Norman B. Lawton and Leonard B. Lawton v. Dorothy K. Strong

249 F.2d 299, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4792
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 1957
Docket13039
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 249 F.2d 299 (Norman B. Lawton and Leonard B. Lawton v. Dorothy K. Strong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norman B. Lawton and Leonard B. Lawton v. Dorothy K. Strong, 249 F.2d 299, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4792 (6th Cir. 1957).

Opinions

ALLEN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal attacks the judgment of the District Court entered in a ease tried without a jury, adjudging defendants liable for damages for constructive fraud in the purchase by defendants from the plaintiff, their sister, of 8,020 shares of stock in the Star Cutter Company, a Michigan corporation, formed in August, 1949.1 The business had been started in 1927 by the father of plaintiff and defendants. It had operated as a family corporation until 1940 and as a family partnership from 1940 to 1949. The transactions between the parties arranging for the sale of plaintiff’s stock to defendants were instituted while the concern was a partnership and were intended to bring about the purchase of plaintiff’s partnership interest.

At the time of the negotiations for sale, defendants were the working partners having control and charge of the operation of the business, plaintiff for several years having been an inactive partner. During this inactive period plaintiff sometimes requested to be allowed to draw money from her capital account, in which profits had accumulated, but was informed that there was no money then available for her. The partnership articles provided for division of the profits “annually.” Since plaintiff derived little income from the partnership for several years, she intended to dispose of her partnership interest and, on the advice of her mother, she consulted defendants, her brothers. Plaintiff requested information from defendants as to what her interest was worth and testified that defendants in effect said they would examine the books and let her know. Defendants testified that they told plaintiff they would see how much they could afford to pay for her interest and would give her the information. Defendant Norman Lawton later reported that he and Leonard Lawton would pay $30,000, $10,000 of which would come from plaintiff’s drawing account in the partnership and $10,000 from each of the brothers. Later, under the advice of the partnership accountant, to avoid questions that might arise under the tax laws, defendants had the partnership changed into a corporation. Plaintiff assigned her 8,-020 shares of stock to defendants on receipt of one check for $10,000 from each defendant. The book value of plaintiff’s stock at the time of transfer was at least $80,200, but plaintiff had no knowledge of this. The court found that it was the duty of the brothers to “fully inform the sister as to the financial affairs of the partnership and the book value of the sister’s interest. This they did not do.” The District Court found that the sale of the stock and the contract for the sale of plaintiff’s partnership interest were parts of one and the same transaction and that a fiduciary relationship existed between the parties. The court held that in view of defendants’ control and complete knowledge of the business as compared to plaintiff’s lack of knowledge, in view of the fiduciary relation existing between partners under which the obligation of utmost good faith exists and the reliance of plaintiff upon her brothers, plaintiff was entitled (1) to a fair and adequate price for her interest, and (2) to information from defendants which would enable her to form a sound judgment of the value of what she sold. This holding is in accord with the applicable law, including the Michigan decisions. Brooks v. Martin, 2 Wall. 70, 17 L.Ed. 732. In the Brooks case one partner was the sole agent of the partnership for an[301]*301other, who relied on him wholly for true accounts. As declared by the Supreme Court, page 82 of 2 Wall.:

“If the parties are to be regarded in this transaction as holding towards each other no different relations from those which ordinarily attend buyer and seller; and as, therefore, under no special obligation to deal conscientiously with each other, we are satisfied that no such fraud is proven as would justify a court in setting aside an executed contract. But there are relations of trust and confidence which one man may occupy towards another, either personally, or in regard to the particular property which is the subject of the contract, which impose upon him a special and peculiar obligation to deal with the other person towards whom he stands so related, with a candor, a fairness, and a refusal to avail himself of any advantage of superior information, or other favorable circumstance, not required by courts of justice in the usual business transactions of life.”

The court then continues, page 85 of 2 Wall.:

“We lay down, then, as applicable to the case before us, and to all others of like character, that in order to sustain such a sale, it must be made to appear, first, that the price paid approximates reasonably near to a fair and adequate consideration for the thing purchased; and, second, that all the information in possession of the purchaser, which was necessary to enable the seller to form a sound judgment of the value of what he sold, should have been communicated by the former to the latter.”

Buckley v. Buckley, 230 Mich. 504, 508, 509, 202 N.W. 955; Backus v. Kirsch, 264 Mich. 339, 342, 343, 249 N.W. 872. Cf. Lightner v. W. H. Hill Company, 258 Mich. 50, 242 N.W. 218, 84 A.L.R. 601. See also Goodrich v. Waller, 314 Mich. 456, 461, 462, 22 N.W.2d 862.

Defendants vigorously contend that no evidence was introduced of misrepresentation or fraud. The court specifically found that defendants had practiced concealment and given untrue statements in answer to plaintiff’s request for information. While the testimony on this point is in conflict, this finding is supported by the record. Moreover, in case of constructive fraud such as may exist in a fiduciary relationship it is not necessary to prove deliberate or intentional fraud. Brooks v. Martin, supra, 2 Wall. 82, 85; Goodrich v. Waller, supra.

Defendants also contend that the record presents no proof of damages. This contention is based upon their theory that no evidence was presented of the actual value of plaintiff’s partnership interest. The court, they contend, relied only upon book value in its determination of damages.

The majority of the court concludes that this contention has no merit. The court had before it, and evidently considered, items of evidence as to value apart from book value. It is true that in effect the court found the book value equivalent to actual value, for it found specifically that plaintiff’s stock was worth not less than $93,200 and not more than $106,177.97. The last figure is the book value of plaintiff’s interest for late May or early June of 1949.

Where, as here, no market value is shown, the value of stock may be shown by evidence tending to show its intrinsic value. Commonwealth of Virginia v. State of West Virginia, 238 U.S. 202, 213, 35 S.Ct. 795, 59 L.Ed. 1272. Such evidence was presented here.

This business had been a prosperous and growing concern for many years before and up to the transaction of 1949. The record shows that the partnership made substantial profits. The court found that the profits were applied to the respective drawing accounts of the partners in proportion to their respective interests and that “Norman and Leonard being working partners, withdrew funds from their shares of the capital for living expenses, and the profits of Dorothy and [302]*302her sister Vivian continued to pile up because they did not withdraw their shares.”

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Bluebook (online)
249 F.2d 299, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norman-b-lawton-and-leonard-b-lawton-v-dorothy-k-strong-ca6-1957.