Krause v. Mason

537 P.2d 105, 272 Or. 351
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 537 P.2d 105 (Krause v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krause v. Mason, 537 P.2d 105, 272 Or. 351 (Or. 1975).

Opinion

BRYSON, J.

Plaintiffs, owners of 50 percent of the common shares of Golden Age Distributors, Inc., an Oregon corporation (hereinafter Golden Age), filed this derivative suit on behalf of the corporation against defendants Mr. and Mrs. Mason, owners of the remaining 50 percent of the common shares, for (1) the nonpayment for stock issued to the defendants; (2) the conversion of corporate assets; and (3) attorney fees.

The trial court decree and judgment required defendants to pay for the shares of the stock issued to them by the corporation but denied relief on the remaining two issues. Plaintiffs appeal. Defendants did not appear or file a brief in this court.

Defendants Mr. and Mrs. Mason had been engaged in the sale of carpets in Oregon for several years under the name of “Mason Custom Carpets.” In March of 1973 defendants approached plaintiffs regarding a business venture for the distribution and sale of “area carpets” (carpets cut and bound — not wall-to-wall) in the northwest. Thereafter, the parties formed an Oregon corporation, Golden Age Distributors, Inc., for the purpose of carrying on such a business and executed the Articles of Incorporation on March 28,1973. The “Certificate of Incorporation” was issued by the Corporation Commissioner on April 2, 1973.

According to the testimony and exhibits received showing the organization of the corporation, and the minutes thereof, it was agreed that each of the four parties would be issued 5,000 common shares in Gold *354 en Age in exchange for $5,000 in cash or its equivalent. Mrs. Krause and the attorney who prepared the incorporation documents testified that the parties had agreed to this plan prior to the execution of the formal corporate documents.

The dispute in this case arises from events which occurred immediately after the execution of the Articles of Incorporation. On Friday, March 30, 1973, before a corporate bank account was established, Donald Mason informed plaintiffs that he was flying to Georgia that weekend to purchase carpets for Golden Age. As a result, plaintiffs gave Mason $7,900 of their personal funds “in order for Mr. Mason to have the money to purchase carpets for Golden Age Corporation.” This sum was part payment by the plaintiffs for their corporate shares.

However, Mr. Mason appropriated some of this money for defendants’ own use in the operation of their “Mason Custom Carpets.” The testimony of defendant Donald Mason best explains this event:

“THE COURT: So the $7900 that you got from the Krauses was used to purchase carpet which went into Golden Age Distributors and Mason Carpets?
“THE WITNESS: Yes, sir.
* * # *
“Q [By counsel] Mr. Mason, of this total sum * * # has any of that been sold?
“A Yes, sir.
“Q And it was sold by you?
“A Yes, sir.
“Q And your business is Mason Custom Carpets?
_“A Yes, sir.
*355 «# * * * *
“Q In other words, you kept the money for your own business?
“A Yes, sir.
«#*###
“THE COUBT: As I get your testimony, you have sold some carpet which was originally purchased with Golden Age’s money?
“THE WITNESS: I have sold some carpet that was purchased out of that $7900, yes, sir.
“THE COUBT: How much of it would you say?
“THE WITNESS: I can’t — I don’t know how much of that I have sold. There has been some of it replaced out of my stock.
“THE COUBT: All of it you have sold you have replaced out of your own stock?
“THE WITNESS: Some of them, yes, sir.
Í6* # * # *
“Q [By counsel] When you sold the carpet, you made a profit?
“A When I sell carpet, I make a profit.”

Thereafter, on or about April 19, 1973, Nancy Krause approached Donald Mason “for an account of where the rest of the money was, where his contribution was, where were the profits going from the carpeting he was selling. He told me if I didn’t like what was going on to get out and stay out” and “to get an attorney.”

Plaintiffs first assign as error the trial court’s ruling which permitted defendants to retain the profits which defendants admit they obtained from the sale of Golden Age’s carpets. From examining the record, we note that the trial court construed plaintiffs’ complaint as an action for common law conversion rather than a shareholder’s derivative suit for the *356 breach of a fiduciary duty. As a result, the trial court denied recovery because “plaintiffs * * * did not sustain the burden of proof that defendants * * * converted certain assets of the Corporation” and because “[t]his is not a case in which the corporate assets have been dissipated and cannot be accounted for * * As hereinafter discussed, we find the complaint properly alleges a derivative suit on behalf of plaintiffs-shareholders.

Defendants’ fiduciary duty was breached when defendants used plaintiffs’ capital contributions to purchase carpets for their own Mason Custom Carpets and when carpets rightfully belonging to Golden Age were sold by defendants for their private gain.

Defendants were promoters of Golden Age, Daly v. Jackson, 226 Or 471, 477-78, 360 P2d 542 (1961); Sherwood & Roberts-Oregon, Inc. v. Alexander, 269 Or 389, 525 P2d 135 (1974), and owed a fiduciary duty to Golden Age. Wills v. Nehalem Coal Co., 52 Or 70, 77, 96 P 528 (1908); see also Stewart v. King, 85 Or 14, 19, 166 P 55 (1917). In addition, Donald Mason knew that the $7,900 which he obtained from plaintiffs constituted a portion of plaintiffs’ consideration for shares of Golden Age stock and was to be used for the purchase of Golden Age’s inventory of carpets.

“It is the duty of the promoters to retain in their hands the property which is to constitute corporate assets until the corporation is formed, # * and then to turn over to it the assets so held.” 1 Fletcher, Cyclopedia of Private Corporations § 192 at 731-32 (rev ed 1963); accord, 18 CJS Corporations § 144.

Generally, fiduciaries, such as defendants, are liable to account for any gain or profits which they may realize from their breach of a fiduciary duty. See Henn, Law of Corporations § 235 (2d ed 1970); Restatement of Trusts §§ 205-06, 208 (1935); Park *357 City Corp. v. Watchie,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
537 P.2d 105, 272 Or. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krause-v-mason-or-1975.