Nelson v. Sierra Construction Corp.

364 P.2d 402, 77 Nev. 334, 1961 Nev. LEXIS 131
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 1961
Docket4364
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 364 P.2d 402 (Nelson v. Sierra Construction Corp.) 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
Nelson v. Sierra Construction Corp., 364 P.2d 402, 77 Nev. 334, 1961 Nev. LEXIS 131 (Neb. 1961).

Opinions

[336]*336OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, C. J.:

The amended complaint in the court below presented a stockholders’ derivative action in three counts. The first two counts sought relief from one Charles L. Horsey, Jr., and one Fred L. Allred, the former being a codirector with Koerwitz and Rapone of Sierra Construction Corporation, and the third count sought relief against R K R Construction Company, Koerwitz, and Rapone. An order of severance was made whereunder this action proceeded against R K R, Koerwitz, and Rapone. A separate action is now pending against Horsey and Allred. Counts 1 and 2 therefore have been dropped, but Count 3 incorporates in such count paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 and paragraphs 10, 11, and 12 of the first count. It omits, however, paragraphs 15 and 16 of Count 3 of the original complaint, the significance whereof is later discussed. Some question has arisen whether paragraphs 1, 2, 3,10,11, and 12 of the first count remain incorporated in the present third count. We are satisfied that the presentation to the district court on sundry motions pertaining to the third count assumed that the said paragraphs of the first count, thus incorporated by reference, were retained in the third count.1 We hold for the purposes of this opinion that such paragraphs remained included in the third count, the only count with which we are here concerned.

This count is asserted pursuant to Rule 23(b) NRCP which permits a derivative or secondary action by shareholders of a corporation.2 It alleges that Koerwitz and Rapone, being directors and officers of Sierra Construction Corporation, formed R K R Construction Company which, since May 1, 1959 has been conducting a general [337]*337contracting business, using the time, facilities and equipment of Sierra Construction Corporation to operate their own construction business. The relief they seek under this count is: “1. That a constructive trust be impressed on the stock of defendants Koerwitz and Rapone in R K R Construction Company and the assets of defendant R K R Construction Company for benefit of the corporation Sierra Construction Corp.” 2. For costs and attorney fees, and 3, for further relief.

The motion to dismiss as to R K R, Koerwitz, and Rapone was granted on the ground that the amended complaint failed to state a claim against said parties under the requirements of Rule 23(b) NRCP, and the amended complaint as to them was ordered dismissed for said reasons, with prejudice.

Two errors are assigned: “1. That the court erred in holding that the [amended] complaint failed to state a claim against said parties upon which relief could be granted. 2. That the court erred in holding that the [amended] complaint should be dismissed with prejudice.”

1. In determining whether or not the amended complaint stated a claim upon which relief could be granted, we turn to the allegations in question. Paragraphs 1, 2, and 3, incorporated by reference into the third count, recite the ownership of 1,200 shares of the stock of Sierra by appellant Herbert E. Nelson, and the ownership of 1,200 shares of said stock by Wallace R. Nelson, by reason of an agreement by Sierra to sell such shares for a total price of $5,000 on each issue, of which $3,750 remained unpaid by Herbert on his stock and $3,800 by Wallace on his stock, with an agreement to extend time for payment of the balance. Paragraphs 10, 11, and 12, incorporated by reference into the third count, contain [338]*338allegations apparently made in support of the requirements of Rule 23(b) NRCP with reference to the necessary allegations in a derivative action. Such allegations are substantially as follows: That in a five and one-half year period commencing in June 1953 Sierra had done a construction business of seven and one-half million dollars, embodied in 54 projects, and earning a profit of $250,000; that during this period the Nelsons accepted minimum salaries but that Herbert E. Nelson, as president, was authorized on April 25, 1958 to pay himself and Wallace R. Nelson bonuses of $8,000 each and to pay similar bonuses to two other directors; that the bonuses were paid to the other directors but not to the Nelsons, the Nelsons being, on the contrary, removed from office. These allegations, of course, establish, at most, a right of action in each of the Nelsons against the corporation, either in contract or in quantum meruit. It is further alleged that, on January 27, 1959, Sierra tentatively resolved to complete present jobs under contract and to provide later for formal resolution for the liquidation of assets and final dissolution; and that, contingent upon the adoption of a formal resolution for liquidation and dissolution, Sierra tentatively resolved that the present members of the corporation “could form other construction businesses”; that, starting about April 15, 1959 Koerwitz and Rapone, with defendant Horsey and directors McColley and Kraft, terminated Herbert E. Nelson’s position as president and director and Wallace R. Nelson’s position as vice president and director, and substituted Koerwitz as president, who failed to pay the $8,000 bonus to each of the Nelsons although theretofore authorized to do so; that Sierra then commenced an action against the Nelsons for the balance of the subscription price of their stock, and levied attachment against other assets owned by them; that, in place of taking steps toward liquidation and final dissolution of Sierra, the directors contracted for new construction work through a newly formed corporation in which they were directors and stockholders, namely R K R Construction Co., and operated R K R “by the use of the time, facilities and equipment of [339]*339Sierra”; that Koerwitz and Rapone and the remaining directors convened a meeting for October 13, 1959 in response to a written demand by the Nelsons that action be commenced against Horsey by reason of certain transactions by him which were set out in the first two counts and, as noted above, segregated from the present action; that at such meeting they selected an attorney who earlier that day had filed suit against the Nelsons “for the purpose of revoking control which the plaintiifs [the Nelsons] allegedly had to certain assets in which the defendant Horsey and the other directors had a proprietary interest and which had an approximate value of $250,000, and causing the service of process on [the Nelsons] at the very meeting which was purportedly called to consider a suit by Sierra against defendant Horsey.” It is further alleged that, at the same meeting, they authorized steps to be taken to secure the stock certificates theretofore issued in the names of the Nelsons but which were still in escrow. It is then alleged that, although the Nelsons on September 21,1959 served a written demand on the managing directors of Sierra for action against Horsey, they withdrew such demand at the meeting of October 13, 1959 because of their acquisition of information in the meantime of the refusal of the directors to take steps for dissolution and, instead, bidding for construction work through R K R as above alleged.

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Nelson v. Sierra Construction Corp.
364 P.2d 402 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
364 P.2d 402, 77 Nev. 334, 1961 Nev. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-sierra-construction-corp-nev-1961.