Kidwell v. Meikle

597 F.2d 1273
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 1979
Docket77-1253
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 597 F.2d 1273 (Kidwell v. Meikle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kidwell v. Meikle, 597 F.2d 1273 (9th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

597 F.2d 1273

Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 96,912
Wayne L. KIDWELL, Attorney General of the State of Idaho, ex
relation of Don V. PENFOLD and Kenneth M. Cooper, suing in
the name of the State of Idaho to protect and enforce the
rights of the charitable, recreational and educational
beneficiaries of Grand Targhee Resort, Inc., Boyd Moulton
and Milton Butler, members of the board of directors of
Grand Targhee Resort, Inc., suing on behalf of Grand Targhee
Resort, Inc., for the benefit of the charitable,
recreational and educational beneficiaries of Grand Targhee
Resort, Inc., and Cleon Kunz, suing derivatively in the
right, on behalf of and for the benefit of Grand Targhee
Resort, Inc., Appellants,
v.
Steve M. MEIKLE, Jr., Valley Bank of Rexburg, Idaho, an
Idaho Corporation, Sioux Corporation, an Idaho Corporation,
Grand Targhee Resort, Inc., an Idaho Non-Profit Cooperative
Corporation, Big Valley Corporation, a Wyoming Corporation,
William H. Robinson, Darold E. Smoot, Nile L. Boyle, Neal K.
Powell, James E. Mitchell, Jr., Gene Sewell, John C.
Commander, John J. Revello, John D. Hansen, Guy R. Hillman,
J. Kent Jolley, Leonard S. Meranus, Charles W. Anness,
United States of America, United States Department of
Agriculture, Farmers Home Administration, United States
Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Targhee National
Forest, Earl L. Butz, Secretary of Agriculture, United
States Department of Agriculture, Frank Elliott,
Administrator of the Farmers Home Administration, United
States Department of Agriculture, United States Small
Business Administration, Appellees.

Nos. 76-3688, 77-1253.

United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.

June 1, 1979.

Ronald J. Jarman, Pocatello, Idaho, Blaine S. Butler, Los Angeles, Cal., for appellants.

Sidney E. Smith, U. S. Atty., Boise, Idaho, Gordon S. Thatcher, Rexburg, Idaho, Terry L. Crapo, Idaho Falls, Idaho, Warren S. Derbidge, Asst. U. S. Attys., Boise, Idaho, for appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of idaho.

Before VAN DUSEN*, WRIGHT and GOODWIN, Circuit Judges.

GOODWIN, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiffs appeal from a summary judgment for all defendants. The complaint charged violations of the federal securities laws, advanced several pendent and diversity claims, and sought mandamus against federal officials.

I. FACTS

The relevant facts, gleaned from a lengthy record and cast in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, are as follows:

Grand Targhee Resort, Inc. (Targhee) was organized in 1967 as an Idaho nonprofit cooperative membership corporation. Its purpose was to operate for its members a ski resort on lands leased from the United States Forest Service west of the Grand Tetons, near the Idaho border, in Wyoming. Membership shares were purchased for between $100 and $1,000 each. The total cash investment by members came to about $547,000.

Targhee's bylaws provided for no dividends; members hoped to receive the return of their original cash contribution upon dissolution, but there was no guarantee. Any surplus on dissolution was to be donated to nonprofit charitable, recreational, or educational organizations. The primary benefit of the resort to most of its members was to be the expected stimulation of the local economy as Targhee attracted skiers and other vacationers.

A 15-member board of directors was empaneled from among the members. The articles of incorporation required that at least two thirds of the directors be "farmers or rural residents" of five named counties in Idaho or of one county in Wyoming. Two thirds of the members of Targhee also had to be residents of these six counties.

To finance the construction of ski lifts and other facilities, Targhee borrowed $600,000 from the Farmers Home Administration (FHA). This federal agency oversaw the organization and early operation of Targhee to protect the government's loan. Later, the Idaho Investment Board (IIB) purchased Targhee's obligation from the FHA with state funds, and the FHA continued to insure the loan.

Targhee opened during the Christmas season in 1969. After its first season, Targhee hired a consulting firm to examine its operation. The consultants recommended that additional housing be built near the ski hill so that visitors could spend the night at the resort.

Steve Meikle, Jr., a founder and member and the executive vice president of Targhee, was chairman of the IIB and president and part owner of Valley Bank, a local bank in nearby Rexburg, Idaho. Meikle suggested to the board a housing plan that led to the formation of the Sioux Corporation (Sioux).

Unlike Targhee, Sioux was incorporated for profit. Sioux shareholders were 32 Targhee members selected by Meikle and others. Shares in Sioux entitled their owners to preferential occupancy rights in and an opportunity to profit from a new lodge to be built at the Targhee resort. Sioux stock was not offered to the public, nor to all members of Targhee. The selection of Sioux shareholders was accomplished without consultation with the Targhee membership or directors. Among those finally chosen for Sioux ownership were Meikle; Kent Jolley, Targhee's attorney; and some members of the Targhee board of directors. Sioux shares were sold to these stockholders at a nominal price, and the 32 shareholders then purchased long-term debentures from Targhee, subordinated to all of Targhee's other creditors, in the total amount of about $50,000.

Targhee then borrowed additional sums, in excess of $340,000, from the Small Business Administration (SBA), and built Sioux Lodge at the resort site. Under a complex agreement, Sioux leased the building from Targhee for about 25 years; Sioux agreed to pay the SBA mortgage out of its sublease receipts and shareholder assessments; and Targhee agreed to manage and maintain the lodge for Sioux on a year-round basis. Sioux had a right of first refusal if Targhee decided to sell the lodge. Jolley served as counsel to both Sioux and Targhee throughout the negotiation of the lodge deal.

There was evidence that the management contract, which forced Targhee to remain in operation the year around, was highly unfavorable to Targhee, and that the design of the Sioux units was disadvantageous to Targhee's food and beverage operation. All 32 Sioux living units had kitchen facilities, enabling Sioux occupants to prepare their meals without patronizing the resort restaurant.

Sioux shareholders subleased the 32 units at the lodge from Sioux, the primary lessee, for 25 years each. Under these agreements, the Sioux shareholders enjoyed some preferential occupancy rights, but had to relinquish their apartments to the public for part of the year to raise funds to pay the rent to Targhee, and hence Targhee's mortgage to the SBA. If public rental of the apartment units at the lodge did not satisfy Sioux's obligation to Targhee, Sioux members would be assessed, after the first two years of lodge operation, to amortize the principal on the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
597 F.2d 1273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kidwell-v-meikle-ca9-1979.