Jones v. Foster

70 F.2d 200, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4103
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 3, 1934
Docket3593
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 70 F.2d 200 (Jones v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Foster, 70 F.2d 200, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4103 (4th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

CHESNUT, District Judge.

The appeal in this case is from a judgment of the District- Court in a suit at law, after jury trial, in the sum of $10,984.77 “with interest thereon at' 6% from March 9, 1931,” in favor of the plaintiff, a citizen- of Oregon, against the defendant, a citizen of Virginia, who is the appellant here. The suit was brought to recover a balance in the hands of the appellant alleged to be due the appellee, as a result of a sale of certain shares of stock belonging to the appellee but held by the appellant as collateral security for. a note of the appellee. The defence was based on certain counterclaims said to exceed the amount of the balance otherwise due. The district judge instructed the jury to allow one of these counterclaims, to disregard two, and to determine from the evidence the validity of another. The jury found that the principal of the balance due the plaintiff was $10,984.77, to which the judge added as a part of the verdict, the interest from March 9, 1931, in accordance with an instruction previously given to the jury. The relations of the parties, and the nature of the controversy over the several items of the counterclaims will appear from the following statement of facts which in themselves are not in dispute.

In 1927 the appellant, Jones, resided in Bristol, Virginia, where he owned and operated the Dixie Coca Cola Bottling Company. The appellee, Foster, was a salesman for a kindred company, travelling that territory. As a result of their business acquaintance they agreed to buy all the shares of stock of the Coca Cola Company of Portland, Oregon, with the understanding that Foster was to move to Portland and manage the business there as secretary and treasurer, and Jones was to be president but to continue to reside in Bristol and direct the policy of the business by correspondence chiefly; and, Foster being without capital, Jones agreed to advance the entire funds for the purchase, taking Foster’s note for forty per cent, thereof secured by the same proportion of the stock, payable with interest in one year but renewable for reasonable periods; and Jones agreed to advance a limited amount of additional funds for working capital, it being recognized that the business would require a development period before becoming profitable and self-supporting. Accordingly the five hundred shares of stock *202 of the Portland Company were acquired for $35,000 and Foster gave his note to Jones for $14,000 secured by 200' shares of the stock. An informal written memorandum of agreement, dated November 4, 1927, was signed by Jones and verbally agreed to by Foster. It contemplated a formal written agreement to be prepared by counsel and it appears in the record that such a paper was prepared some three years later, but if so the record does not contain it and apparently it was never executed by the parties. Some part of the resulting controversy is doubtless attributable to this fact. The informal agreement provided that the salary of Foster should be at the rate of $200 per month for the first year, $250 for the second year, and $300 “when the plant earns a minimum of 6% on capital”; and “any increase in salary beyond $300 per month to be figured in ratio of stock owned at that time by Foster and Jones.”

Pursuant to the agreement Foster went to Portland and took over the active management of the Company. By formal corporate action he was elected secretary-treasurer and general manager, with salary as agreed upon; and Jones was elected president, without salary. The duties of the president as specified in the By-Laws of the corporation included the “general supervision and management of the affairs of the Company” as well as other conventional duties pertaining to the office. The business of the company did not progress so well as had been hoped, and for two years it accumulated a loss of $29,-000 and Jones advanced as loans over $40,-000 for additional capital, raising the money with difficulty, the amount being much more than was originally contemplated. The third year showed better results but in the meantime Jones had become dissatisfied with Foster’s management and- decided to sell the stock, to' which Foster very reluctantly consented in deference to Jones, as the former felt the necessary loss of the development years would be reflected in later gains. Finally Jones concluded a sale of the stock of both parties for $135,000 out of which the purchaser retained $33,069.91 for satisfaction of certain corporate debts, and paid the balance of $101,930.09 to Jones on March 9, 1931, on delivery of the whole capital stock of the Company, including the 2001 shares belonging to Foster, the purchaser requiring Jones to give bond secured by his stock in the Dixie Company of the estimated value of $50,000, conditioned to satisfy other possibly existing indebtedness of the corporation ■ which might develop in a year. Jones returned Foster’s note showing payment of the $14,000 and interest from the proceeds of sale. Foster, not being informed of the exact conditions of the sale, asked for definite information but received somewhat indefinite replies from Jones who delayed the final settlement by supplying only partial information, even though some months later Foster sent his attorney from Portland to Bristol to ask Jones for an accounting for his profits on the sale of the stock. Finally, February 2, 1932, without prior further developments, Foster sued for the balance due him on the basis of such information as he had. In the account filed by him with the suit he charged Jones with the receipt of $101,930.09 from the purchaser of the stock, and credited him with $22,471.26 balance of principal of the loans made by Jones to the Company remaining unpaid, and with interest thereon at 7%, and also with the amount of several other items paid by Jones for the account of the corporation, leaving the net proceeds of the sale of stock in the possession of Jones $73,-656.37, forty per cent, of which ($29,462.55) belonged to Foster subject to further credit for his cancelled note of $14,000 which, with accumulated interest and some other minor items, aggregated $17,701.95, leaving a net balance of $11,760.60 claimed by Foster.

Further deductions and counterclaims set up by Jones in the pleadings, and at the trial were: (1) An item of $1,939.59 for traveling expenses incurred in the business of the Company, forty per cent, of which was chargeable to Foster in proportion to his stock; (2) a elaim for $10,000 against the Portland Company for special and extraordinary services rendered by Jones outside and beyond the scope of his agreed and regular duties as president; (3) a elaim for $25,-000 against the Company and Foster for services in effecting a sale of the stock of the Company for $135,000; (4) a elaim for interest on Jones’ investment of $21,000 in the original purchase of the stock calculated to March 9, 1931, in the amount of $4,879'.59; (5) a claim against Foster that he should bear his proportion of the loss sustained by the Portland Company in operations for the first two years, which Jones attributed to the failure of Foster to follow instructions and conform to policies outlined by Jones; and (6) a claim for compensation to Jones from the Company and Foster based on the hazard incurred by Jones in advancing from time to time working capital to the corporation in the total amount of $41,383.22, although this amount with interest had been fully re-paid to Jones.

*203 We will consider these counterclaims separately.

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Bluebook (online)
70 F.2d 200, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-foster-ca4-1934.