Reinstine v. Rosenfield

111 F.2d 892, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3799
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 8, 1940
Docket7107
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 111 F.2d 892 (Reinstine v. Rosenfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reinstine v. Rosenfield, 111 F.2d 892, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3799 (7th Cir. 1940).

Opinion

SPARKS, Circuit Judge.

By this action in equity appellant Rein-stine, as executor of the will of Isaac Ros-enfield, deceased, sought an accounting and a recovery from the appellees, William, Morris and John Rosenfield, individually and as trustees under the will of Louis Rosenfield, deceased, and also Sarah M. Rosenfield, a widow, and Ethel R. Harris. After a joinder of issues and trial, the District Court, on May 1, 1939, dismissed the *893 cause for want of equity. Subsequently, on September 25, 1939, the District Court made a finding of facts and rendered its conclusions of law thereon. On October 3, 1939, the parties stipulated that the findings of fact and conclusions of law be incorporated in the record to be filed in this court, and that was done. An appeal was taken from the decree of May 1, 1939.

The complaint sought an accounting from 'the defendants of twenty-two per cent of four thousand shares of National Distillers Products Company stock which the defendants received from the sale by them of the distillery property in Louisville, Kentucky, on July 12, 1933. The property sold had belonged to the defendants’ testator, Louis Rosenfield, prior to his death on November 4; 1926, and had been purchased by him from Sunnybrook Distillery Company, the former owner, at public auction on December 19, 1917. The basis for the alleged right to an accounting was an alleged oral agreement between Louis Rosenfield and the other members of the copartnership of Ros-enfield Brothers and Company, that whenever the purchased property should be sold by the purchaser, the net proceeds thereof should be divided among the co-partners and the personal representatives of those deceased, in the proportions in which the individuals were interested in the copartnership. It was alleged that Isaac Rosenfield’s interest therein was twenty-two per cent.

The following facts were specially found, by the District Court and were substantially supported by evidence. On and prior to December 19, 1917, the copartnership was engaged in the business of selling whiskey manufactured by Sunnybrook Distillery Company, a Kentucky corporation, at its distilling plant in Louisville, Kentucky. There were five members of the copartnership, to-wit: Isaac, Louis, Morris S. and Joseph F. Rosenfield, who’ were brothers, and William Leith. They constituted the board of directors and some1 of them were its officers. As individuals they, and members of their respective families, owned the corporation’s capital stock. All the brothers except Morris S. had died prior to the filing of the original complaint on January 30, 1934, and he also was dead at the time óf the trial, but his deposition had been taken and was admitted in evidence.

The sale was provided for in a written agreement of November 21, 1917, executed by all of the stockholders of Sunnybrook Distillery Company, and approved by a resolution of the board of directors adopted at their meeting on November 24, 1917, at which all five directors were present. The agreement and resolution provided for the sale of the property at public ’ auction to the highest bidder, and the agreement subsequently authorized any stockholder, even though he might be a director or officer, to pay for and become the purchaser at such sale in his own right and for his individual use and benefit.

The distillery property, offered at the sale on December 19, 1917, included lands, buildings, equipment, machinery and fixtures comprising the plant, and also the brands, trade-marks and trade names under which the Distillery Company’s products had been sold for many years, but did not include the stock on hand or bottling supplies. The offer of the property was expressly made subject to a four-year reservation by the seller of the use of designated portions of the property for the storage of the whiskey then on the premises, and for its bottling, handling and removal, in consideration of which the seller agreed that during the period of such reservation it would pay an annual rental of an amount equal to seven per cent of the highest amount bid at the sale for the plant alone, together with one-third of the real estate taxes against the premises, and would keep the used property in repair.

Louis Rosenfield was the highest bidder at the sale and became the purchaser at a total price of $55,000, of which $20,000 was bid and paid for the brands and $35,000 for the physical property. These amounts were paid to the Sunnybrook Distillery by Louis Rosenfield and he remained the owner of the property until his death. There was no evidence that Isaac Rosenfield, or Rosenfield Brothers and Company, or anyone other than Louis Rosenfield himself, furnished any part of the purchase price.

At the time of the sale further distillation of whiskey in the United States had been prohibited as a war measure, and in consequence thereof, and the advent of national prohibition which was then considered certain, the business of manufacturing whiskey as it had theretofore existed appeared to have come to an end. The sale of the distillery property to the highest bidder at public auction was agreed upon, and the sale was held, pursuant to the advice and under the supervision of the corporation’s attorney, Nettleroth, for *894 the purpose among others of ascertaining the exact loss in asset value that had been sustained by the corporation in order that such loss could be deducted in computing the corporation’s income tax for the year 1917. Such deduction was thereafter claimed by the corporation, and after investigation of the sale by the Internal Rev-, enue Department, allowed.

Isaac Rosenfield disposed of all his shares of stock in the Sunnybrook Distillery Company after the date of the sale, and had no interest therein or in the corporation at the time of his death on July 9, 1931.

The _ court found that the evidence of Morris S. Rosenfield and the corporation’s attorney, Nettleroth, and the exhibits presented negatived the claim that the distillery property was either sold by Sunnybrook Distillery Company, or purchased by Louis Rosenfield, pursuant to any agreement or understanding whereby the copartners of Louis Rosenfield, or their representatives, should be entitled to a share in the net proceeds realized by him, or his estate from a sale or disposition of such property, or that any such agreement was ever made. The.court further found that there was a complete failure of proof of the agreement, as alleged in the complaint, or of any agreement or circumstances under which Isaac Rosenfield or the plaintiff became entitled to any share or interest in the proceeds of the sale of the distillery property by the defendants.

Upon these findings the court concluded '.that the agreement relied upon was not enforceable in a court of equity in that, if made,.

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Bluebook (online)
111 F.2d 892, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 3799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reinstine-v-rosenfield-ca7-1940.