Pohn v. Diversified Industries, Inc.

403 F. Supp. 413, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16006
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 25, 1975
Docket74 C 3261
StatusPublished

This text of 403 F. Supp. 413 (Pohn v. Diversified Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pohn v. Diversified Industries, Inc., 403 F. Supp. 413, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16006 (N.D. Ill. 1975).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

MARSHALL, District Judge.

This is a diversity action in which plaintiffs, Maxwell Pohn and S. M. & R. Co., Inc., both Illinois citizens, seek a declaratory judgment that defendant, Diversified Industries, Inc., a Delaware-Missouri corporate citizen, has breached a tripartite management agreement entered into among the parties on June 17, 1974, providing for Pohn’s management of S. M. & R. Diversified’s interest in that agreement stems from the fact that it owns 99% of the outstanding shares of S. M. & R., and prior to the agreement, provided management and administrative services for S. M. & R. Pohn previously moved for partial summary or judgment on the pleadings insofar as his complaint seeks a declaration that Diversified has breached the management agreement. That motion was denied on March 10, 1975, for the reasons stated in a memorandum decision of that date. In that memorandum, the court invited a motion from defendant for a summary adjudication that it had not breached the management agreement. That motion has now been made and is ready for decision.

The management agreement was entered into simultaneously with a stock purchase agreement between Pohn and Diversified and a shareholders’ agreement among Pohn, S. M. & R. and Diversified. Prior to the execution of the three agreements, Diversified had owned all of the issued and outstanding shares of capital stock of S. M. & R. Under *414 the stock purchase agreement, Pohn acquired from Diversified 20 shares of the stock of S. M. & R. which constituted 1% of all of those shares. Under the shareholders’ agreement, S. M. & R. agreed to purchase and Diversified agreed to sell the remaining 99% of the shares of S. M. & R. at a time keyed in part to the termination of the management agreement here involved. The price to be paid to S. M. & R. for Diversified shares is to be determined by a formula keyed substantially to V2 of the net income of S. M. & R. for the period commencing on the date the shareholders’ agreement was excuted and continuing through the date of the termination of the management agreement, reduced by the aggregate of any state or federal income taxes properly paid or accrued by the company on its net income for such period, and increased by 10% of the net income of the company during such period after deduction of such state or federal income taxes and all funds deposited with respect to such income in an escrow established pursuant to the terms of an escrow agreement also simultaneously executed. As a consequence, upon the termination of the management agreement and the agreed to purchase -by and sale to S. M. & R. of Diversified’s shares, Pohn would become the sole shareholder in S. M. & R.

At the time Pohn’s motion for summary judgment was denied, the terms of the shareholders’ agreement, although pleaded generally in his complaint, had not been submitted to the court. All of the agreements are now a part of the record and they should be interpreted and applied in pari materia.

Furthermore, at the time Pohn’s motion for summary judgment was denied, the contesting parties assumed the general validity of the management agreement and contented themselves to argue its construction. But the management agreement was so broad as to cause us •to state, “What Pohn’s position comes down to is simply this: under the terms of the management agreement, the Directors of S. M. & R. selected by Diversified, must rubber stamp his [Pohn’s] decisions. This is an extraordinary position for a corporate officer to take, even within the framework of a closely held-wholly owned subsidiary such as S. M. & R. is in its relationship to Diversified.”

All of the agreements provide that their “validity, construction and enforceability . . . shall be governed in all respects by laws of the State of Illinois.” Because the parties, in retrospect, seem to have contested only the issue of the construction of the management agreement, we observed, “Regrettably, the parties have not seen fit to favor the court with any respectable authority coming from Illinois (or elsewhere for that matter) with regard to the soundness of Pohn’s position.” In opposition to Diversified’s motion for summary judgment, Pohn has now submitted the decision of the Illinois Supreme Court in Galler v. Galler, 32 Ill.2d 16, 203 N.E.2d 577 (1964), and the cases there cited and discussed. Indeed, that authority was submitted to the court on a motion to reconsider denial of Pohn’s motion for summary judgment. That motion for reconsideration was denied because it appeared to the court that the theories and authorities there advanced were different from and in addition to the position taken in the initial motion for summary judgment removing them from the proper • office of a motion for reconsideration or rehearing. But Galler and its precursors are clearly germane to defendant’s motion and compel its denial.

In Galler, the Illinois Supreme Court sustained an agreement made by the shareholders of a closely held corporation which provided for the declaration and payment of minimum annual dividends (so long as earned surplus was not impaired), the continuation of the payment of the salary received by a shareholder-officer to his widow over a five-year period aggregating twice the *415 amount paid the deceased shareholder-officer in one year, and the election of specified persons or their nominee to the board of directors. In sustaining the agreement, the Illinois Court said at 203 N.E.2d 584-585:

It would admittedly facilitate judicial supervision of corporate behavior if a strict adherence to the provisions of the Business Corporation Act were required in all cases without regard to the practical exigencies peculiar to the close corporation. West v. Camden, 135 U.S. 507, 10 S.Ct. 838, 34 L.Ed. 254. However, courts have long ago quite realistically, we feel, relaxed their attitudes concerning statutory compliance when dealing with close corporate behavior, permitting “slight deviations” from corporate “norms” in order to give legal efficacy to common business practice. See e. g., Clark v. Dodge, 269 N.Y. 410, 199 N.E. 641; Benintendi v. Kenton Hotel, 294 N.Y. 112, 60 N.E.2d 829, 159 A.L.R. 280 (dissenting opinion subsequently legislatively approved.) This attitude is illustrated by the following language in Clark v. Dodge: “Public policy, the intention of the Legislature, detriment to the corporation, are phrases which in this connection [the court was discussing a shareholder-director agreement whereby the directors pledged themselves to vote for certain people as officers of the corporation] mean little. Possible harm to bona fide purchasers of stock or to creditors or to stockholding minorities have more substance; but such harms are absent in many instances. If the enforcement of a particular contract damages nobody — not even, in any perceptible degree, the public — one sees no reason for holding it illegal, even though it impinges slightly upon the broad provisions of [the relevant statute providing that the business of a corporation shall be managed by its board of directors.] .

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Related

West v. Camden
135 U.S. 507 (Supreme Court, 1890)
Erie Railroad v. Tompkins
304 U.S. 64 (Supreme Court, 1938)
Galler v. Galler
203 N.E.2d 577 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1965)
Benintendi v. Kenton Hotel, Inc.
60 N.E.2d 829 (New York Court of Appeals, 1945)
Becker v. Becker
60 N.E.2d 847 (New York Court of Appeals, 1945)
Clark v. Dodge
199 N.E. 641 (New York Court of Appeals, 1936)
Kassel v. Empire Tinware Co.
178 A.D. 176 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1917)

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403 F. Supp. 413, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pohn-v-diversified-industries-inc-ilnd-1975.