SK Hand Tool v. Dresser Industries

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 15, 1996
Docket1-94-3997
StatusPublished

This text of SK Hand Tool v. Dresser Industries (SK Hand Tool v. Dresser Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SK Hand Tool v. Dresser Industries, (Ill. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION OCTOBER 15, 1996

No. 1-94-3997

SK HAND TOOL CORPORATION ) APPEAL FROM THE and CORCORAN PARTNERS, LTD. ) CIRCUIT COURT Plaintiffs-Appellees, ) OF COOK COUNTY. Cross-Appellants, ) ) v. ) ) DRESSER INDUSTRIES, INC., ) HONORABLE Defendant-Appellant, ) MARTIN C. ASHMAN, Cross-Appellee. ) JUDGE PRESIDING.

PRESIDING JUSTICE CAMPBELL delivered the opinion of the court: Plaintiffs SK Hand Tool Corporation ("SK") and Corcoran Partners Limited ("Partners") sued defendant Dresser Industries, Inc. ("Dresser") for fraud in connection with the Partners' purchase of Dresser's hand tool division. Following a trial in the circuit court of Cook County, the jury returned a verdict for plaintiffs in the amount of four million dollars in compensa- tory damages and 50 million dollars in punitive damages. The trial court denied Dresser's post-trial motion, but granted a remittitur totalling 42 million dollars of the punitive damages. Plaintiffs consented to the remittitur. Both sides now appeal. The record on appeal indicates that Daniel Czuba and Thomas Corcoran formed Partners in 1982 to acquire and turn around troubled companies. The Partners first sought to buy Dresser's hand tool division. Dresser CEO Jack Murphy wanted the sale to close before the end of the fiscal year on October 31, 1983. The parties signed a letter of intent on August 16, 1983 and began negotiating a definitive agreement. Murphy would not sell to the Partners on credit. According to Rex Sebastian, a former Senior Vice Presi- dent of Dresser, Murphy also wanted to ensure that the loss to Dresser would not exceed $1,000,000. The sale was closed by a Purchase Agreement ("Agreement") signed on October 26, 1983. The purchase was a leveraged buy-out wherein the Partners put up $100,000 cash, pledged their personal assets and borrowed approximately $7.8 million to purchase the business. The estimated sale price was discounted by ten million dollars from book value, reflecting the poor performance and contingent liabilities of the business. The Partners' interest was assigned to SK, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Partners. Paragraph 3.2 of the Agreement provided that Dresser war- ranted an "Effective Date Balance Sheet," prepared from the books of account of the handtool division in accordance with the accounting principles, practices and procedures consistently applied by Dresser with respect to the handtool division. The Effective Date Balance Sheet was to fairly present in all mater- ial respects the asset values and liabilities for the items reflected thereon as of the effective date. Paragraph 2.4 of the Agreement provided that Dresser would have 45 days from the closing date to submit the Effective Date Balance Sheet to the buyer. Paragraph 2.4 also provided that in the event of any disagreement with the balance sheet within 60 days after receipt thereof, the parties would make a good-faith attempt to resolve their differences, with any such resolution becoming final and binding. If the parties were unable to resolve their differences within 30 days of Dresser's receipt of notice from the buyer, the parties would appoint a nationally recognized accounting firm to arbitrate the dispute. In December 1983, Dresser submitted the Effective Date Balance Sheet, showing that SK owed an additional $28,000 for the purchase of the handtool division. SK submitted the Effective Date Balance Sheet to the accounting firm of Peat, Marwick & Mitchell, which itemized $3.5 million in possible offsets SK might have against Dresser's calculation of the purchase price. SK submitted the list to Dresser, which disputed some of the claimed offsets. In March 1984, the parties unsuccessfully tried to settle their differences. Peat, Marwick & Mitchell later revised its list to $2.5 million in possible offsets. However, disagreements between the parties remained. On April 25, 1984, the plaintiffs filed a complaint to compel arbitration in the circuit court of Cook County. Dresser filed a petition for removal in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. Dresser also filed a three-count countercomplaint for sums Dresser allegedly advanced to SK to meet certain payroll obligations after the purchase. The plaintiffs later added counts alleging common law fraud and violation of the federal racketeering statutes to its complaint in federal court. On December 17, 1984, the district court ordered Dresser to submit the claims relating to the calculation of the Effective Date Balance Sheet to arbitration; Dresser's counterclaims were not submitted for arbitration. On July 25, 1985, the arbitrator awarded the Partners/SK a $1,386,000 reduction in the purchase price. In late 1985, SK was sold to a French entity named Facom. Corcoran and Czuba each made over two million dollars on the sale. On January 29, 1987, the racketeering count was dismissed. On July 29, 1987, the federal district court granted judgment on the arbitration award to the Partners/SK and to Dresser on all three counts of its countercomplaint. On August 19, 1987, SK and Dresser executed releases in satisfaction of judgment in the amount of $1,357,848.18 and interest and $1,456,121.83 and interest, respectively. In sum, the Partners/SK owed Dresser approximately $98,000. The trial court granted Dresser's motion to dismiss the common law fraud claim for lack of jurisdiction. Plaintiffs then filed a complaint against Dresser in the circuit court of Cook County on January 27, 1988. The complaint, later amended, alleged that officers and agents of Dresser misrepresented the value of the handtool division's assets and liabilities. In particular, the plaintiffs claimed that William Downey, President of the Dresser Tool Group, told them that the dollar value of "lifts" to which the handtool division was committed was "practically nothing." Plaintiffs also alleged that Dresser Tool Group Comptroller John Macaulay falsely told them that the handtool division's accounting practices differed from generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP") only with respect to intracompany transfers. Plaintiffs also alleged that Macaulay falsely represented that Dresser's figure for obsolete inventory would be "proper," when Dresser had removed items from the list of obsolete inventory that allegedly should have been included. The complaint further alleged that George Fansmith, the comptroller for the handtool division, represented that a liability for cooperative advertising had been accrued, but the liability was allegedly not reflected in Dresser's balance sheets, thereby inflating the purchase price. Finally, the complaint alleged that Dresser's representation that the balance sheet would fairly present the asset values and liabilities for the items reflected thereon was false. Plaintiffs alleged that they relied on these statements, but after learning of their falsity were forced to curtail marketing expenditures, resulting in lost sales and profits and a lower resale price. At trial, Daniel Czuba testified that after the Partners signed the letter of intent, he and Corcoran and outside advisors investigated the business. Czuba testified that in late August 1983, he discussed the handtool division's income statement and the balance sheet with comptroller Fansmith. Czuba testified that he asked Fansmith what was included in the accrued liabili- ties, and that Fansmith replied "just the ordinary things, coop and taxes and all sorts of things that you would expect to find in an accrual account." Czuba asked whether there was anything abnormal in the way Dresser kept the books; Fansmith replied that they "just use conventional accounting." Czuba testified that he then thought he understood how Dresser would have accounted for lifts.

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SK Hand Tool v. Dresser Industries, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sk-hand-tool-v-dresser-industries-illappct-1996.