McKinney v. Gannett Co.

660 F. Supp. 1037, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17838
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedApril 11, 1983
DocketNo. CIV-78-630 C
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 660 F. Supp. 1037 (McKinney v. Gannett Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKinney v. Gannett Co., 660 F. Supp. 1037, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17838 (D.N.M. 1983).

Opinion

[1038]*1038SUPPLEMENT TO MEMORANDUM OPINIONS FILED MARCH 17, 1981 AND AUGUST 25, 1981

CAMPOS, Chief Judge.

The Option Feature

The option to McKinney to retake The New Mexican after a suitable time for a current evaluation is related, functionally, to the rescission remedy in two (2) very critical and important ways. One of these has been mentioned. It operates as a guarantee that Gannett will act toward The New Mexican in a responsible way during the evaluation period.

The other functional aspect of the option feature has not been as fully discussed or treated by me as, perhaps, it should have been. But the part it plays in the rescission scheme is integral. And it needs some discussion now so that all, including the Court of Appeals, may be fully advised as to the reason for its existence in the rescission remedy. This aspect relates directly to my decision not to allow McKinney “damages ancillary to rescission.”

In the case of rescission of a simple sale of an object for a certain number of dollars, damages to the object during possession by the buyer might well be a desirable and necessary adjunct of complete equity when the sale is undone. But we do not have here the mere purchase and sale of a horse for a fixed number of dollars. The transaction here is vastly different. We are treating here with assets upon the value of which bear a myriad of forces. Those forces need not be identified here. It is sufficient to know that the values of The New Mexican and the Gannett common stock are not static. These forces and values are in constant kaleidoscopic change. And some of the changes in values have been wide-ranging and volatile. The characteristics which inhere in the litigated assets, taken together with Gannett’s conduct, present a complex of equitable considerations which is unusual indeed.

The value of one of the objects of the trade, the Gannett common stock, is:

[1039]*1039A. readily ascertainable, and

B. has been on a track of steady increase since February 1976. The market value of that stock has been:

1. February 26, 1976 (day prior to closing of transaction) $11,850,000.
2. September 1, 1978 (date suit filed) $14,250,000.
3. March 17, 1981 (date of first Memorandum Opinion) $18,112,500.
4. August 25, 1981 (date of judgment) $17,325,000.
5. April 8, 1983: $31,387,500.

On the other hand, the value of the other object of the trade, The New Mexican, is

C. not readily ascertainable, and

D. great diversity of opinion exists between the parties as to whether its value has increased or decreased since February 1976.

At trial, McKinney took the position that Gannett's policies had deteriorated the value of The New Mexican to the point it was then worth less than its value at the time of the transaction.

In an adversary proceeding the dollar determination of the worth of an operating newspaper is a difficult task at best. But engraft upon such a burden the additional one of determining what the value of that newspaper would have been had it been managed according to what McKinney contends would have been a more enlightened and the proper policy and we would have moved into a world of legalistic surrealism. “Damages ancillary to rescission,” in the context of this case, was a morass to be avoided at all cost.

The option device, at conception, was designed to detour the necessity of the distasteful and all but impossible task of determining “damages ancillary to rescission.” The device provided a functional alternative to McKinney’s request that I enter an order of rescission and award him “damages ancillary to rescission.”

If rescission was, or is, to be had at any time McKinney must return all that he has received in the transaction. This includes all of the Gannett stock. It is not equitably possible to order rescission without this element. However, at all times since March 1981 the Gannett stock which must be returned has exceeded by many millions of dollars the amount The New Mexican was worth in February 1976. And, again, McKinney took the position that, at the time of trial, the newspaper was worth less than in February 1976. If McKinney were to avoid suffering a disastrous negative economic impact upon my ordering outright rescission, as he originally prayed, then it would have been absolutely incumbent upon him to prove, at the very least, “damages ancillary to rescission” in an amount equal to the difference between the allegedly deflowered and devalued New Mexican and the value of Gannett stock to be returned. Those values in March 1981, and the direction they have taken since, would have placed McKinney’s economic interest at considerable risk. The remedy as prayed for could have been calamitous indeed. A straight order of rescission with “damages ancillary to rescission” may well have visited upon the wronged party additional and enormous melancholy. He could have lost enough millions of dollars to make many, many millionaires.

By extending McKinney the option to take, or not retake, after he evaluated the value of the asset he was retaking, in the context of the values as I thought they existed in March 1981, I felt I was according McKinney something at least as valuable as “damages ancillary to rescission.” In the milieu of equitable components in the case in March 1981 I felt that the option feature was a reasonable functional alternative to “damages ancillary to rescission.”

One further thought on McKinney’s claim for rescission and “damages ancillary to rescission” and the further claim that these should have been decided by a jury. Firstly, rescission is an equitable remedy and one which is awardable in the discretion of the Court. I am of the opinion that the greater discretionary power is the one which empowers a grant of rescission. Depending on circumstances, and to make rescission an appropriate remedy, [1040]*1040a court of equity may, but need not, grant “damages ancillary to rescission.” The latter is a lesser discretionary power included within the greater. If this is a correct appraisal of the equitable power of a court in regard to rescission then we need not reach the question as to whether a jury must determine “damages ancillary to rescission.” The equitable remedy was fashioned without “damages ancillary to rescission” as an element in the remedy. Whether a jury must, or the Court may, measure such damages is a moot question in this case.

To have the Court, or a jury, render a measurement of “damages ancillary to rescission” and then afford McKinney the option to accept or reject a package comprised of rescission and “damages ancillary to rescission” was not appealing as an equitable proposition in this case. The platter of equity would have been heaped beyond capacity.

In short, the option feature of the equitable remedy I structured in this case would not have been a component in it had I decided McKinney should have “damages ancillary to rescission.”

Income Taxes

Reversal of the 1976 transaction of the parties in the manner which I have ordered has been structured to accomplish one basic and simple two-part purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
660 F. Supp. 1037, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinney-v-gannett-co-nmd-1983.