Luster v. Hutchens

60 F.2d 751, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2596
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 1932
DocketNos. 9429-9431
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 751 (Luster v. Hutchens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luster v. Hutchens, 60 F.2d 751, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2596 (8th Cir. 1932).

Opinion

STONE, Circuit Judge.

These are three separate actions for damages on account of breach of contract brought against the executors of the estate of Frank C. Hermann by Gilruth, by Gillette, and by Hutchens. The cases were consolidated for trial and judgments entered in favor of each plaintiff on the verdict of a jury. From such judgments these appeals are brought.

In 1932, the Gillette Rubber Company, a Wisconsin corporation, located at Eau Claire, went into receivership, Mr. Hermann being one of the receivers. In 1935, there was a reorganization worked out by the creditors’ committee and Mr. Hermann, with the approval of the court. The general result of this plan was that a new corporation of the same name took over the assets of the receiver through a purchase of such assets. The creditors took the securities and preferred stock of the new corporation for their debts, and Hermann, who was to finance the new company, was given the common stock, amounting to 100,000 shares of no par value (later given a nominal value of $5.40'). As a part of this arrangement between the committee and Hermann, so much as necessary of 49,000 of the above shares were to be devoted to specified purposes, while the remaining 51,000 shares (to insure control by Her-mann) were to belong to Hermann. Another feature of this arrangement was that the committee required that a satisfactory organization (meaning the one in existence during the receivership) should continue for five years under the control of Hermann, and that he should give to the 'committee satisfactory assurances that this would be done. The organization which the committee and Hermann understood was intended by the above requirement consisted of Gilruth, Gillette, and Hutchens. In order to give the committee the above assurance as to the continuance of this organization, Hermann, upon' March 23, 1925, wrote a letter to the chairman of the committee to the effect that he would act as president and, possibly, as treasurer of the new corporation, and that Gillette, Hutchens, and Gilruth would maintain official connections with the company for a period of five years, in various specified capacities, the letter ending:

“These officers will also be on the Board of Directors, and they have signified their consent to maintain the respective relations . to the Company by their signatures hereto attached.

“Trusting that this .statement will serve your purpose,”

At the bottom of this letter was the statement, “We hereby approve and assent to the foregoing,” which was separately signed by Gillette, Hutchens, and Gilruth. This assurance was satisfactory to the committee, the reorganization was carried out as planned, and the 100,000 shares of common stock delivered to Hermann.

The present actions are each identical in substance, differing only in the individual plaintiffs, and are based upon the assertion that each of the plaintiffs, separately, made a verbal contract with Hermann that if plaintiff would join in the above assurance to the committee Hermann would give him one-, fourth of the 51,000' shares of common stock, or 12,750' shares thereof. Gillette and Hutch-ens pleaded that each had received only 10,-000' shares, leaving a balance of 2,750' shares due under the contract, while Gilruth pleaded delivery of only 5,000 shares, leaving 7,750' due. The recovery sought was dividends received and retained by Hermann on the shares which should have been delivered, for the value of -certain subscription rights attaching to this stock before suit, and for the failure to deliver the balance of the stock. For reasons which are not material now, the claims for dividends and stock rights were not submitted to the jury. The only matter submitted was that of damage for failure to' deliver the shares of stock under the contract. Thus, the matters for investigation on these appeals are confined to the delivery of the stock under the alleged contract.

Appellants present their points here under seven main headings. We deem it unnee-[753]*753essary to determino more than one of these, as this is sufficient to dispose of these appeals.

The contracts sued upon are identical in substance and were orally made. We take the verdict of the jmy, upon conflicting- evidence, as having established that the oral contracts were made. The oral contracts, as pleaded and supported by evidence, arose out of the situation following- and were as follows: The reorganization committee required satisfactory assurances from Hermann that Gilruth, Hutchens, and Gillette would each become and remain associated with the new company for a period of five years. For the purpose of inducing c-ach of these parties to join with the others in making such assurances to the committee, Hermann agreed with each of them to transfer to him 12,750 shares of the common stock (being one-fourth of the 51,001) shares) and that each of them so agreed and performed that agreement by signing the approval and assent to the above letter of March 23, 1925, and that the right to the stock became then fixed by such full performance.

Five thousand shares of this stock were delivered to eaeh of these plaintiffs shortly after it came to Hermann. In June, 1926, a further 5,000- shares each were delivered to Hutchens and to Gillette under a sale agreement wherein eaeh of them gave a note to Hermann for the purchase price, and shortly afterwards Hermann canceled the note so that the stock was received without obligation. Apparently, the stock covered by this second transaction was not a part of the 51,000 shares but was other stock belonging to Her-mann. At any rate, the net result was that Gilruth had received 5,000' shares and Hutch-ens and Gillette 10,000 shares eaeh for which none of the three had paid or were obligated to pay. This left 7,750- shares due Gilí nth and 2,750 shares due to each of the other two, under the oral contracts.

It is contended by appellants that these oral contracts wore canceled by several subsequent written contracts between the parties dealing directly with disposition of this undelivered stock now in suit. It is not contended that these later written instruments specifically and expressly canceled the prior verbal contract, hut the conten! ion is that those written instruments were so inconsistent with the continued existence of the verbal contract that they must be taken to have the legal effect of canceling that contract. Appellants argue that there are nine such subsequent written agreements. As matter of fact, three of the instruments are not contracts. Of those three, one is a letter (October 14, 1925) from Gilruth to Hermann; another is the will of Hermann (February 9, 1920); while the third is a memorandum in connection with an income tax return of Hermann (June 24, 1926). This letter from Gilruth is his construction of the voting and pooling agreements, and, at most, is merely an admission against his own interest and, of itself, could not affect Hutchens and Gillette. The will merely throws light upon the so-called sales agreement made upon the same date (February 9, 1926). The tax memorandum is merely an explanation of the transactions involving- the transfer of blocks of 5,000-shares to each of the three plaintiffs, relates to a past transaction, and is, at most, an admission against interest of Hutchens and Gillette, who attached their approval thereto.

Of the six matters urged which are contracts, it is unnecessary to discuss, four of them which clearly do not have the effect urged by appellants. We confine our attention to the remaining two.

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85 F.2d 833 (Seventh Circuit, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
60 F.2d 751, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luster-v-hutchens-ca8-1932.