Stopford v. Boonton Molding Co., Inc.

265 A.2d 657, 56 N.J. 169, 46 A.L.R. 3d 444, 1970 N.J. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 1, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 265 A.2d 657 (Stopford v. Boonton Molding Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stopford v. Boonton Molding Co., Inc., 265 A.2d 657, 56 N.J. 169, 46 A.L.R. 3d 444, 1970 N.J. LEXIS 239 (N.J. 1970).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Francis, J.

This case involves a damage claim based upon an alleged anticipatory breach by defendant-employer Boonton Molding Company of plaintiff-employee William T. Stopford’s vested contractual right to a lifetime pension. Defendants, Mecom, owner of all the stock of Boonton except for a few qualifying shares, and Koza and Clifton, officers of Boonton, were charged with the assumption of individual liability for payment of the pension. After trial, a jury verdict of $68,000 was returned against Boonton, Mecom and Koza. The claim against Clifton was dismissed with prejudice by consent. On appeal, ihe Appellate Division in an unreported per curiam opinion reversed the judgment below and remanded the cause for entry of judgment in favor of all defendants. This Court granted plaintiff’s application for certification. 55 N. J. 311 (1970).

Plaintiff Stopford entered the employ of Boonton Molding Company on or about January 1, 1944. At that time Boon-ton was owned by George Scribner. About 1956 defendant Mecom, a resident of Texas and an owner of a number of substantial business interests in his home state and elsewhere, and two associates acquired the company. Scribner remained as the manager for five years thereafter. After Scribner left around 1960, the business was operated as a *174 limited partnership by Mecom and an associate, Mabel; Stop-ford was made general manager. In December 1961 the company was incorporated and Stopford was appointed president.

At incorporation, Mecom, then owner of the company, acquired all of its stock except a few qualifying shares. In addition he became a director and chairman of the executive committee of the board of directors with authority to act for the board. It is beyond dispute that after December 1, 1961, although the business existed in corporate form, Mecom considered that he owned it and had absolute control over it. As he put it, he operated the company as his “own personal property”; what he said controlled. He did not have to consult the board of directors; he made the decisions, whatever their nature, and passed them on. He said, “I am in charge. I operate it [the company] as a business, as an individual.” In fact, he “appointed” Stopford as president of Boonton in a telephone call from Texas. Significant in this connection is a note included in Boonton’s financial statement of March 31, 1964 that “[u]nder the provisions of Subchapter S of the 1954 Internal Revenue Code, the Company, with the consent of its stockholders [Mecom], has elected [since 1961] to be treated as a ‘Small Business Corporation’ and, as such, any taxable income or losses are assumed by the individual stockholders.” Thus losses sustained by Boonton during Stopford’s tenure as president were included for tax purposes with the gains or losses from Mecom’s manifold individual enterprises. elsewhere, particularly in his home state, Texas.

In the early part of Stopford’s regime as president, a union instituted an effort to organize the Boonton production workers. Stopford and John Belding, a vice-president and director of the company, discussed means of avoiding unionization and of providing an employment inducement as well as an incentive for long-term service. One method they decided upon was the establishment of two pension plans, one for the production workers and the other for per *175 sonnel including officers of the company who would not bo included in the production workers’ bargaining unit. After obtaining outside expert assistance two separate plans were prepared, one for production workers which was to be noncontributory, the other for the remaining personnel, which was substantially the same in format, except that it called for contributions by the covered employees as well as by the company.

Around the spring of 1962 the two plans were presented by Stopford and Belding to' Mecom, Mrs. Mecom, also a Boonton director, and Mecom’s attorney, who had come up from Texas for the meeting. There is no doubt that at this time, in addition to the unionization activity, the company was suffering from financial problems. However, as the evidence reveals, Mecom was shown that if the plans were adopted certain substantial existing employee fringe benefits would be eliminated resulting in a net savings to the company of $55,000 annually over the cost of funding the pensions. Substantial testimony appears in the record that at this meeting Mecom — whose word was law — approved the plans and gave the word to go ahead. There is also some testimony that Mecom indicated he wanted to study the matter further.

There is no doubt that thereafter two pension plans were installed by Boonton and printed copies thereof distributed to the affected employees. One plan, covering all employees, was denominated the “Pension Plan”; the other, covering only the salaried employees, was called the “Pension Plan Contributory Group.” The only difference between the two plans, except for the amount of benefits payable, was that the employees who qualified for the contributory plan were required to contribute to the pension fund. The non-contributory plan became effective on June 1, 1962, and the contributory plan on January 1, 1963. Both provided for the creation of a pension fund and the appointment of a trustee to hold the fund, i. e., to receive company and employee contributions and pay the pensions as employee eligi *176 bility arose. Such a trust agreement between the company and a trustee was executed on January 1, 1963.

The preamble of the trust agreement recited that:

[I]t is the intention of the Company, in order to reward its present and future employees, who may qualify under this agreement, for faithful service rendered and to be rendered to the Company, to create a Pension Fund, and to assure, to the extent hereinafter provided, the sustenance of such participating employees in their old age, * * *.

The agreement specified that upon its execution, the company:

[s]liall pay into the Pension Fund, all monies required by it to be contributed to said Pension Fund, according' to the terms and conditions thereof, and all sums contributed and collected by it from employees, according to the terms and conditions of said Pension Fund. * * *

The direction and management of the fund and the administration oE the pension plans were committed to the "Administration Committee” exclusively, the chairman and members of which were to be appointed by the company.

The contributory plan, with which we are concerned in the present case, required each participating employee to contribute 4% of his annual compensation in excess of $4800 during each year of membership. It then provided that:

The Company shall bear the remaining cost of the Plan, and the Company shall contribute to the Trustee such amounts at such times as shall be decided by the Company. (Emphasis ours.)

The plan fixed the normal retirement date of a participant as the first day of the month next following his 65th birthday, provided he had completed 15 years of continuous service. Provision was included also for early retirement. Its text said:

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Bluebook (online)
265 A.2d 657, 56 N.J. 169, 46 A.L.R. 3d 444, 1970 N.J. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stopford-v-boonton-molding-co-inc-nj-1970.