Lawrence v. Muter Co.

171 F.2d 380, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2852
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 12, 1948
Docket9484, 9485
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 171 F.2d 380 (Lawrence v. Muter Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence v. Muter Co., 171 F.2d 380, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2852 (7th Cir. 1948).

Opinions

MINTON, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff, a citizen of Michigan, filed this action in equity against the defendants, Muter, a citizen of Illinois, and the Muter Company, an Illinois corporation, for breach of fiduciary relationship and fraud. From a judgment of $128,438.33 in favor of the plaintiff, the defendants have brought this appeal.

This litigation culminates a series of dealings between the parties commencing in April 1938. The undisputed evidence and the findings disclose that at that time and since 1923, the plaintiff owned and operated an unincorporated business manufacturing and selling radio coils and allied radio parts. The defendant Muter was president, treasurer, and director, and owned 97% of the 200,000 shares of outstanding stock of the defendant Muter Company which also manufactured and sold radio parts. Since late 1937 and as of March 31, 1938, the plaintiff was admittedly insolvent. The first contact between the parties took place in early April 1938 when the plaintiff discussed his financial condition with Muter and stated that his company was prepared to manufacture push button turners which could be remodelled to use Muter Company switches. A week later, Muter examined the plaintiff’s plant and outlined in substance the terms on which he would give financial assistance to the plaintiff. The plaintiff then agreed that Muter’s láwyer represent both parties. On May 17, the parties worked out in memorandum the details of a contract to be entered into by them, and on May 27, 1938, the contract, prepared by Muter’s lawyer, after first being compared item by item with the memorandum, was duly executed.

Pursuant to said contract, Muter advanced $25,000 of which $15,626.66 was accepted in full liquidation of creditors’ claims and the balance retained as working capital; a new corporation, General Manufacturing Company (hereafter called General) was formed with 5,000 authorized shares of which Muter took 3,000 and the plaintiff 2,000. The plaintiff immediately pledged his 2,000 shares with Muter; executed a power of attorney giving the latter full voting rights; and conveyed his business assets to the corporation. The corporation in turn executed a $25,000 chattel mortgage on all its assets to Muter, due in three years. The plaintiff, although nominally president, remained as a production supervisor of General at $50 a week, while Muter exercised full management and control.

In April 1939 Muter decided to move General to the first floor of the Muter Company plant and to consolidate the activities of the two companies. On April 21, 1939, the plaintiff received 2,000 shares of Muter Company stock and conveyed to Muter his 2.000 shares of General. Late in December 1939, Muter conveyed the 5,000 shares of General, which he now owned, to the Muter Company; the latter dissolved General; and a merger was effected. For the 5,000 shares of General, Muter received $25,000 in cash and 2,000 shares of Muter Company’s hitherto unissued stock. At this point Muter received two things for his share in the assets of General, now merged into Muter Company, namely, the $25,000 in cash which he had advanced to salvage the plaintiff and his bankrupt business, and 2.000 shares of Muter Company, which is exactly the amount of shares in Muter Company that the plaintiff received. In these circumstances, it is difficult for us to see how Muter ever overreached the plaintiff as the court found, as we hereafter set [382]*382forth. The plaintiff continued as an employee of Muter Company. In June 1943 he was assistant sales manager with a drawing account against 5% of the net profits of the Muter Company. In late June 1943, the plaintiff asserted a claim to an additional interest in Muter Company. Muter then proposed to increase the plaintiff’s compensation to $85 a week against %% of the net sales of Muter Company, effective as of February 1, 1943, and the plaintiff agreed. On or about June 29, 1943, the plaintiff signed a release and received two checks totalling $5,631.02.

In February 1944, a reduction of his salary to .35% of net sales of Muter Company produced dissatisfaction in the plaintiff, and he then in May 1944 for the first time consulted an attorney of his own and began a series of letter demands on the defendant company, including an offer made on May 14, 1945, to settle his alleged claim for $50,000. On May 15, 1945, the plaintiff was discharged, and this suit followed.

From June 7, 1938, to and including the year 1945, the plaintiff received $63,713.83 from General Manufacturing Company and/or the Muter Company; including compensation $44,713.83; 2,000 shares of Muter Company (value at time of trial) $16,500; and dividends thereon $2,500. Muter Company’s net profits before taxes in 1938 were $64,384.82 and in 1939 $20,-494.98. They increased sharply in 1940 and 1941. Following conversion to war production, profits of the Muter Company for the indicated years were:

Net. Income Before Provision for Federal Income and Excess Profits Taxes and Reserve for Contin^encies.
Net Income After Provision for Federal Income and Excess Profits Tax.es and Before Reserve for Contincies.
1942 $ 404,058 66 $107,818-54
1943 1,329,808.13 349,334.84
1944 1,153,224.10 312,767.83
1945 333,162.97 95,202.90

Since in our view the disposition of this case turns on the effect of the release executed by the plaintiff on June 29, 1943, it is necessary to detail in greater particularity the relations and transactions of the parties prior and leading up to the release. In October 1937, the plaintiff was without working capital or bank credit and on the verge of bankruptcy. He then sought through a credit agency to arrange a meeting of his larger creditors and consulted a firm of underwriters, upon whose advice he applied for a loan to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. This application was turned down. In April 1938, a creditors’ committee was formed, a meeting of the larger creditors was held, and appraisers were appointed. The latter found that the plaintiff’s assets on a liquidating basis could not be valued in excess of $25,000, assuming that some $13,000 accounts receivable were one hundred per cent collectible. His debts were in excess of $39,000, upon which he was personally liable since as above stated his business was unincorporated. It was against this background that the plaintiff solicited Muter’s financial aid in April 1938, and the parties entered into the contract partially described above.

The plaintiff alleges in his complaint that Muter entered on this salvage operation as a result of a fraudulent scheme to deprive the plaintiff of his business. This allegation is without merit for the record clearly shows that Muter had never met the plaintiff before; and that their first contact was made solely on the initiative of the plaintiff who then fully realized that his business was virtually wrecked unless help was immediately forthcoming. Although the plaintiff was undoubtedly under a state of compulsion owing to his desperate financial condition and was in this sense coerced' into the contract in question, it is well-settled that mere stress of business condition does not constitute duress where the defendant was not responsible for such circumstances. French v. Shoemaker, 14 Wall. 314, 81 U.S. 314, 20 L.Ed. 852; In Re Prima Co. (Harris Trust & Savings Bank v.

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Lawrence v. Muter Co.
171 F.2d 380 (Seventh Circuit, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
171 F.2d 380, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-muter-co-ca7-1948.