory Company was never disclosed to any attorney appearing before the Court in this matter prior to or at the time the decree of October 21, 1971, was entered;
(2) The decree of October 21, 1971, was obtained by fraud committed on this Court by Jefferson National Equities Corporation, State Security Life Insurance Company, A. Lamar Reid, and W. Bruce White. . . .

The diversion ruling was limited to one finding of fact;

The Court finds ... a diversion and misapplication of assets of Jefferson Memory Company by W. Bruce White and A. Lamar Reid, which misapplication was aided and assisted by . . . State Security Life Insurance Company, and the Jefferson National Equities Corporation, each acting with knowledge of the actions and conduct of each of the others. The said diversion of assets, and the failure to disclose those diversions, constitute a fraud upon and contempt of this Coui’t.

Among the many sanctions imposed by the court were the following:

(1) the unpaid balance ($470,245.34) of the judgment rendered against Memory in the October, 1971, decree was declared due immediately;

(2) White, Reid, Equities, and State Security were held liable to Memory for $468,408.00, the amount of Memory’s assets found to have been diverted;

(3) a contract between Equities and State Security for the sale of 110,532 shares of Memory’s State Security stock was made the property of Memory;

(4) a 1968 voting trust agreement governing Memory’s State Security stock was “cancelled, abolished, and held to be null and void and of no effect”;

(5) the debt of Richard V. Moore, President of State Security, to Equities and 58,976 shares of State Security stock pledged to secure the debt were declared to be the property of Memory;

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Bluebook (online)
505 F.2d 685, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 5525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-s-skinner-jr-etc-v-w-bruce-white-a-lamar-reid-etc-jefferson-ca5-1974.