Mahlen Land Corp. v. Kurtz

94 N.W.2d 888, 355 Mich. 340, 1959 Mich. LEXIS 451
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1959
DocketDocket 4, Calendar 47,516
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 94 N.W.2d 888 (Mahlen Land Corp. v. Kurtz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mahlen Land Corp. v. Kurtz, 94 N.W.2d 888, 355 Mich. 340, 1959 Mich. LEXIS 451 (Mich. 1959).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This matter involves alleged wrongdoing with corporate assets. The legal principles involved' are well established. The facts are somewhat more involved, due, primarily, to irreconcilable differences in the testimony of witnesses.

The bill of complaint, filed by the Mahlen Land Corporation (Mahlen), George H. Pastor Development Company (Pastor), A. Jerome Geisler, Florence Geisler, George H. Pastor, and Mahala L. Pastor, charged that defendant Paul Kurtz (Kurtz) “as the then secretary obtained and retained in his possession some of the corporate property and assets including, among other things, stock purchased by Mahlen Land Corporation in other corporations *343 having a value in excess of $100,000;” that Mahlen needed the assets in order to discharge certain obligations; that the successor secretary-treasurer, A. Jerome Geisler, pursuant to the orders of the board of directors, had demanded of Kurtz “the return of said corporate property and assets in accordance with the direction of the board of directors of Mahlen Land Corporation,” but was met with refusal, that Kurtz “informed plaintiff Geisler that he was retaining same in his personal safe-deposit box and refused and failed to deliver same over to said secretary-treasurer of said Mahlen Land Corporation and continues so to do.” The bill prayed accounting and surrender of assets.

The pleadings filed by defendant Kurtz (adopted by his wife, Tillie Betty Kurtz, who appeared as defendant and cross plaintiff) are summarized in his brief as follows:

■ “Kurtz’s answer to the bill charged that any lack of cash in the treasury of Mahlen was ‘deliberately brought about by the fraudulent dealings’ of Pastor and Geisler and that payment ‘of their long overdue obligations’ to Mahlen would supply all needed cash.
“Kurtz charged that plaintiffs ‘were engaged in continuing the fraud on’ Mahlen of failing to pay their ‘long overdue obligations # * * to said Mahlen’ and that plaintiffs ‘were not acting in good faith.’
“Kurtz charged Pastor and Geisler with ‘refusing to collect overdue substantial sums from persons associated with them.’
“Kurtz charged that since the purpose of the organization of Mahlen had been accomplished and that dissolution and distribution were in order, Pastor and Geisler were not the proper persons to, manage liquidation because they themselves were indebted to Mahlen for misapplication and misappropriation of about $150,000.
“Kurtz’s cross bill charged wrongful use by Pastor and Geisler ‘of a majority of the stock of’ Mahlen *344 and ‘of their majority on its board of directors in continuous and flagrant breach of the understanding among the parties’ in respect to the use of Mahlen money as set forth in paragraph 8 ‘and in violation, disregard and derogation of their duties as fiduciaries, officers and directors of Mahlen’ in deliberate fraud of cross plaintiffs and of their rights, all to the advantage of Pastor Company, the Pastors and the Geislers. * * *

“Kurtz’s cross bill prayed for an accounting, for judgment, for dissolution, a receiver and general relief.” (Italicized matter in quoted source.)

We need not further summarize the pleadings, the primary issues appearing herefrom. The trial chancellor’s decree was in favor of plaintiffs and defendants have appealed. Before us also is an appeal from “the judgment, sentence and order dated October 23, 1956, of said Court in the above-entitled suit finding him [Paul Kurtz] guilty of contempt by failure to perform an order herein dated March 29, 1956.”

These are the outlines of the controversy. Such additional facts from a lengthy record, the files of 2 additional related cases certified to us, and the 2 volumes of exhibits * will be referred to insofar as *345 we deem them relevant and material to the controlling issues.

"We find it necessary to comment at the outset upon a phase of the case to which defendants devote a great deal of attention, namely, the so-called attitude of the trial chancellor toward them and their counsel. Defendants’ principal witness was Paul Kurtz. The parties before us seem to agree that his testimony lacked consistency but ascribe the lack of consistency to different causes. According to defendants, it was the skill of plaintiffs’ counsel. “Mr. Maddin,” it is said, “early demonstrated that he could get Kurtz as a witness to appear to go around the full circle of at one end answering ‘yes’ and at the other end answering ‘no,’ or the reverse. But at once it appeared that this mannerism of Kurtz (and the questioner) had very little to do with his credibility as a witness.” With this conclusion plaintiffs do not agree. They assert that their counsel “tried many cases in his 31 years of practice, but has never encountered a witness so lacking in respect for the court, judicial proceedings and the truth.” The trial chancellor’s conclusions were expressed as follows:

“The testimony of defendant Kurtz is practically the sole support of the cross bill. The charges of misfeasance and malfeasance against the plaintiffs grew out of a combination of the Kurtz auditor’s investigation, plus Kurtz’s own deductions therefrom.. These charges were made in ‘shotgun’ style. Every check issued by the plaintiffs was made the basis for claim of wrongdoing on their, part. Time after time Kurtz was forced to admit that most of them were absolutely baseless in fact, and that he actually knew nothing about the subject'matter. The net result of-these reckless and irresponsible charges, and futile *346 attempts to support them on the stand, was to render the testimony of Kurtz practically valueless. His constant attempts at evasion, and his reluctance to answer questions which necessitated damaging admissions on his part, slowed down the trial and swept away whatever credibility his testimony might otherwise have possessed. The court is forced to conclude that Mr. Kurtz felt that if he made as many charges and allegations of wrongdoing as possible, some of them would be bound to stick. The court cannot agree with him. The convincing proof is lacking. He asserted much, but proved nothing.”

In this Court defendants repeatedly attack the chancellor as antagonistic to them and we are cited to many excerpts from the record in alleged support thereof. Since it would be unfair to quote remarks by court, counsel, or witnesses except in fairly full ■context, and since practical limitations of space preclude the inclusion of a great deal of the lengthy record, we will set forth in detail only those matters initially complained of — those occurring at or near the start of the trial. The circumstances do not vary greatly as the trial progressed. It is urged to us, then, that “the trial court early and continuously showed a deep and irrepressible personal antagonism toward Kurtz.” We turn to the page in the record cited in support of such charge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 N.W.2d 888, 355 Mich. 340, 1959 Mich. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahlen-land-corp-v-kurtz-mich-1959.