Matheson v. Hicks

10 F.2d 872, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 965
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 7, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 10 F.2d 872 (Matheson v. Hicks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matheson v. Hicks, 10 F.2d 872, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 965 (E.D.N.Y. 1926).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

The above suits were consolidated by order of this court.

The first above-entitled action is brought in equity by Mr. Matheson, under section 9 of the Trading with the Enemy Act (Comp. St. 1918, Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 3115½e), to compel the return to the plaintiff of certain stock of the Cassella Color Company, a New York corporation, which the Custodian had seized. The Custodian asserts title to the stock, and by way of counterclaim demands an accounting with reference thereto.

The second above-entitled action is brought in equity by the Custodian against Mr. Shaw, for an accounting with reference to an alleged additional interest in the stock of the Cassella Color Company. The defendant Shaw claims to own this stock and demands its return.

The demands by the Custodian were served, the first two on the Cassella Color Company and Matheson and Shaw, and the third on Matheson and Shaw. The first, signed by Custodian A. Mitchell Palmer, dated March 11,1919, seized 57 per cent, of the total capital stock of said Cassella Color Company standing in the names of said Matheson and Shaw, claiming they belonged to and were held by said Matheson and Shaw on account of, on behalf of, or for the benefit of Cassella & Co. G. m. b. H., of Frankfort on Main, Germany, a German corporation, and required the assignment thereof to him and the issuance of new certificates therefor to him.

The second, signed by Custodian Francis P. Garvan, dated May 14, 1919, stated to be, supplementary to any prior demands, seized .855 shares of the capital stock of the said Cassella.Color Company out of 1,500 issued [873]*873and outstanding on January 2, 1912, purported to have been transferred at a later date by Cassella & Co. G. m. b. H., to Matheson and Shaw as are still outstanding, and the avails of such 855 shares as were no longer outstanding, with interest on said avails, and the accretions and accumulations thereto and the interest on said accretions and accumulations, and required delivery and an accounting.

The third, signed by Custodian Thomas W. Miller, dated November 8, 1921, which was stated to be supplementary to former demands, was much more elaborate; but, inasmuch as this demand was served after the formal termination of the war with Germany, on July 2, 1921 (42 Stat. 105), it was ineffective. Miller v. Rouse (D. C.) 276 F. 715.

Beginning in May, 1918, by three successive reductions, ending in January, 1919, the capital stock of the Cassella Color Company was reduced to 5 shares, and those were the only shares of that company outstanding at the time of such demands. A certificate for 57 per cent, of said 5 shares, or for 2.85, was issued in the name of Francis P. Garvan, as Alien Property Custodian, and of these 2.85 shares Matheson claims 247333/iooooo and Shaw 37667/iooooo.

The real question at issue in this consolidated action is whether the sale of shares of the stock of the Cassella Color Company, made by Leopold Cassella & Co. G. m. b. H., a German corporation, and Carl von Weinberg, a German citizen, to William J. Matheson, in October, 1913, was bona fide and effective, or was colorable and fictitious, and by said sale a German beneficial interest was not extinguished, but was in existence at the time of such demands. In order to properly answer this question it will be necessary to consider the relations and actions of the parties prior to and subsequent to the sale, the surrounding circumstances, the sale and agreements, and in so doing to consider oral and documentary evidence.

The following facts clearly appear from the evidence:

Messrs. Matheson and Shaw are native-born American citizens. Mr. Shaw, the defendant in the first above-entitled action, as a boy entered in the employ of Mr. Matheson, the plaintiff in the first above-entitled action, and gradually rose to a position of importance, eventually becoming a part owner of the business. Mr. Matheson, the plaintiff in the first above-entitled action, is a chemist by education, having studied at St. Andrews University, Scotland, after which he returned to the United States and became expert -in the application of coal tar and aniline-dyes, and developed a large clientele of users of dyes. - -

Having been requested to undertake the distribution of the dyes manufactured by Leopold Cassella & Co., a German partnership, on commission, he refused, because he contended that what he sold to his customers was not only the goods, but also services, as much as the goods themselves, and that he did not regard commissions as suitable compensation. Thereafter the agreement of December 22, 1877, between Leopold Cassella & Co. and William J. Matheson, was entered into. This agreement gave Mr. Matheson the exclusive right to sell aniline color manufactured by Leopold Cassella & Co. in the Middle, Eastern, and Southern States of the United States, subject to the rights of said company to sell to certain specified persons.

Thereafter Mr. Matheson formed a co-partnership under the name of William J. Matheson & Co., and on September 5, 1878, an agreement was made by Leopold Cassella & Co. with sáid copartnership William J. Matheson & Co. This agreement gave the said William J. Matheson & Co. the exclusive right to sell aniline colors manufactured by Leopold Cassella & Co. in the United States of America, subject to the right of Leopold Cassella & Co. to sell to certain specified persons.

■ On April 27, 1883, an agreement was entered into between Leopold Cassella & Co. and William J. Matheson & Co. This agreement contained provisions for purchases which were for immediate sale, and others which were for stock, and also provided that said Leopold Cassella & Co. should have the right to cancel or continue the contract within 60 days after the event of the’death of Mr. Matheson. On January 1,1894, an agreement was entered into between Leopold Cassella & Co. and Wm. J. Matheson & Co., Limited, which had lately been incorporated. There was no provision in this agreement for a cancellation on the death of Mr. Matheson.

On October 30, 1897, an agreement was entered into between Leopold Cassella & Co. and William J. Matheson & Co., Limited. This agreement contained a provision giving Leopold Cassella & Co. the option tó purchase at the end of five years from date, or any time thereafter, or on the death or retirement from business of William J. Matheson, the good will and facilities of all of the [874]*874business of William J. Matbeson & Go., Limited, in coal tar dyes.

The said agreement also contained a provision that William J. Matbeson & Co.,' Limited, invoice all products of Leopold Cassella & Co., and label all their goods on stationery which should have printed thereon the words “Cassella Color Department,” or other words indicating such separate department, as might be mutually agreeable. Mr. Mathe?son had succeeded, first individually, then through a copartnership, William J. Matheson & Co., and later through the corporation of Wm. J. Matheson & Co., Limited, in building up a large and lucrative business, ,in which service and advice rendered and given to their customers had come to form a large part in the sale of such dyes.

Mr. Matheson, whether individually or through the copartnership or corporation, had always been conducting a business in which Leopold Cassella & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F.2d 872, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matheson-v-hicks-nyed-1926.