Lewis & Co. v. Radford

257 S.W.2d 56, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 766
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 27, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 257 S.W.2d 56 (Lewis & Co. v. Radford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis & Co. v. Radford, 257 S.W.2d 56, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 766 (Ky. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

CULLEN, Commissioner.

Lewis & Company, a Corporation controlled by M. W. Lewis, Jr., brought suit-in equity against Cyrus S. Radford seeking to be awarded 10 percent of the capital stock, and 10 percent of the profits since 1942, of The Radford Company, a corporation controlled by Cyrus S. Radford. Lewis & Company offered in its petition to. pay to Radford an amount equal to one-tenth of the paid-in capital of The Radford Company. From a judgment dismissing its petition, Lewis & Company appeals.

The suit is based primarily on the contention that Radford occupied a fiduciary relationship towards Lewis & Company, by virtue of which Radford became a constructive trustee for Lewis & Company of the amount of stock and profits sued for. It is also contended that there was an express contract under which Radford agreed to sell Lewis & Company a 10 -percent interest' in The Radford Company, but it is conceded by Lewis & Company that -the proof would mot' be sufficient to establish an' express, contract in the absence of a fiduciary -relationship between Radford and Lewis & Company; so the entire case seems to rest on- the existence of such relationship.

A rather detailed statement of the facts is necessary for' an understanding of the' issues.'

Prior to 1933, The Radford Company of Kentucky (hereinafter called the old Rad-ford Company) was engaged in the Soft drink business. Lewis & Company, at that time and at all times subsequent thereto, was primarily engaged in the business of sugar brokerage. In 1929 or 1930, Lewis & Company had acquired 10 percent of the capital stock of the old Radford Company, for a price of approximately $1,000. At that time, and thereafter until 1942, Cyrus Radford owned 28 percent of the stock of the old Radford Company, and his wife, mother and brother owned'an additional 56 percent. • ' "

In 1933, following the repeal of Prohibition, the old Radford Company acquired a contract for the distribution at wholesale of the products of National Distillers, and thereafter until 1942 the company engaged profitably in the business of a whiskey wholesaler. There was evidence that the profits, from the .distributing business amounted ,to as much as-. $130,000 a year.

Beginning in 1935,. the old Radford Company also began purchasing whiskey in bulk, and by 1942 it owned some-9,500 barrels of whiskey.

In 1941, Cyrus S. Radford acquired 8½ percent of the capital stock of Lewis & Company, and became a director of that company. Radford and M. W. Lewis, Jr. also were, owners of the.stock in a corporation, organized in 1939, for the distribution of Canada Dry products.- ;

Early in September 1942 a proposition was advanced for the sale of the majority of the stock of the old Radford Company to Bernheim Distillers, and in October 1942 all of the stock was sold to Bernheim Dis[58]*58tillers, except the 28 percent owned by Cyrus S. Radford individually. It is agreed that the sole purpose of this transaction was to obtain an advantageous price for the bulk whiskey owned by the old Radford Company, and everyone understood that the old Radford Company would be dissolved alnd the bulk whiskey be distributed in kind. (The dissolution and distribution actually took place in December 1942.) The transaction was handled in this way, rather than selling the whiskey outright, in order to “get around” OPA ceiling prices. It was understood that the distributorship contract with National Distillers would terminate with the sale of the stock to Bernheim, because a corporation owned by a distillery could not hold a wholesaler’s license under the Kentucky ¡statutes.

Bernheim Distillers paid some $390,000 for the stock of the old Radford Company, and Lewis & Company received some $54,000 for the shares for which it originally had paid $1,000.

Prior to the completion of the sale of the stock to Bernheim Distillers, Cyrus S. Rad-ford went to New York and made an agreement with National Distillers pursuant to which the latter agreed that following the-dissolution of the old Radford Company, the distributor’s contract for National Distillers’ products would be given to a new corporation to be owned by Radford alone. In November 1942, after the sale of the stock to Bernheim Distillers, Radford purchased, for $17,000, the stock of another distributing corporation, and changed its name to The Radford ¡Company. He also purchased, for $65,000, the physical properties of the old Radford Company, except the bulk whiskey. He then commenced distribution of National Distillers’ products under the new distributorship agreement.

In November 1942, about the time Rad-ford was setting up his new corporation, a conference was held by Lewis and Radford’ in' the office of an attorney. At this conference Lewis brought up the question of the two men going back together into the whiskey distributing business for National Distillers', and the attorney advised Lewis' not to -go back into the business with Rad-ford until “one or two income tax examinations have been made.” Radford said nothing at the conference on the subject of going back into business with Lewis.

In 1945, Lewis approached Radford and announced that he was now ready to take his 10 per cent interest in the new Rad-ford Company. Radford replied that he would not give Lewis any interest in the new company because it would not be satisfactory to National Distillers. Five years later, in 1950, the present suit was filed by Lewis & Company.

The foregoing facts are substantially undisputed. In addition, however, Lewis maintains that before the sale of the stock to-Bernheim Distillers he had an express-agreement, or at' least a very definite “understanding” with Radford, that Lewis & Company was to have the same interest in the new Radford Company that it had in the old company, Radford flatly denies-any agreement. We think the evidence warrants the conclusion that Lewis had-the impression he would have an interest in the new company, and that Radford contributed to this impression, at least to the extent of being silent when he might have spoken. However, the evidence falls short of establishing. an express contract, and, as stated at the outset of this opinion; Lewis concedes that he can prove a contract only on the basis of a silent understanding between two close business associates owing a fiduciary duty to each other.

Lewis first claims the existence of a fiduciary relationship on the ground that he and Radford were joint adventurers. This is on the theory that the two men' had been associated over the years in various business enterprises. If the two men had' been engaged in a single business enterprise,' and had merely adopted the corporate form of doing business as a convenience in carrying out their project, there might be a basis for holding that they were engaged in a joint adventure. See Hathaway v. Porter Royalty Pool, 296 Mich. 90, 295 N.W. 571, 138 A.L.R. 955, Id., 296 Mich. 733, 299 N.W. 451, 94 A.L.R. 967. But the evidence-shows clearly that the association of the men arose through their corporations, rath[59]*59er than the corporations arising as a result of their personal association. They were not engaged in a single enterprise, but in various different enterprises. Under these Circumstances, it is our opinion that the elements of a joint adventure were not present. See 30 Am.Jur., Joint Adventures, sec. 3, p. 677; 48 C.J.S., Joint Adventures, § 1, p. 801.

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257 S.W.2d 56, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-co-v-radford-kyctapp-1953.