Risvold v. Gustafson

292 N.W. 103, 207 Minn. 359, 1940 Minn. LEXIS 668
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 19, 1940
DocketNo. 32,211.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 292 N.W. 103 (Risvold v. Gustafson) 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
Risvold v. Gustafson, 292 N.W. 103, 207 Minn. 359, 1940 Minn. LEXIS 668 (Mich. 1940).

Opinion

*361 Loring, Justice.

This is an appeal from an order denying the plaintiff’s motion for amended findings or a new trial. We review the order insofar as it denies the motion for a new trial. The plaintiff, as a stockholder in the corporate defendant, sought in behalf of the corporation to recover from the individual defendants all of the capital stock of the Dahl Corporation, hereinafter referred to, or in lieu thereof its value, and for himself he sought the expense of prosecution of the suit, including attorneys’ fees.

The complaint charged the individual defendants with a conspiracy to defraud the corporate defendant of a one-third interest in a thousand acres of placer ground on Sullivan Creek in the Hot Springs precinct in the vicinity of Fairbanks, Alaska. The defendants D. E. Gustafson, J. A. Gustafson, Brandell, Drew, and Wyer were directors of the corporate defendant.

The defendant Dahl was an experienced placer miner who had spent his life in the Alaskan gold fields. It is apparent that he had little business experience outside of mining. In 1933 he acquired an option from the owners on the acreage here involved. He was on friendly terms with the Gustafsons and sought their aid in endeavoring to dispose of the option at a profit in Seattle, Chicago, Minneapolis, and other places in the United States. Apparently at that time there was no thought of disposing of the property or any interest in it to the defendant corporation. Dahl was attempting to get $100,000 or $125,000 for the property, and apparently the parties hereto did not think at that time that the defendant corporation was in a position to acquire the property at so high a price. Having been unable to dispose of the entire property at a profit, it evidently occurred to D. E. and J. A. Gustafson and to Brandell that the defendant corporation might sell more of its capital stock and acquire a two-thirds interest in the property for $75,000, all of which would have to be paid to the owner to take up the option. Dahl had, to begin with, promised D. E..and J. A. Gustafson, Thurston, and Brandell a share of the profits which he might make in the disposition of the option. *362 When the sale of a two-thirds interest to defendant corporation ivas broached he agreed with them that they should have an interest with him in the remaining one-third of the property when the option was taken up and the two-thirds conveyed to the defendant corporation. This interest of the Gustafsons and Brandell was not disclosed to the other officers and directors or stockholders of the defendant corporation, and on April 23, 1934, a contract was entered into between the owners of the property as vendors and the defendant corporation as vendee whereby it was agreed that for a consideration of $75,000 payable in four instalments the vendors were to convey to the defendant corporation a two-thirds interest in the property and to the defendant Dahl a one-third interest, deeds to be executed and placed in escrow with the First National. Bank at Fairbanks with instructions to deliver them to the respective grantees upon the payment of the purchase price in full by the corporate defendant. The contract granted to the corporate defendant, and not to Dahl, the right .to enter upon the mining property and to conduct mining operations thereon. Later it was agreed between the corporate defendant and Dahl that the corporation was to be reimbursed for the moneys expended for the development of the property before the division of profits according to the respective interests. The defendant Thurston was a stockholder in the corporate defendant but not an officer or director-. He ivas a friend of Dahl and- ivas given an equal share with Dahl and the others in Dahl’s one-third. Later the defendants Drew and Wyer were given an interest in Dahl’s one-third. Probably this was done when they discovered that the Gustafsons and Brandell had been promised an interest. Defendant G. H. Gustafson Avas also promised an interest. Thereupon a corporation known as the ■ Dahl Corporation was organized under the Iuavs of Alaska with a capital stock of 400 nonpar shares, 50 of .which Avere issued to each of the eight individuals who had an interest- in Dahl’s one-third which Avas transferred to the Dahl Corporation. Dahl was given employment as superintendent or manager of the mining, operations by the corporate defendant, *363 which spent around $72,000 in development work. The operations in the ensuing years proved to be very profitable.

In February, 1938, plaintiff brought this action and included as defendants Thurston and G. H. Gustafson, who, though stockholders of the defendant corporation, were not officers or directors thereof but who had received stock in the Dahl Corporation. Prior to the commencement of the action Drew and Wyer offered to transfer their Dahl Corporation stock to the defendant corporation and subsequently did so.

Soon after the commencement of this action the stockholders of defendant corporation held a meeting and elected a new board of directors which engaged attorneys to represent it herein. An answer was filed in behalf of the corporation which demanded all the relief sought by the plaintiff. Counsel for the corporation took an active part in the trial, which resulted in findings in favor of the plaintiff and the corporation to the extent that directors Brandell, J. A. Gustafson, and D. R. Gustafson concealed their arrangement with Dahl from other representatives of the corporation until after the consummation of the transaction. The trial court ordered those defendants to transfer their Dahl Corporation stock to the defendant corporation, or if the rights of third parties should have intervened they were to pay to the defendant corporation the value of the stock, which the court found to be $100 per share. As to the defendant G. H. Gustafson, who Avas not a director at the time of the transaction and who had received his interest partly from the directors and partly from Dahl, it required that he turn over to the corporation 30 shares or their value, 30 shares having been the portion of his stock representing the interest which the court considered that he had acquired from Brandell and the two other Gustafsons. No relief was granted against DreAV and Wyer, Avho had turned over their stock to the defendant corporation prior to the trial. They were given their costs and disbursements, as Avere Thurston and Dahl, who had no trust relation to the corporation.

The plaintiff was dissatisfied with this result and moved for amended findings on the theory of a conspiracy amongst all the *364 individual defendants to defraud the defendant corporation. The trial court declined to amend its findings and denied the motion for a new trial. Plaintiff now comes here assigning 38 errors but has briefed only the points that the evidence compelled a finding of a conspiracy to defraud to which all of the individual defendants Avere parties and that because Dahl and Thurston were benefited by reason of the corporate defendant’s having taken the two-thirds interest in the property upon the basis hereinbefore recited they should be compelled to turn over all their stock in the Dahl Corporation to the defendant corporation.

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Wenner v. Gulf Oil Corp.
264 N.W.2d 374 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1978)
Diedrick v. Helm
14 N.W.2d 913 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1944)
Nienaber v. Katz
43 N.E.2d 322 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1942)
Risvold Ex Rel. Cleary Hill Mines Co. v. Gustafson
296 N.W. 411 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1941)
State, by Peterson v. Anderson
294 N.W. 219 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
292 N.W. 103, 207 Minn. 359, 1940 Minn. LEXIS 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/risvold-v-gustafson-minn-1940.