Johnston v. Rothwell

87 P.2d 13, 54 Wyo. 99, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 3
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1939
Docket2045, 2046
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 P.2d 13 (Johnston v. Rothwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. Rothwell, 87 P.2d 13, 54 Wyo. 99, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 3 (Wyo. 1939).

Opinion

*106 Kimball, Justice.

The appeals are from a judgment following an accounting under a contract providing for payment of certain debts of the Northwest Power Company, a holding corporation, hereinafter usually called “the Power Company.”

The Power Company, in 1929, owned the capital stock of several subsidiary public utility corporations. The capital stock of the Power Company, 10,000 shares was owned by parties who for the purpose of the case are divided into three groups: the Rothwells (H. P. Rothwell and his sons, Paul A. and Erwin C.) who owned 6,050 shares; Smith & Alden (Isaac B. Smith *107 and W. T. Alden, and their associates) who owned 2,500 shares, and the Johnstons (A. D. Johnston and Katharine T. Johnston) who owned 1,450 shares.

In April, 1929, one of the Rothwells agreed in writing to cause the Power Company to sell to H. M. Byllesby and Company, hereinafter called “the Byllesby Company,” the capital stock of the subsidiary companies for $1,245,000. At that time two of the subsidiary companies were defendants in what is called the Clarke suit, an action by Clarke and others, as plaintiffs, then pending in the United States District Court. By Section 4 of the contract for sale of the stock it was provided that the Byllesby Company should retain $100,000 of the purchase price “as indemnity for the payment of any judgment or judgments rendered against the defendants” in the Clarke suit, and any other judgments for causes arising before the transfer of the stock. The Byllesby Company agreed to pay the Power Company 6 per cent, interest on the sum so retained. By section 6 of the contract the Power Company agreed to indemnify and hold harmless the Byllesby Company and the subsidiary companies “against any claims, judgment or damages” arising before the transfer of the stock. Section 7 provided that the Power Company should “retain sixty-five per cent, of its assets, or securities, or cash, amounting to the same as the funds with which to further indemnify [the Byllesby Company] and the subsidiary companies against loss or damage referred to in Sections 4 and 6.” The contract was ratified and adopted by the Power Company, and by July 1, 1929, the stock of the subsidiary companies had been transferred to the Byllesby Company, and the purchase price, except the mentioned $100,000 paid to the Power Company or to holders of its bonds.

The effect of this transaction was to convert practically all of the assets of the Power Company into *108 cash, about $425,000. Later, during the latter part of 1929, about $200,000 was invested in the stocks of various public utility and industrial companies and in promissory notes of individuals and companies. This was the financial condition of the Power Company on December 31, 1929, as shown in detail by the report of Gregerson Brothers, certified public accountants, employed to examine the books and records of the company. The report, called the “Gregerson audit,” was accepted by the stockholders of the Power Company as the basis of the negotiations that led to the contract now to be mentioned. In January of 1930 the John-stons and Smith & Alden who (it is said in the brief) were alarmed at the prospects of loss on the stocks of other companies in which funds of the Power Company had been invested, offered to sell their shares of stock in the Power Company to the Rothwells. The offer was accepted and the contract put in a writing, dated January 15, 1930, in which the Power Company is called the first party; the Rothwells second parties; Smith & Alden third parties and the Johnstons fourth parties. The material parts of this contract are contained in the following summary.

The contract is prefaced by a reference to the Bylles-by contract and particularly to the provisions of sections 4, 6 and 7 thereof. The second parties agreed to purchase from the third and fourth parties all their stock in the first party for $40 per share, “plus any salvage” from the fund of $100,000 retained by the Byllesby Company. Provision was made for setting up two funds called, respectively, the “indemnity fund” and the “revolving fund.” The third and fourth parties agreed to deposit with the first party $10 per share, total $39,500, of the purchase money to be held by first party “as a part of the indemnity fund required by that paragraph [7] of said Byllesby contract which relates to the retention of the assets of the first party *109 as above mentioned.” The first party agreed to deposit this |39,500, “less the revolving fund hereinafter mentioned,” on saving’s deposit in the First National Bank of Buffalo, Wyo. So long as this indemnity fund or any portion thereof should remain in the possession of the first party, the third and fourth parties were to be “entitled to receive the interest and income therefrom.” It was also provided that “a revolving fund of $10,000 shall be established for the purpose of meeting expenses and costs of litigation arising out of the acquisition of the Hot Springs Light & Power Company [the Clarke suit],” of which amount the second, third and fourth parties agreed to contribute $6,050, $2,500, and $1,450, respectively, “provided, that the contributions from the third and fourth parties respectively may be taken out of and deducted from their respective contributions to the indemnity fund aforesaid.” It was agreed that the $10,000 revolving fund should be deposited. in the First National Bank of Buffalo, Wyo., subject to the check of H. P. Rothwell, and that “all checks shall be accompanied by vouchers showing the payment of the items for which said checks are drawn.” It was understood “that the said H. P. Rothwell shall be entitled to pay, out of said revolving fund, any of the expenses arising out of the litigation [known as the Clarke suit], and any income tax assessed against the Northwest Power Company for years prior to 1930.” It was further provided that “immediately upon the payment of any item, the said H. P. Rothwell shall notify the third and fourth parties respectively of the expenses so paid and they shall immediately reimburse said revolving fund for their pro rata proportion of such expense, it being the intention of the parties hereto that said revolving fund shall not decrease below the sum of $10,000 except temporarily.” The second parties agreed to contribute iii like manner their proportion of any deficiency in said fund. If third *110 and fourth parties should fail, after notice, to reimburse the revolving fund, H. P. Rothwell was authorized to take the money out of the indemnity fund. It was further provided that “any and all interest received from the $100,000 deposit with Byllesby & Company shall be placed in the revolving fund.” There were provisions for distribution of anything remaining in the mentioned funds after the claims payable therefrom had been satisfied.

Pursuant to the above contract Smith & Alden and the Johnstons were paid the purchase price for their stock, $30 per share in cash, and $10 per share, $39,500, deposited in the mentioned bank, $35,550 as the indemnity fund, and $3,950 as their part of the revolving fund. The Rothwells deposited their part, $6,050, of the revolving fund.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 P.2d 13, 54 Wyo. 99, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-rothwell-wyo-1939.