Osborne v. Carmichaels Mining MacHine Repair, Inc.

628 A.2d 874, 427 Pa. Super. 159, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2334
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 19, 1993
Docket1703
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 628 A.2d 874 (Osborne v. Carmichaels Mining MacHine Repair, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborne v. Carmichaels Mining MacHine Repair, Inc., 628 A.2d 874, 427 Pa. Super. 159, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2334 (Pa. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

OLSZEWSKI, Judge.

This is an appeal from an order denying the parties’ exceptions to the Honorable H. Terry Grimes’s order in equity. After a hearing, Judge Grimes ordered appellant corporation, Carmichaels Mining and Machine Repair Company [hereinafter “Corporation”], to pay $126,692.71 plus prejudgment interest to appellee, Josephine Osborne [hereinafter “Josephine”], administratrix of her late husband’s estate. We affirm.

Carl Osborne [hereinafter “Osborne”], Joseph Baker, and Paul Roberts founded Corporation as equal shareholders in 1982. At the time, they entered into a corporate stock redemption agreement to provide for, among other things, the death of a shareholder. Upon his death, Corporation was required to purchase the deceased shareholder’s stock from his representative at a price established in paragraph 2 of the agreement:

2. Unless altered as herein provided, for purposes of determining the purchase price to be paid for the stock of a stockholder shall be, a floating book value computed at the end of each fiscal year and at other such times as may be required plus the shareholder’s percentage of total stock ownership times $300,000 of corporate good will.

*162 Agreement, ¶2, reproduced record [R.R.], p. Illa. The agreement also required Corporation to purchase life insurance on the shareholders, naming Corporation as sole beneficiary and owner of the policy. Id., p. 114a. These policies, while owned by Corporation, had a value of $100,000 and their proceeds were to be applied to the purchase of a deceased shareholder’s stock. 1

When Osborne died in 1990, Josephine and the Corporation could not agree on the “purchase price” of Osborne’s stock, which represented his !é ownership in Corporation. The parties disagreed primarily because the term “floating book value” was not defined in the contract and is not a term that has any standard meaning under general accounting principles. Thus, while it was clear that Corporation was obligated to purchase Osborne’s stock for $100,000 (}é of $300,000 representing corporate good will) plus % of Corporation’s “floating book value,” the parties could not agree what amount beyond $100,000 Corporation owed for the repurchase of Osborne’s stock.

The trial judge heard testimony, from both accounting experts and Osborne’s partners 2 , to resolve the ambiguity surrounding the term “floating book value.” He concluded that the parties intended the term “floating” merely to indicate the parties’ desire to measure the book value of the corporation at the end of each fiscal year. Thus, he examined Corporation’s 1990 Federal Income Tax statements to determine its most recent book value, which he found to be $90,-957.00. He then deducted an amount equal to the cash surrender value of Osborne’s life insurance policy ($8,165), and an amount of claimed good will on the tax return ($2,713) from *163 the book value to arrive at an adjusted book value of $80,-078.13. He justified these adjustments on the basis that Josephine had already benefitted from the cash surrender value of the life insurance policy when Corporation realized the $100,000 in benefits under the policy. She also benefitted from the collection of “corporate good will” under the good will figure established by the agreement. The court divided this adjusted book value by three and added it to $100,000, arriving at a purchase price of $126,792.61. He also awarded Josephine prejudgment interest on the insurance proceeds from the date of receipt, and on the adjusted book value from the date of Osborne’s death.

Corporation makes three claims on this appeal: (1) the trial court erred in refusing to adjust the book value of the corporation to represent the cash surrender value of the life insurance policies of all three partners; (2) Josephine admitted that Corporation only owed her $115,171 (the figure that Corporation argues it owes under its first argument) by failing to file a responsive pleading to its new matter; and (3) the trial court erred in awarding prejudgment interest. 3 We will address each argument in turn, beginning, however, with Corporation’s second claim. At the outset we note that our scope of review in equity matters is narrow. We are limited to determining whether findings of fact are supported by competent evidence, whether an error of law has been committed, or whether there has been a manifest abuse of discretion. Hercules v. Jones, 415 Pa.Super. 449, 609 A.2d 837 (1992).

I.

This ease, at its most fundamental, boils down to whether Corporation owes Josephine $126,000 as the trial court found, or $115,171 as Corporation calculates, for the redemption of *164 Osborne’s stock. We will discuss the substance of this claim below. As a matter of first instance, however, Corporation contends that Josephine admitted that Corporation’s indebtedness is limited to $115,171 since she did not respond to new matter which contained that very allegation. We disagree.

In its answer to Josephine’s complaint, Corporation included several allegations under the heading “New Matter,” the most damning of which occurs in paragraph 15: “Pursuant to the agreement, upon the death of Carl Osborne, his estate was entitled to $100,000 through the proceeds of the insurance policy insuring his life and one-third of $45,513. Therefore, as a result of his' death, his estate was entitled to $115,171.” R.R. at 10A. As written, the new matter is nothing more than a legal conclusion that $45,513 is the appropriate “floating book value” of Corporation under the agreement. The issue of properly valuing the “floating book value,” however, is the very issue that Josephine raised in her complaint, and which Corporation denied in its answer. Corporation’s factual allegations in new matter were not extrinsic to Josephine’s factual averments, were not properly included in new matter, and Josephine was therefore not required to respond to them. Watson v. Green, 231 Pa.Super. 115, 331 A.2d 790 (1974). Moreover, insofar as Corporation’s new matter contained purely legal conclusions, such as paragraph 15, no response was required to such conclusions, and Josephine’s lack of response is considered a denial. Gottwalt v. Dellinger, 395 Pa.Super. 439, 577 A.2d 623 (1990). Corporation’s first claim fails.

II.

Corporation claims next that the trial judge should have adjusted the “book value” of Corporation by excluding the cash surrender value of each partner’s life insurance policy before it set the purchase price of Osborne’s stock. We disagree.

In interpreting the value of shares pursuant to a stock redemption agreement, our only useful authority is the *165 language of the agreement itself. Block v. Mylish, 351 Pa. 611,

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628 A.2d 874, 427 Pa. Super. 159, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-carmichaels-mining-machine-repair-inc-pasuperct-1993.