Prescott v. Kreher

123 So. 2d 721
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 30, 1960
Docket1779-1782
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 123 So. 2d 721 (Prescott v. Kreher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prescott v. Kreher, 123 So. 2d 721 (Fla. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

123 So.2d 721 (1960)

Barnard PRESCOTT, Oliver W. Kuhn, Warren M. Dilsaver, and Joseph M. Mandese, Appellants,
v.
Karl KREHER and Marine Bank & Trust Company, a Florida corporation, Appellees.

Nos. 1779-1782.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

September 30, 1960.
Rehearing Denied November 10, 1960.

*722 James B. McDonough, Jr., Tampa; David C.G. Kerr and William Terrill Hodges, Tampa, of counsel; Macfarlane, Ferguson, Allison & Kelly, Tampa, for appellants.

Corcoran & Henson, Tampa, for appellee, Karl Kreher.

KANNER, Judge.

A suit in equity seeking an accounting has resulted in five separate appeals involving two orders of the lower court. These appeals, which have been consolidated for consideration here, include the court's initial order, interlocutory in nature, wherein the chancellor found that the plaintiffs, Prescott, Kuhn, Dilsaver, and Mandese, were not entitled to an accounting, and a subsequent order denying petition for rehearing and dismissing the cause as to those plaintiffs. Through caution, interlocutory and final appeals from both orders were taken. However, in view of the court's dismissal of the cause as to the four named plaintiffs, the matters presented with reference to them are here reviewed as a final appeal. By the first order above referred to, the chancellor also found that the plaintiff, Beynon, as administratrix of the Estate of Schuyler B. Burdett, was entitled to an accounting; and the defendant, Kreher, has entered an interlocutory appeal as to this, making the fifth appeal, which will be disposed of in a separate decision. Kreher v. Beynon, Fla.App., 123 So.2d 731.

The accounting requested is the result of transactions flowing from the corporate organization and financing of the Jim Walter Corporation, a firm engaged in the construction of homes. The plaintiffs have offered to do equity. The relief sought is not limited to an accounting by the defendant, Kreher, but applies also to the plaintiffs so that there will be a determination of what is necessary to be paid, received, or distributed by the plaintiffs and the defendant in order to correspond with their several interests.

*723 Circumstances leading up to and surrounding the requested accounting constitute a highly involved narrative which had its beginning early in 1955. At that time, six men employed by the securities and brokerage firm of A.M. Kidder & Company in Tampa joined together in an agreement to pool and distribute their earnings through what they termed an "earnings pool." These men, Prescott, Kuhn, Dilsaver, Mandese, Kreher, and Burdett, the last named being now deceased, were engaged in selling securities and were paid by the Kidder company on a commission basis. Their purpose in entering into the earnings pool agreement was to stabilize their earnings, to effect a more smoothly running office, and to forestall harmful competition and disputes as to commissions earned. Each man agreed to pay into the pool all commissions which he earned, and the proceeds were to be distributed to the individual members. Prescott, Kuhn, and Kreher, as senior members, would each receive two-ninths; while the other three, as junior members, each would receive one-ninth of the proceeds. The agreement covered a period from February, 1955, to December 31, 1955. Managing the pool was Prescott, the office manager, or Prescott and Kuhn, who kept the fund in a joint bank account.

The plan went into operation; and in May or June of that year Kreher made an agreement with J.W. Walter of Walter Construction Company, then a partnership, to handle the corporate organization and financing of the construction company and its subsidiaries. He procured a leave of absence from the Kidder company so as not to involve that organization in handling the corporate financing of the Walter company and left to devote his full time to this endeavor. It was understood and agreed that Kreher would continue drawing from the earnings pool and would, in turn, pay into the earnings pool any compensation which he might earn for services in connection with the financing of the Jim Walter Corporation and the sale of its securities. Members of the earnings pool also agreed to help to whatever extent they could without involving A.M. Kidder & Company. Pursuant to the agreement, Kreher, although on official leave of absence from the Kidder company, did continue to draw from the earnings pool until sometime in December of 1955. Kreher served as the representative of the earnings pool members with reference to the corporate organization, financing, and sale of securities of the Jim Walter Corporation.

With these basic facts in mind, we now observe that Kreher's financing of the Walter corporation, as it eventuated, developed into a successful and most lucrative enterprise. Some members of the earnings pool prospered through these financing operations more than did the others, particularly Kreher and, to a lesser degree, Prescott and Kuhn, as will be pointed out later.

We proceed now to the developments which transpired after Kreher took over the corporate organization and financing of the Walter enterprise. In June of 1955, Kreher submitted to the Walter group two plans of financing, one designated as an orthodox plan and the other as his unorthodox plan. The latter was accepted. That plan specified issuance of certain securities to the Walter group in return for the assets of the partnership and also issuance of certain other securities for sale to new incorporators. Securities to be thus issued consisted of bonds, convertible bonds, participating bonds, common stock, bond or "A" warrants, bond or "A" warrant options, and common stock or "B" warrants. Those securities were to be divided into 408 portfolios, 108 of which were to be issued to the Walter group and 300 to be sold to the new incorporators. Specified in the plan of financing was the provision that 120,000 bond warrant options and 120,000 common warrants to be issued to the Walter group would be sold by them to Kreher at the issue price of one cent each, or a total of $2,400. That feature of the *724 plan under which Kreher would purchase the 240,000 warrants was not disclosed to members of the earnings pool, and it was nearly two years later that Prescott and Kuhn learned of it.

Kreher guaranteed the subscription of the entire plan for financing and guaranteed to raise an initial deposit of $105,450. He made good those guarantees. Members of the earnings pool did not contribute to the guarantee deposit, but included in that deposit was the sum of $2,400 for the 240,000 warrants Kreher was to buy from the Walter group.

Compensation to Kreher for his handling of the financing was through the sale of "founders warrants" and "founders portfolio warrants." These warrants were options giving the purchasers the right to buy portfolios of securities in the new corporation, to all of which Kreher had subscribed. The founders warrants applied to the Walter group, the price being $250 each; while the founders portfolio warrants applicable to the 300 portfolios to be sold to new incorporators were priced at $253.50 each, on the average, depending upon the date of option. Kreher was entitled, under his agreement with the Walter group, to the proceeds of the sale of founders warrants and founders portfolio warrants. These proceeds he claimed on behalf of the earnings pool. It was contemplated that the earnings pool would claim 26 portfolios of securities from the proceeds of the sale of founders warrants and founders portfolio warrants.

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Bluebook (online)
123 So. 2d 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prescott-v-kreher-fladistctapp-1960.