Laystrom v. Continental Copper & Steel Industries, Inc.

133 F. Supp. 130, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2856
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 29, 1955
DocketNo. 51 C 1405
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 133 F. Supp. 130 (Laystrom v. Continental Copper & Steel Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laystrom v. Continental Copper & Steel Industries, Inc., 133 F. Supp. 130, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2856 (N.D. Ill. 1955).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

This is an action brought by the former stockholders1 of Quality Hardware and Machine Corporation to recover from the assignee of the purchaser of the stock an alleged balance on the price agreed to be paid for the stock.

The original contract for the sale of the stock was entered into on July 22, 1944, between substantially all the owners of stock of Quality Hardware and Machine Corporation, as sellers, and Chester A: Bolles, as buyer. The purchase price was fixed as a sum equal to the net worth of the Corporation plus 50% of the net profits for the next five years. Approximately $900,000 was paid to plaintiffs on July 31, 1944, for the net worth of the Corporation and more than $100,000 was paid to the plaintiffs for their share of the net profits for the last five months of 1944 and for the calendar years 1945 and 1946. The correctness of the amounts so paid is not in dispute. The plaintiffs, however, claim that there remains owing a substantial amount of money on account of profits in the calendar year 1948 and the first seven months of 1949. The defendant denies that any additional sum is owing, claiming that there were no profits in 1947, [132]*1321948 and the first seven months of 1949, but only losses.

Both parties are in agreement that there was no profit in the year of 1947 and that nothing is owed for that year. The books of account show for 1947 a net loss of $69,816.96, for 1948 a net loss of $355.54, and for the first seven months of 1949 a net loss of $248,400.43. It is the plaintiffs’, position that certain liabilities entered on the books in 1948 and 1949 should have been recorded in 1947 so as to show for 1947 a net loss of $533,020.51,2 and a net profit before income taxes for 1948 .of $193,447.96, and for the first seven months of 1949 of $73,195.99. Plaintiffs allege they are entitled to one-half of these net profits for 1948 and the first seven months of 1949.

Resolution of the differences between the parties is dependent upon the construction to be placed upon the terms of the original contract of sale and of the assignment thereof. In pertinent part the original contract of sale provided:

«2. * * * The purchase price for said shares of stock shall be * *. *.
“(a) A sum equal to the net worth of Quality as of July 31, 1944 as determined by an audit as herein provided * * *.
“(b) Six (6) payments equivalent to fifty per cent (50%) of the net profits of the business of Quality computed as herein provided for the five years commencing August 1, 1944 and ending July 31, 1949; and * * *
«3 * * *
“(b) The amounts payable under paragraph 2(b) hereof shall be paid by the buyer on March 14, 1945 and [133]*133March 15 of each succeeding year thereafter, the final of said payments to be made March 15, 1950. * * *
«5 * * *
“The net profits of the business for each of said periods are to be computed on .the basis of the methods of accounting now employed by Quality.”

In 1946 Chester Bolles, the purchaser of the stock under the original agreement, assigned the contract to the defendant.3 Thereafter the plaintiffs and the defendant entered into an agreement dated April 11, .1946, which provided that as the remaining portion of the purchase price the defendant should pay to the plaintiffs (paragraph 7(a) thereof):

“An amount equal to fifty percent (50%) of the net profits of the business of Quality computed as provided for in the contract of July 22, 1944, for the years 1946, 1947 and 1948, and the first seven months of 1949. ”

“Net profits” is a term having a well established meaning. The leading case defining the term is Thomas v. Columbia Phonograph Co., 1911, 144 Wis. 470, 129 N.W. 522, which was a suit by an employee whose compensation was to consist in part of a percentage of net profits. The employer in computing the amount to be paid had offset against losses in prior periods the gains in subsequent periods before making payment for such later periods. The court held this was proper, saying, 129 N.W. at pages 523-524:

“ * * * When the words ‘net profits’ are applied to a course of dealing involving several successive transactions the idea of time is inseparably involved in the expression. For receipts and disbursements, gains and losses, in such case are never simultaneous, and some period is always meant at the end of which net profits may be ascertained. The words ‘net profits’ unqualified * * * by other words in the contract, would naturally refer to the termination of the adventure. They may also refer to the expiration of a year or other fiscal period, at the end of which profits are to be computed, but which is a fraction of and within the period of adventure. But in this latter case if the business continues and covers several of such fiscal periods, and the period is for the purpose of computation only, and not for the purpose of terminating the adventure, losses and gains arising out of matters covered by an earlier fiscal period but occurring after ascertainment of the profits for that period, are carried into and increase or. diminish the net profits in the next or some succeeding fiscal. period. * * * It would be an entirely unreasonable construction of this contract to hold that during the period of service the plaintiff might select those months which showed a net profit, compute his percentage on this net profit, and reject all those months which showed a loss. The true construction of this contract is that the fiscal period for computation of net profits is the month, but that the real period to which net profits refers is the period of plaintiff’s service and if by reason of net profits made during some months and losses incurred during other months of the period of plaintiff’s service, there is at the end no net profit at all, the plaintiff has not earned anything by way of percentages upon net profits. * * * ”

Numerous other cases hold that “net profits” cannot be said to exist in any period until the deficits of a prior period have been wiped out. As recently as last year our Court of Appeals so held. In Hamilton Mfg. Co. v. United States, [134]*1347 Cir., 1954, 214 F.2d 644, 647, the court said:

* * * We think it can be said reasonably only that by net profits is meant the net profits upon the business from its organization, and * * áre not to be confined to one period and made synonymous with annual profits. * * *
“ * * * In the preceding years there were no net profits but only accumulated losses, to the reduction of which current earnings must necessarily be applied until the deficit is wiped out and net profits have actually come into existence.”

The court quoted with approval the following language from Lich v. United States Rubber Co., D.C.D.N.J.1941, 39 F.Supp. 675, affirmed per curiam, 3 Cir., 1941, 123 F.2d 145:

- * * * The term connotes the clear pecuniary gain remaining after deducting from the gross earnings of the business the expenses incurred in its conduct, the losses sustained in its prosecution, and the capital invested.

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Bluebook (online)
133 F. Supp. 130, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laystrom-v-continental-copper-steel-industries-inc-ilnd-1955.