Rooke v. Grant

76 A.2d 793, 77 R.I. 447, 1950 R.I. LEXIS 101
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 21, 1950
DocketEq. No. 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 76 A.2d 793 (Rooke v. Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rooke v. Grant, 76 A.2d 793, 77 R.I. 447, 1950 R.I. LEXIS 101 (R.I. 1950).

Opinion

*448 Capotosto, J.

This is a bill in equity to establish a constructive trust and for an accounting. It was heard in the superior court on bill and answer in the nature of a cross bill. *449 Following hearings over an extended period of time the trial justice denied and dismissed the bill and a decree to that effect was thereafter duly entered. The cause is before us on complainants’ appeal from the entry of that decree.

The complainants George F. Rooke and Jennie L. Rooke are husband and wife, hereinafter frequently referred to as the Rookes. They instituted these proceedings on behalf of themselves and “other stockholders of the Money-Meters, Inc., a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Michigan, who may appear herein and pay their proportionate part of the expense and costs hereof * * No other stockholder joined with the Rookes. Confusion will be avoided by keeping in mind that Money-Meters, Inc. of Michigan is not the respondent “Money-Meters, Inc.,” a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Rhode Island. In the course of this opinion we will refer to the former merely as “Money Meters” and to the latter as “Money Meters of Rhode Island.”

The real respondent in this cause is Max L. Grant, individually and doing business as Mary Investment Company. The respondents Louis Meisel, Charles C. Brown, Gardner Investment Company, and Money-Meters, Inc. of Rhode Island are admittedly agents -or agencies of Grant. The other respondents are Coin-Meters, Inc., hereinafter called Coin Meters, and Leonard Yalve Company.

It is impossible to set out with any degree of particularity and within reasonable limits either the many allegations of the bill and of the answer in the nature of a cross 'bill, or the evidence in support thereof which comprises 3,772 pages of testimony and 368 exhibits. In the circumstances we must necessarily confine ourselves to a mere outline of the pleadings and to a summary in general terms of the evidence, which we have examined with the assistance of extensive briefs from the parties.

The bill sets out in great detail complainants’ financial dealings with Grant over many years with special reference to the period from September 1936 to the bringing of this *450 suit in July 1943. The various transactions between the parties and the consequences thereof during the period from 1936 to 1943 concerned mainly the management and attempted rehabilitation of Money Meters, a corporation which the Rookes controlled as stockholders, officers and directors, and also of the Providence Manufacturing and Tool Company, hereinafter called Providence Tool, the trade name of an unincorporated business concern originally owned by the complainant George L. Rooke personally, which company, in the course of the dealings under consideration, was incorporated as Coin Meters. The gravamen of complainants’ allegations is that Grant, who had knowledge of the precarious financial situation of the above-named corporation and company, “solicited” the complainants to give him their “complete confidence,” representing to them that if they “would put their trust in him, he [Grant] would protect the assets and business of their concerns and of them personally * * that by such solicitations he won complainants’ confidence to the extent that on September 23, 1936 they entered into an agreement with him whereby they gave Grant “exclusive control in the management of their said enterprises” for the above-mentioned purposes.

On the basis of such fundamental allegations the bill then proceeds tO' describe complainants’ subsequent business dealings with Grant in relation to the affairs of the two corporations and his ultimate alleged conversion of complainants’ interests therein to his own personal benefit and advantage. The main prayer of the bill is that Grant and the other respondents as his agents be held as constructive trustees for the Rookes of all properties and moneys that came into their respective hands and possession by reason of such dealings, and that they be required to give an accounting thereof.

Respondents’ answer in the nature of a cross bill specifically denies each and every allegation of the bill with reference to complainants’ claim that Grant induced or *451 solicited them to do business with him in the manner about which they now complain. The answer, like the bill, sets out fully from Grant’s viewpoint the business relations between the parties for over twenty years. The substance of the answer is that Grant'always dealt with the complainants on a strictly business basis and for profit, without any solicitation or inducement on his part; that for some time prior to 1936 he had refused to lend the Rookes any more money; that in September of that year they personally and through others besought him to assist them as a matter of business in their extreme financial predicament, they and their various enterprises, especially Money Meters, then being on the brink of disaster; that he finally yielded to such entreaties and after a preliminary examination entered into the agreement of September 23, 1936; and that, except for an addition to that agreement on September 24, the complainants were thereafter always represented by counsel. In other words the basic theme of the answer is that the Rookes, well knowing Grant’s mode of doing business, voluntarily agreed to give him not only full and unusual compensation for his anticipated substantial investment in most unfavorable circumstances but also to pay him for the time, experience and efforts that he would be called upon to expend in the matter.

As with the pleadings, we will now outline the evidence in general language except in rare instances. It appears that by 1936 the Rookes were not novices in business matters, including the promotion, development and management of corporations organized by them. There is also evidence showing that they were inclined to take long chances in investments of various kinds and that they did not hesitate to use the funds of one of their corporations or ventures for the benefit of another whenever they deemed it convenient for their own personal interests. On the other hand the evidence shows Grant as a conservative investor and moneylender who, carrying on his business mainly through agents and corporate agencies, *452 exacted both security and extraordinary compensation from those who came to. him for his money or services.

It further appears that the Rookes and Grant had numerous dealings with each other in money matters for many years before the agreement, which is at the root of this cause, was signed in September 1936. We need not refer to such prior dealings as they have no material bearing-on the issue now before us. However, by 1936 the Rookes personally and most of their enterprises, especially Money (Meters and Providence Tool, had become involved in serious and pressing financial difficulties. It was in such circumstances that they turned to Grant and besought his assistance in extricating them from their precarious situation.

In September 1936 Money Meters, the successor to the Rooke Automatic Register Company of Maine, manufactured automatic coin registering machines.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wistow Barylick, Inc. v. Bowen, 94-6341 (2002)
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2002
Del Greco v. Del Greco
142 A.2d 714 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1958)
Girard v. Sorel
125 A.2d 212 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1956)
Lawrence v. Andrews
122 A.2d 132 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 A.2d 793, 77 R.I. 447, 1950 R.I. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rooke-v-grant-ri-1950.