Kirtz v. Wiggin

483 F. Supp. 148
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1980
Docket76-481C(B)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 483 F. Supp. 148 (Kirtz v. Wiggin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirtz v. Wiggin, 483 F. Supp. 148 (E.D. Mo. 1980).

Opinion

483 F.Supp. 148 (1980)

Frank Groom KIRTZ and Mary Jane Kirtz, Plaintiffs,
v.
Blanton WIGGIN, Erma Wiggin et al., Defendants.

No. 76-481C(B).

United States District Court, E. D. Missouri, E. D.

January 15, 1980.

*149 Joseph L. Badaracco, St. Louis, Mo., for plaintiffs.

Edward Weakley, Mark Mittleman, St. Louis, Mo., for defendants.

MEMORANDUM

REGAN, District Judge.

In this action pending since May 26, 1976, defendants have moved to dismiss plaintiffs' fourth amended complaint for failure to state a claim and for summary judgment.

In an earlier stage of this case we dismissed plaintiffs' second amended complaint on various procedural grounds. In an unpublished opinion in Kirtz v. Wiggin, 566 F.2d 1179 (8 Cir. 1977), the Court of Appeals reversed in part and affirmed in part, expressly disclaiming any attempt to consider the substantive sufficiency of the allegations of the complaint, although noting that plaintiffs' claims, "as articulated in their complaint, rest precariously on the outer fringes of cognizable legal theories." The complaint we dismissed contained thirteen claims. The present complaint contains sixteen.

Quoting from the Court of Appeals opinion: "The Kirtzes, residents of Missouri, were the sole minority stockholders of Med-Science Electronics, Inc., a Missouri corporation, until August 1973, when that company was merged into Advance(d) Instruments, Inc., a Massachusetts corporation. Blanton and Erma Wiggin, residents of Massachusetts, controlled the majority of the stock of both companies and were the directors and officers of Med-Science. The Kirtzes allege that the Wiggins, through various self-dealing transactions and improper accounting devices, diverted corporate funds and fraudulently reduced the book value of Med-Science so that Advanced Instruments could purchase the company at less than its true worth." As noted by the Court, the present suit "is one in a long line of legal disputes arising from the Kirtzes' relationship with Med-Science." Two of these cases "culminated in the disbarment of Kirtz by the Supreme Court of Missouri."

Plaintiffs, who objected to the merger prior to the meeting of the stockholders of Med-Science and made a written demand for payment of the "full value" of their shares, thereafter filed suit in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis under Section 351.455 RSMo., seeking judgment for such amount as the court should determine to be the "full value" of their shares as of the day prior to the date the vote on merger was taken, together with interest thereon to date of judgment. Following a full-scale *150 trial of that action,[1] judgment was entered awarding plaintiffs $62,100 as the "full value" of their minority Med-Science stock, and interest of $13,424. Plaintiffs were ordered to deposit with the court an assignment of their stock to be delivered upon the payment by defendants of the sums awarded. The state court judge found that the Med-Science stock had a value of $2.76 per share. On plaintiffs' appeal the judgment was affirmed. Kirtz v. Advanced Instruments, Inc., Mo.App.1979, 581 S.W.2d 868. The record in that case, containing the trial transcript, is before us on the motion for summary judgment.

In our consideration of the sufficiency of the fourth amended complaint and the evidence relating thereto, we start from the premise that the Missouri Supreme Court's finding[2] that "Kirtz had been guilty of gross, reprehensible fraud in performing certain alleged acts in seeking to obtain control of Med-Science and in converting certain shares of stock belong to (Burlis)" in no way affects or precludes plaintiffs' ability to recover for any later fraud which may have been perpetrated on them by the Wiggins.

Count I of the present complaint alleges that (at some unspecified time prior to the merger) $140,443 of Med-Science funds was paid to Advanced Instruments, Inc. (a corporation wholly owned by the Wiggins) as commissions for the sale of Med-Science products pursuant to a contract appointing Advanced Instruments as exclusive sales agent; that plaintiffs were unaware of the relationship between the two corporations until 1975;[3] and that as a result of the payments of the sales commissions, the value of plaintiffs' 28% stock holding was diluted to the extent of 28% of the payments, for which amount, together with $50,000 punitive damages judgment is sought. In effect, Count I attempts to state a claim for breach of the Wiggins' fiduciary relationship based on the charge that for practical purposes they were dealing with themselves. Parenthetically, we note that there is no claim that the sales commissions were not in fact earned nor that they were excessive. Assuming, however, that the Wiggins' conduct resulted in a wrongful depletion of corporate assets, it is clear that plaintiffs would have no individual or personal, as distinguished from a derivative, claim with respect thereto.

The situation here presented is wholly unlike that in Gieselman v. Stegeman, supra, where the wrongs committed by Kirtz resulted in a direct injury to the plaintiffs therein. As the Missouri Supreme Court stated (443 S.W.2d at 131): "Stockholders may maintain an action on an individual basis, as distinguished from a derivative action, against directors, officers, or others for the redress of wrongs constituting a direct fraud upon them, as in the case where wrongdoers by fraud have seized control of the corporation from the complaining corporation . . . Another rule . . . gives to a stockholder to whom an erring director or officer owes a special fiduciary duty the right to maintain an individual action."

In Gieselman, Kirtz, as Burlis' longtime friend, adviser and attorney, occupied a position of special trust and confidence in advising him with respect to the protection of his stockholdings. Burlis sought to recover from Kirtz the stock he owned of which Kirtz had fraudulently deprived him. In the present case, there is no allegation nor contention that the Wiggins seized control of Med-Science from plaintiffs, nor could there be, since such control was already in the Wiggins. So, too, the Wiggins and the Kirtzes dealt at arms length with *151 each other, so that the Wiggins owed the Kirtzes no fiduciary duty other than that they would have owed to any minority stockholder. In contrast to Gieselman, the Wiggins did not occupy a position of special trust and confidence.

Of course, any breach of the fiduciary duty owed by an officer and controlling stockholder to the corporation could adversely affect the value of the stock owned by the other stockholders. However, if by reason of self-dealing, the Wiggins wrongfully diverted corporate assets to themselves, the wrong was to the corporation and not to plaintiffs individually.[4] And inasmuch as the alleged "wrong" was known to plaintiffs prior to the trial and determination of the value of the minority stock,[5] they had the right and obligation to present the evidence relating thereto in the state valuation case if they believed it would serve to enhance the value of their stock. This for the obvious reason that the amount of the allegedly diverted assets for which the Wiggins are claimed to be liable would have been an asset of the corporation to be considered and taken into account in ascertaining the value of the plaintiffs' stock.

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Related

Kirtz v. Wiggin
538 F. Supp. 1218 (E.D. Missouri, 1982)
Kirtz v. Wiggin
637 F.2d 572 (Eighth Circuit, 1981)

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