Mynatt v. Collis

57 P.3d 513, 274 Kan. 850, 2002 Kan. LEXIS 702
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 1, 2002
Docket87,418
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 57 P.3d 513 (Mynatt v. Collis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mynatt v. Collis, 57 P.3d 513, 274 Kan. 850, 2002 Kan. LEXIS 702 (kan 2002).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Abbott, J.:

This is a lawsuit brought by William S. Mynatt, Mynatt Truck & Equipment, Inc. (Mynatt Truck), a Kansas corporation, against David W. Collis and Ann M. Hughes, husband and wife. Highly summarized, the lawsuit was to recover money used *854 by the two individuals for their own personal use and for punitive damages in favor of Mynatt and Mynatt Truck.

William Mynatt formed Mynatt Truck & Equipment, Inc., in 1988. Mynatt was tire president of Mynatt Truck and owned all 1,000 shares of common stock issued. Sometime in 1988, David Collis began working for Mynatt Truck as a mechanic. Mynatt promoted Collis to vice president and general manager in 1990.

On September 30, 1993, Mynatt sold Collis 250 shares of his common stock. Collis executed a promissory note in the amount of $12,500 to Mynatt in consideration for the shares. The promissory note granted Mynatt a security interest in Collis’ shares to guarantee the note.

At some point, Mynatt and Collis also formed a company called B&D Leasing to finance sales and make lease arrangements with customers.

From the time of his appointment as vice president and general manager in 1990 until March 1996, Collis was responsible for the review and approval of bills and for determining which general ledger account the bills were to be charged to when paid. Collis was also primarily responsible for opening company mail. Mynatt generally managed corporate sales, leaving responsibility of most of the other operations of Mynatt Truck to Collis. Mynatt and Collis were the only persons authorized to issue corporate checks from 1990 until March 1996. The vast majority of checks issued were signed by Collis. Mynatt only occasionally signed checks.

From 1990 through 1996, Collis routinely brought his two credit card statements and Hughes’ credit card statement to work and had Mynatt Truck pay the full balance due, even though the credit card transactions were, for the most part, personal charges. Collis admitted he customarily buried these personal credit card payments by coding them to legitimate business accounts. Mynatt Truck paid Collis’ personal credit card charges for such things as visits to a massage parlor, a Nordic Track exercise machine, shotguns and ammunition, boating supplies, and jewelry. Collis never discussed his practice of burying these charges with Mynatt or anyone else at Mynatt Truck and stated that it was not likely Mynatt *855 could tell the payments were fraudulent by looking at the corporate financial statements.

Collis also issued corporate checks to himself, to his wife, and to cash for his own benefit. During the same time period, it was rare for Mynatt to get checks for cash or cash advances. Collis made a deposit on a Toyota Land Cruiser, purchased a Corvette, paid for a boat dock, and purchased a Kubota tractor and attachments for the tractor with corporate funds. Collis wrote corporate checks to pay for items Hughes purchased to decorate their home. Again, Collis buried these payments paid for with corporate funds by writing the checks to cash or coding the expenses to legitimate business accounts. Collis also engaged in other unauthorized business-swapping transactions where corporate customers Bill Curth, Ronan Roofing, and Arbor Care traded work on Collis’ personal residence in exchange for work performed on their vehicles at Mynatt Truck. Collis admitted all these practices were dishonest, fraudulent, and illegal.

In March 1996, Collis resigned as an officer and shareholder of Mynatt Truck, taking a company truck and tools with him. Collis formed Collis Equipment Company, a direct competitor with Mynatt Truck. In May or June 1996, Collis returned to Mynatt Truck and blacked out most of the information regarding his personal expenses on his credit card statements.

In March 1997, Mynatt and Mynatt Truck filed suit against Collis and Hughes. In the petition, Mynatt made an individual claim against Collis for amounts owing on the promissory note. Mynatt additionally asked the court to determine that certain real property titled in the names of Mynatt, Collis, and both of their wives was held in trust for Mynatt Truck, or alternatively sought a reformation of the deed to reflect ownership by the corporation.

Mynatt and Mynatt Truck together alleged that Collis wrongfully used or dissipated corporate assets to benefit himself and Hughes. Collis and Hughes generally denied the allegations and contended that Collis had been authorized to use corporate assets for his personal benefit. In addition, Mynatt and Mynatt Truck advanced claims against Collis for conversion and unjust enrichment, fraud, *856 and breach of fiduciary duty. Mynatt Truck also sought judgment against Collis and Hughes for business loans advanced to Collis.

Collis filed a counterclaim alleging that Mynatt dissipated corporate assets of Mynatt Truck for his own benefit and failed to pay Collis for 55 days of vacation. Collis asserted that Mynatt used corporate funds to pay for personal expenses, an airplane, life insurance, personal- income taxes, legal and accounting fees, and family travel expenses. Collis also sought the dissolution and an accounting of B&D Leasing, the general partnership owned by Collis and Mynatt.

Prior to trial, Mynatt and Mynatt Truck asked for leave to seek punitive damages pursuant to K.S.A. 2001 Supp. 60-3703. Following a hearing, die district court granted leave to claim punitive damages.

A 7-day bench trial was conducted by Judge Leben in January and April 1999. The district court issued a memorandum decision summarizing its findings of facts and conclusions of law on March 16, 2001.

In its findings of fact, the district court specifically found:

“7. Although a variety of expenditures were made for the benefit of Collis’ wife, Ann, she was never an employee of Mynatt Truck. Although Collis indicated that she ran some errands for the company, he agreed that she rarely did so after 1992.
“8. Collis admits taking about $5,000 to $6,000 worth of tools with him when he left Mynatt Track. (At a later point in his testimony, during the second part of the trial — which took place about three months after the first part — Collis claimed he only took about $2,000 worth of tools when he left. This unexplained, significant difference is typical of his testimony. The court accepts the statement he made on this subject from the first day of his testimony, which was based on his earlier deposition testimony.)
“9. A Kubota tractor was purchased by Collis with company funds. It never had any business purpose. Collis took tire tractor home with him and still has it. Mynatt Truck paid approximately $12,000 for the tractor.
‘TO. On the Curth transaction, Collis admitted at one point in his testimony that he actually wasn’t sure that he ever ‘settled up with’ Mynatt regarding that transaction. Previously, he had testified that he had paid Mynatt about $2,500 in connection with the Curth transaction.
“11.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 P.3d 513, 274 Kan. 850, 2002 Kan. LEXIS 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mynatt-v-collis-kan-2002.