Strasburger v. Mars, Inc.

83 A.2d 101, 46 Del. 274, 7 Terry 274, 1951 Del. Super. LEXIS 103
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 7, 1951
DocketCiv. A. 236
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 83 A.2d 101 (Strasburger v. Mars, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strasburger v. Mars, Inc., 83 A.2d 101, 46 Del. 274, 7 Terry 274, 1951 Del. Super. LEXIS 103 (Del. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

Terry, J.:

This is an action brought by Harry W. Strasburger, et al., plaintiffs, against Mars, Incorporated, defendant, for attorneys, fees in the amount of $64,500, alleged to be due the plaintiffs from the defendant for services rendered by plaintiffs during the period 1943-1949 in the collection for defendant, under Section 722 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U. S. C. A. § 722, of a tax refund in the approximate amount of $200,000.

° The complaint contains two counts: The first count is based upon a special contract to pay the amount sued for; the second count is based upon an implied promise to pay for services rendered.

The defendant in its answer has generally denied all of the essential allegations of the complaint, and, in addition thereto, has set forth a counterclaim in which the defendant alleges that plaintiffs are liable to it in the amount of $151,304.75 representing legal fees paid by defendant to plaintiffs during the year 1946 and the first six months of 1947. It is alleged that these payments were made by defendant as a result of deception which plaintiffs practiced upon defendant, the details of which are hereinafter set forth.

The plaintiffs have moved to dismiss the counterclaim for noncompliance with Rule 9(b) of this Court, which requires a cause of action based upon fraud to be alleged with particularity.

*276 The question to be determined is: Do the allegations of misrepresentation and concealment as contained in defendant’s counterclaim meet the requirements of Rule 9(b).

“Rule 9(b) Fraud * * *. In all averments of fraud * * * the circumstances constituting fraud * * * shall be stated with particularity. * * * ”

The pertinent allegations of the counterclaim are as follows:

“Prior to March 10, 1943 upon the recommendation of one of its then employees who was a client of the plaintiff, Claude R. Miller, the said plaintiffs became and were the attorneys for the defendant and the relationship of attorney and client existed between the said plaintiffs and the defendant during all of the time hereafter referred to.

“The said employee of the defendant upon whose recommendations plaintiffs had become the attorneys for the defendant continued in the employ of the defendant until September of 1949 and shortly thereafter the plaintiffs ceased to act as the attorneys for the defendant.

“At all of the times during which the plaintiffs were acting as the attorneys for the defendant, the defendant reposed special confidence and trust in said plaintiffs by reason of the relationship of attorney and client existing between them. In the year 1946 and during the first six months of 1947 the plaintiffs, knowing of the special confidence and trust reposed in them, submitted to the defendant long complex statements for their services ostensibly rendered to the defendant by the plaintiffs knowing that such statements would not be submitted to the Board of Directors of the defendant and knowing that such statements would be paid without question. During the years above mentioned, the defendant paid various statements submitted by the plaintiffs aggregating the following amounts in each of the following years:

1946 $106,102.95

First six mos. 1947 45,201.80

*277 “Within the past few months, the defendant has learned for the first time that the plaintiffs, during the years 1946 and 1947, billed the defendant for alleged services which in fact were not performed for the defendant. The statements of the plaintiffs were so worded as to conceal the true nature of numerous items for which they charged the defendant and by reason thereof the defendant was misled into paying the same which it would not have paid except for the plaintiff’s misrepresentations and concealments.

“By reason of the fiduciary relationship existing between the plaintiffs and defendant and the plaintiffs’ misrepresentations and concealment, the defendant has paid to the plaintiffs the sum of One Hundred Fifty-one Thousand Three Hundred Four Dollars and Seventy-five Cents ($151,304.75) which it is entitled to recover from the said plaintiffs.

“At all of the times during which plaintiffs were acting as the attorneys for defendant, they acted through the plaintiff Miller. Defendant does not know to what extent, if any, the remaining plaintiffs had actual knowledge of the misrepresentations and concealment of the plaintiff Miller but alleges that plaintiff Miller, in practising the misrepresentations and concealment, was acting as a partner of, and therefore on behalf of, the remaining plaintiffs and that the remaining plaintiffs together with the plaintiff Miller have received the payments set forth above.

“Wherefore the defendant demands judgment against the plaintiffs dismissing the complaint herein and that the defendant have judgment against the plaintiffs for One Hundred Fifty-one Thousand Three Hundred Four Dollars and Seventy-five Cents ($151,304.75) and that the defendant have judgment for interest on the amount found to be due to him from the plaintiffs on which the same is found to be due and for costs.”

Although the word “fraud” has not been expressly used in the language of the counterclaim, it is, nevertheless, clear that *278 the defendant’s action is based thereon and its right to relief depends, of course, upon its ability to establish that the plaintiffs deceived it into paying sums of money to the plaintiffs by reason of the misrepresentations and concealments contained in the invoices as rendered to it from time to time by the plaintiffs during the year 1946 and the first six months of 1947.

A determination of the question involves the proper interpretation to be given the language employed under Rule 9(b) as indicated.

The plaintiffs suggest that the provisions of the Rule clearly indicate that a detailed recitation of the circumstances constituting the fraud must be alleged. They maintain in the present case that they are entitled to know the precise statements contained in each invoice for the year 1946 and the first six months of 1947, which constitute the alleged misrepresentations and concealments by which the defendant was misled into paying for services allegedly not rendered by plaintiffs to it. They further suggest that the defendant must allege at the outset which officers or directors of the corporation were deceived. Otherwise, they say they are unable to adequately prepare an answer to said counterclaim. Citing Speed v. Transamerica Corp., D. C. Del. 1945, 5 F. R. D. 56; Winter v. Pennsylvania R. R. Co., (1948) 5 Terry 429, 61 A. 2d 398; Miller v. Loft, Inc., (1931) 17 Del. Ch. 301, 153 A. 861; Fritz v. E. I. DuPont De Nemours & Co., (1950) 6 Terry 427, 75 A. 2d 256.

The defendant contends that a correct interpretation of the rule is to say that, while general allegations of fraud are insufficient, only ultimate facts rather than evidentiary details are required to be pleaded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 A.2d 101, 46 Del. 274, 7 Terry 274, 1951 Del. Super. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strasburger-v-mars-inc-delsuperct-1951.