Nulsen v. National Pigments & Chemical Co.

145 S.W.2d 410, 346 Mo. 1246, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 467
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 11, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 145 S.W.2d 410 (Nulsen v. National Pigments & Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nulsen v. National Pigments & Chemical Co., 145 S.W.2d 410, 346 Mo. 1246, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 467 (Mo. 1940).

Opinions

A rehearing was granted in this cause, additional briefs were filed, and the cause has been reargued and reassigned. We adopt the statement in the former opinion as follows:

"This is an action to recover amount paid out on a judgment against plaintiff and for an attorney's fee in the case resulting in the judgment. A jury was waived; judgment, including interest, went for plaintiff for $21,182.48, and defendant appealed.

"The facts, in part stipulated, were these: In effect, plaintiff owned the Nulsen Corporation, Manufacturers, and C.P. DeLore owned the J.C. Finck Mineral Milling Company, and the latter company owned the DeLore-Baryta Company. December 20, 1920, the stockholders of the Nulsen Corporation and the Finck Company entered into a contract to consolidate these two corporations. January 11, 1921, the name of the Nulsen Corporation, Manufacturers, was changed to National Pigments Chemical Company, defendant here. All did not run smoothly with plaintiff and DeLore, so on July 30, 1921, plaintiff and DeLore entered into an agreement by which plaintiff bought all the interest that DeLore and his associates had in the defendant company. At the time of the deal between plaintiff and DeLore, no stock had been issued by the new company, defendant here, but it was considered that plaintiff bought all the stock in the new company that would have been issued to DeLore and his associates. In effect, plaintiff bought all the properties of the Finck Company and the DeLore-Baryta Company. Plaintiff's case is based on the theory that in dealing with DeLore, he was acting for the defendant, and that he made the purchase for and on behalf of defendant, and that defendant adopted his deal with DeLore.

"The contract between plaintiff and DeLore was signed by them only. The consideration was $400,000, payable as follows: $50,000 upon execution of the contract, $100,000 in 60 days, and $25,000 in *Page 1249 90 days. The balance was taken care of by plaintiff's six per cent notes, one for $75,000, due January 10, 1922, and three for $50,000 each, and due, respectively, January 10, 1923, 1924, and 1925.

"Price Waterhouse Company, accountants, had made an audit of the Finck Company and the DeLore-Baryta Company, and the contract between plaintiff and DeLore, among other things, provided:

"`The statements of Price, Waterhouse Company, upon the basis of which this contract has been entered into, show a possible tax liability, on account of back income and excess profits taxes of $35,000.00 on the part of J.C. Finck Mineral Milling Company and the DeLore-Baryta Company. It is mutually agreed between the parties hereto that in the event said liability shall hereafter be established at a greater sum than $35,000.00 and the same shall be paid by Nulsen or his associates or the National Pigments Chemical Company, then the said DeLore shall, upon demand, pay to said Nulsen one-half of such excess over and above said sum of $35,000.00; and in the event such tax liability shall be determined to be less than said sum of $35,000.00, then the said A.G. Nulsen will, upon the establishment of such fact, pay to the said DeLore one-half of the difference between the amount so determined for said tax liability and the said sum of $35,000.00. This matter is to be determined not later than the date of maturity (January 10, 1925) of the last installment payment hereinbefore provided.'

"At a meeting (September 29, 1921) of the board of directors of defendant, J.K. Nulsen, a son of plaintiff, offered the following resolution which was adopted:

"`Resolved, by the board of directors of this company, that the deal entered into by Mr. Albert G. Nulsen in behalf of this company with Casper P. DeLore and his associates, by which he secured the relinquishment and surrender by said DeLore and his associates, of all of their right and interest, if any, in this company, be and the same is hereby approved and the officers of this company are hereby authorized and directed to reimburse Mr. Albert G. Nulsen for any amounts of money he may have heretofore paid out on account of said deal, and to execute the notes of this company covering all further payments to be made in connection therewith, or if notes covering such further payments or any of them have already been executed by Mr. Nulsen, then in lieu of the execution of notes, the officers of the company may endorse such notes which have already been executed, in the name of this company. They are further authorized and directed to pay to J.P. Thomy (or to Mr. Albert G. Nulsen if he shall have paid to Mr. Thomy) said sum of $25,000.00 as contemplated in said deal, and to pay to Mr. H.F. Lodge (or to Mr. Albert G. Nulsen if he shall have paid Mr. Lodge) the sum of $6,000.00 as contemplated by said deal, and they are further authorized and directed to pay, as and when they shall become due and *Page 1250 payable all fees of attorneys, accountants and appraisers incident to the abandoned consolidation of said companies, and that the total amount of all of said expenses and disbursements be set up on the books of the company as the purchase price of the property and assets of the J.C. Finck Mineral Milling Company and its subsidiaries.'

"May 14, 1923, plaintiff and his son, J.K., sold (consideration $800,000) to the National Lead Company `all of the common capital stock' of defendant (according to the audit attached to the contract, first parties on December 31, 1922, owned 6743 shares out of 7500 shares of the common stock of the company), and the sale contract contained this provision:

"`Parties of the first part (the Nulsens) hereby guarantee that on December 31st, 1922, there were no liabilities of the National Pigments and Chemical Company not shown on the attached audit of Price, Waterhouse Company, and that if any liabilities of said National Pigments and Chemical Company, other than those shown on said audit of Price, Waterhouse Company, shall appear, thenparties of the first part hereby assume and agree to pay same;and this agreement is made for the benefit of the NationalPigments and Chemical Company as well as the party of the secondpart hereto (National Lead Company) and may be enforced by both the National Pigments and Chemical Company and the National Lead Company.' (Italics ours.)

"It turned out that no tax liability was established against either the Finck Company or the DeLore-Baryta Company, as contemplated in the above quoted paragraph of the contract (July 30, 1921) between plaintiff and DeLore, and DeLore, on December 29, 1926, brought suit against plaintiff to recover $17,500. November 26, 1928, plaintiff, in the present cause, gave defendant written notice of the DeLore suit against him, and attached to the notice a copy of the DeLore petition. The notice informed defendant that plaintiff would hold it liable to him for the consequences of the DeLore suit, and asked that defendant come in and defend, but defendant did not do so. Plaintiff resisted the DeLore suit, but the trial resulted in a judgment against him, which he paid (April 11, 1931) and the present cause was filed August 18, 1931, and was tried April 26, 1937.

"Defendant, appellant here, stands, we may say, on three propositions, viz.: (1) That the provision (quoted, supra) of plaintiff's contract of sale to the National Lead Company precludes recovery in this cause; (2) that plaintiff's cause, if any, was barred by the five year statute of limitations; and (3) that the evidence is not sufficient to support the judgment."

The first and third propositions, being inter-related, will be considered together. Does the quoted provision (supra) of the contract of May 14, 1923, between the plaintiff and the National Lead Company,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 S.W.2d 410, 346 Mo. 1246, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nulsen-v-national-pigments-chemical-co-mo-1940.