Prince v. Sonnesyn

25 N.W.2d 468, 222 Minn. 528, 1946 Minn. LEXIS 573
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 6, 1946
DocketNo. 34,220.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 25 N.W.2d 468 (Prince v. Sonnesyn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prince v. Sonnesyn, 25 N.W.2d 468, 222 Minn. 528, 1946 Minn. LEXIS 573 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

Magney, Justice.

Plaintiffs, Donald Prince and Gordon Jensen, and defendant Earl N. Sonnesyn were members of a partnership at will known as the Prince Manufacturing Company. Each had a one-third interest. On June 12, 1944, a corporation by the same name was organized to succeed to the partnership. Sonnesyn acquired a controlling interest in the corporation. Plaintiffs, claiming that Sonnesyn fraudulently induced them to agree to incorporate and fraudulently acquired a controlling interest, brought action. They prevailed, and Sonnesyn appeals from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

Plaintiff Prince had- operated a small manufacturing plant under the name of the Prince Manufacturing Company. He desired to secure war contracts. The Smaller War Plants Corporation directed him to Sonnesyn, who as an individual operated under the name of Twin City Engineering Service, Inc. On October 19, 1943, Prince and Sonnesyn formed a partnership, and on December 1, 1943, they commenced business as such partnership under the same name. The agreement was in writing. Prince was to draw $100 a week, and Sonnesyn was to receive five percent of the gross production of the shop plus actual traveling expenses. They agreed that as soon as the shop was on a paying basis and any surplus was not needed' there would be a division of profits on a “50-50 basis.” Prince was to have full charge of the shop, and Sonnesyn was to obtain contracts. Sonnesyn secured the first contract on or about January 1, 1944. It was with the Bendix Company. Three thousand dollars was raised as operating capital on a note given to one Ralph Arone, signed by the parties and secured by a chattel mortgage on the equipment of the shop and Sonnesyn’s *530 interest in his homestead. To obtain this money, another note for $1,000 was given Arone as a bonus. Later it was discovered that the personal property covered by the chattel mortgage was, as to a large part of it, not owned by Prince and that he personally was owing about $1,121.35 for labor, rent, and other items on his prior activities. Sonnesyn arranged additional financing with the First Acceptance Corporation of Minneapolis, which also at the outset loaned them $1,000 on paper sold to it.

On or about February 1, 1944, the plaintiff Gordon Jensen was taken in as a partner. He contributed machine-shop tools. The three were to share the profits equally. Each was to draw $100 a week. Nothing was then said about Sonnesyn receiving five percent of production. Prince was to be in charge of production, Jensen was to design and build or supervise the building of certain tools, and Sonnesyn was to handle the finances. Under this new arrangement the partnership continued to operate, and successfully so. In the early part of May 1944, Sonnesyn made a proposition to incorporate the business. The partnership then owed the First Acceptance Corporation $36,000. It had purchased a number of accounts on actual invoices, for which, if not paid, the parties would be liable. This was the nature of the indebtedness. On May 1, 1944, the net worth of the partnership was $11,555.18, and up to that time the three partners had drawn out of the business a total of $6,837.35, which included Prince’s prior indebtedness. From these figures it is apparent that the business had prospered. Son-nesyn gave as his reason for wanting to incorporate that the First Acceptance Corporation was worried about its money, that he felt insecure, and that Prince and Jensen could not back up $36,000. He said that he could protect them, and, as Prince testified, “for the $36,000 by virtue of the fact that he was a friend of the company and personally endorsed any debt that we owed them, and that he mortgaged-his house to them to secure this money and so to protect himself and the First Acceptance Company, it was necessary that he get 51 percent of the stock * * * or 52 percent.” Sonnesyn said that the company could no longer run the way it had *531 in the past because of the fact that he was personally liable for all the accounts that were due the First Acceptance Corporation. He also said that he had to have a controlling interest in the corporation in order to continue, because the First Acceptance Corporation had told him that unless he controlled' the stock they would have to discontinue the discount banking of the company. He said that he was a personal friend of the officers or some officer of the First Acceptance Corporation and that because of that friendship he was able to secure the money that was used to transact the business; that without him, his taking care of the finances, they could not exist. We are giving the version of the testimony most favorable to plaintiffs, as we must.

Prince and Jensen objected to giving a controlling interest to Sonnesyn, as they felt that he was not entitled to more than a third, the same as under partnership basis. Sonnesyn then gave Prince and Jensen four alternatives: That they incorporate, sell, buy, or dissolve the partnership and go out of business. He said, “If you don’t like it, you can pull out.” Sonnesyn offered Prince $2,000 for his interest, but did not indicate what he would take for his own. Prince did not want to sell. The earnings of the partnership during the short time of operation, as has been shown, clearly indicate why Prince and Jensen did not want to sell or liquidate. They were doing well, but at that time they undoubtedly lacked the means with which to buy Sonnesyn’s interest. So, believing the representations made by Sonnesyn and wanting to stay in business, they agreed to incorporate and give Sonnesyn control of the corporation.

Sonnesyn admits that he told Prince and Jensen that he did not want to be a minority stockholder; that the business had become complicated and the liabilities large and that if they would agree to incorporate he would waive his five percent of production. When Jensen entered the partnership nothing was said about five percent of production. Sonnesyn admits that he gave Prince and Jensen the four-way proposition already mentioned and that he offered to buy Prince’s interest. That Sonnesyn’s purpose in insisting that *532 the partnership be incorporated was not solely for his own financial protection, as he claims, is evidenced by the fact that after incorporation, when he had secured control of the business, his salary was boosted to $200, while the salary of Prince and Jensen was fixed at $125 a week for each.

On May 19, 1944, the parties agreed in writing to create a corporation for the continuance of the business and to have issued to Sonnesyn 59 shares and to plaintiffs 28 shares each, or 56 shares. Jensen was to contribute certain machinery to the corporation, for which 12 shares were to be issued to Sonnesyn and six shares each to plaintiffs. It was further agreed that the proposed corporation should assume the $4,000 liability to Arone. The articles of incorporation were signed on June 12, 1944. The business was incorporated on Sonnesyn’s terms and on conditions laid down by him.

Shortly after incorporation, a contract for $600,000 for the manufacture of 50,000 rocket nozzles for the National Tube Company was received. The filling of this order enlarged tremendously the activities of the business and greatly increased the need for operating capital.

Originally, the First Acceptance Corporation loaned the Prince Manufacturing Company $1,000. The loan was not made to Son-nesyn personally.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.W.2d 468, 222 Minn. 528, 1946 Minn. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prince-v-sonnesyn-minn-1946.