McLaney v. Fortune Operating Co.

444 P.2d 505, 84 Nev. 491, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 395
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 21, 1968
Docket5459
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 444 P.2d 505 (McLaney v. Fortune Operating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLaney v. Fortune Operating Co., 444 P.2d 505, 84 Nev. 491, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 395 (Neb. 1968).

Opinion

*493 OPINION

By the Court,

Collins, L:

This appeal is from a judgment entered by the court below in which three cases were consolidated for trial. We conclude the judgment to be in error, reverse it and remand the consolidated actions for a new trial in accordance with this decision.

The three cases below are:

Case No. A 15523 a suit by Harold C. Springston against Fortune Operating Co., Inc. for $35,000, the balance due upon a promissory note;

Case No. A 17657 a suit by Springston in a representative capacity pursuant to NRCP 23(a) on behalf of himself and other creditors seeking a judgment for damages against Fortune and William McLaney for failing to comply with Nevada’s Bulk Sales Act (NRS 98.010-98.050);

Case No. A 22056 an action by Michael Bornstein, David Pearl and Anthony DiMaggio against Fortune Operating Co., Inc., dba The Carousel Club and Melvin Axler, Sam Brechner, J. H. Buchanan, and William McLaney seeking to have Fortune and Axler permanently enjoined from transferring the assets of Fortune to Buchanan and McLaney and to have the sales agreement between them declared null and void.

The trial judge rendered the findings of fact, conclusions of law and on the major points entered judgment in favor of respondents. This appeal is from that judgment.

The judgment declared void the sale and transfer to *494 McLaney of the business of Fortune Operating Co. and the furniture and fixtures. It ordered McLaney to reconvey those assets to Fortune or in the alternative, if reconveyance could not be had, to pay damages to Springston for $35,000; to Bornstein for $41,000; to Pearl for $33,801; to DiMaggio for $24,750. It also awarded plaintiffs costs and an attorneys fee of $25,000.

The court later allowed Miami National Bank, S. A. Rizzo and J. Cason Ives to intervene as creditors of McLaney. Their claim was rejected. They appeal from that order.

The lower court found the following facts:

Springston, Bornstein, Pearl, and DiMaggio owned respectively 160, 170, 140, and 100 shares of common stock in Fortune Operating Company.

On April 1, 1964 Springston entered into an agreement with Fortune selling his 160 shares of stock for $55,000 of which $10,000 was paid down with the balance of the purchase price to be paid in installments; Springston deposited his stock certificates and promissory note in escrow; Fortune is in default on the note in the sum of $35,000.

On May 27, 1964 Bornstein, Pearl and DiMaggio entered into an agreement for the sale of their 410 shares of stock to Fortune; each received 10 percent of the purchase price as a down payment with the balance of the price to be paid in installments; Fortune defaulted in the payments and failed to cure the default within 10 days as required by the agreement. Each of these parties elected under the agreement to declare the unpaid balance of the purchase price payable immediately. 1

The trial court found that Melvin Axler, an officer purporting to act as president of Fortune, on October 12, 1964 entered into a letter agreement with McLaney and Buchanan for the sale of Fortune; on November 14, 1964 a formal agreement was entered into with McLaney to buy the business, furniture and fixtures of Fortune; on November 14, 1964 Fortune supplied McLaney a certificate of passage of a resolution at a stockholders and directors meeting of Fortune held October 12, 1964 for the purpose of voting on the proposed sale of all *495 of the assets of Fortune to McLaney; no notice of the stockholders meeting was given to Bornstein, Pearl, DiMaggio, or Springston, nor did they waive notice of the meeting.

The only stockholders present at the meeting were Sam Brechner and Melvin Axler holding 170 shares and 660 shares respectively of the 1,900 issued and outstanding shares of Fortune.

Springston, as a creditor of Fortune, received no notice of the bulk sale of Fortune’s business, furniture and fixtures to McLaney.

The court further found that under the escrow agreements Springston’s voting rights of the stock of Fortune were suspended but that the voting rights of stock sold by Bornstein, Pearl and DiMaggio were not suspended because of Fortune’s default in payment of installments due them.

From these facts the lower court concluded that the meeting of October 12, 1964 was not a properly constituted stockholders meeting as required by NRS 78.565; that Springston, Bomstein, Pearl, and DiMaggio were entitled to notice of the stockholders meeting because the default of Fortune in the stock sales agreement with Springston, Bornstein, Pearl, and DiMaggio terminated the suspension of their voting rights; and that Springston, Bornstein, Pearl, and DiMaggio were entitled to a judgment requiring McLaney to reconvey all the assets of Fortune acquired by the sale back to it or in the alternative, if the reconveyance was impossible, then to the money judgments detailed above.

After McLaney acquired Fortune’s assets, he transferred them to Clanebach, Inc., a Nevada corporation, in which he held a stock interest. Clanebach borrowed $425,000 from Miami National Bank. This loan was secured by Fortune’s lease on the Silver Palace (Club Carousel) and a chattel mortgage on its furnishings and equipment. Clanebach borrowed another $100,000 from S. A. Rizzo and J. Cason Ives which was secured by a second assignment of the lease and chattel mortgage on the equipment. These lenders were allowed to intervene after judgment but their claim that rescission of the contract was impossible and that only Fortune was liable was rejected by the lower court.

While the parties make many contentions and urge many issues, 2 we think the decisive issues are these:

*496 (1) Were Springston, Bornstein, Pearl, and DiMaggio voting shareholders of record and thus entitled to notice of the October 12, 1964 meeting? 3

(2) What is the effect of Nevada’s Bulk Sales Act on the parties?

(3) Were Miami National Bank and Rizzo entitled to intervene as permitted by the lower court?

(4) Is there any theory upon which Buchanan can be held liable?

(1) If Springston, Bornstein, Pearl, and DiMaggio were stockholders entitled to vote on October 12, 1964 they were entitled to notice of the meeting which they failed to receive. See NRS 78.370 and 78.565. The question is whether the agreement for the sale of their stock to Fortune had relinquished or suspended their voting rights at the time of that meeting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
444 P.2d 505, 84 Nev. 491, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaney-v-fortune-operating-co-nev-1968.