Knutsen v. Frushour

436 P.2d 521, 92 Idaho 37, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 242
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1968
Docket9708
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 436 P.2d 521 (Knutsen v. Frushour) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knutsen v. Frushour, 436 P.2d 521, 92 Idaho 37, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 242 (Idaho 1968).

Opinion

*38 McQUADE, Justice.

At all pertinent times, A. L. Knutsen, a respondent, and appellant E. B. Frushour were directors and stockholders of respondent Kidd Island Bay Development Corporation.

; The present action is both a class or representative action and a shareholder’s derivative action brought by respondent Knutsen against appellant.

The district court found appellant had breached a fiduciary obligation by seizing a corporate opportunity of respondent corporation when he purchased in his own name (by trading for it land previously owned by the corporation) two parcels of land which respondent corporation was attempting to obtain. Therefore the court determined the land to be held in constructive trust for respondent corporation.

The court ordered conveyance to the corporation of those parts of the land still owned by appellant and ordered an accounting for those parts which appellant had sold. The court also awarded attorneys’ fees to be paid from the recovery property to respondent Knutsen. Finding no error in that determination, we affirm.

Two issues are presented:

I. Whether sufficient competent evidence supports the trial court’s finding that appellant breached a fiduciary obligation to respondent corporation when he purchased for himself certain parcels of land?
II. Whether under the circumstances, respondent Knutsen had justification to bring the present action as a shareholder’s derivative suit without first having petitioned respondent corporation to institute suit in its own behalf?

Just before oral argument of the present appeal, a motion to delete one of the district court’s findings was made on behalf of respondent corporation. The motion is denied on the following grounds. It is unreasonably tardy, for the findings were filed February 23, 1965, two and one-half years before oral argument. That respondent Knutsen may not have served a copy of the findings on respondent corporation does not excuse this lack of diligence. Further, the matter contained in the finding concerning conspiracy and wrongdoing by several directors other than appellant is unnecessary for our consideration of the district court’s decision.

I.

Respondent Kidd Island Bay Development Corporation was formed in December 1958. As its name implies, the corporation’s business purpose was development of land around Kidd Island Bay. The Bay is part of Coeur d’Alene Lake in Idaho.

Since shortly after its inception, respondent corporation owned approximately two hundred and fifty acres of water frontage land at the head of the bay. This land previously had belonged to appellant who then had conveyed part to a son-in-law. Both thereafter conveyed their interests to a partnership whose principal members were the persons who then formed respondent corporation. The partnership conveyed this land to the corporation. This land generally extended east-west around the head of the bay. Adjacent to the land’s northerly boundary on the west side of the bay was property which until 1962 belonged to Henry L. Day.

This Day property consisted of two parcels. One parcel was adjacent to respondent corporation’s land, and was separated from the other parcel by a percolation field which Day had conveyed before 1958 to Campfire girls as a facility for their campsite. Part of the parcel adjacent to respondent corporation’s land was shoreline property. The remainder of the two Day parcels, however, and the percolation field, were bounded on the shoreline by a fairly narrow strip of land belonging to appellant. • (

The district judge found respondent corporation, by its officers and directors, was “at all times after 1958” “desirous and anxious to purchase and acquire from one, Henry L. Day” the two parcels mentioned in the preceding paragraph. This acqui *39 sition “was discussed in a confidential and fiduciary manner” at officers’ and directors’ meetings “commencing in 1960 and upon repeated occasions” since that time. Appellant had participated in these discussions, the court found, and he “well knew and was aware of the need and necessity of the acquisition” of such property “by the corporation and of the value and worth thereof.”

The court further found appellant had been, at all pertinent times, an agent of respondent corporation “with respect to the acquisition for said corporation” of the two Day parcels.

In his dual fiduciary capacity as director and agent, the court found, appellant undertook to acquire the Day parcels by an exchange of a fifteen-acre tract of land then owned by the corporation, or, if unable to arrange this trade, by a money purchase. The court also found:

“That upon repeated occasions after his said employment, the defendant, E. B. Frushour, did represent unto plaintiff, A. L. Knutsen and other officers, directors and stockholders of said corporation that he was negotiating for the acquisition of said Day property, for and on behalf of said corporation, and that no other agent, stockholder or officer of said corporation should interfere in the negotiations thereof, or in any way alert the owner, Henry L. Day, of the need, necessity and desire of said corporation to acquire said property.”

During November 1961, the court found, appellant “falsely stated and represented to the officers, directors and stockholders” of respondent corporation, “that he was unable to negotiate for the [respondent corporation’s] acquisition of” the desired Day parcels, but instead he informed them he had arranged on respondent corporation’s behalf to sell to Henry L. Day for $2,000 the fifteen-acre tract of land which respondent corporation until then had hoped to trade to Day for the two desired parcels.

By warranty deed to Henry L. Day as grantee dated November 15, 1961, respondent corporation conveyed its fifteen-acre tract. In return, respondent corporation received a check in the sum of $1,800 dated December 20, 1961, from a realty company where appellant worked. The money came from a trust fund on deposit at the company. The funds were released by two men to whom appellant previously had promised to convey land in the area near Day’s parcels. By quitclaim deed of December 19, 1961, Day conveyed his two parcels to appellant.

Actually, Day never offered to purchase respondent corporation’s fifteen-acre tract of land; rather, he agreed to trade to appellant for it the two parcels which the court found respondent corporation desired and had directed appellant to obtain for the corporation. Nevertheless, respondent corporation’s minutes for January 5, 1962, state: “Cox [corporation’s attorney] reviewed the Day sale.”

In this regard, the court found:

“ * * * in truth and fact, said defendant [appellant] had arranged with the said Day for an exchange of said properties as desired and contemplated by the corporation, but had, in violation of his fiduciary duties and obligations, failed and refused to inform the corporation of that fact and had falsely represented otherwise in order that he could carry out his fraudulent scheme to unlawfully take the title to said Day property in himself, to the determent of said corporaation.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
436 P.2d 521, 92 Idaho 37, 1968 Ida. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knutsen-v-frushour-idaho-1968.