Thompson v. Afro-American Co.

92 F. Supp. 213, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2500
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedAugust 29, 1950
DocketCiv. No. 3666
StatusPublished

This text of 92 F. Supp. 213 (Thompson v. Afro-American Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Afro-American Co., 92 F. Supp. 213, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2500 (D. Md. 1950).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Chief Judge.

At the outset, the Court wants to allude to two points which have been important in the case and on either one of which the Court might perhaps have dismissed this suit.

First is the question of the plaintiff’s citizenship, namely,- whether there has been in fact adequate proof of the plaintiff having-been a citizen of the State of New York at the time the suit was filed, so as to provide the diversity of citizenship requisite to this Court’s jurisdiction.

Second, is the question whether, in any event, plaintiff’s rights which are at issue here had been previously adjudicated by litigation in the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City, and thereby had become res adjudicata.

When these two points were originally raised and fully argued, this Court concluded that while at least the first one, namely, that of jurisdiction, presented a rather close factual point, nevertheless the complaint should not be dismissed on either ground, but that all the facts should be fully heard. After hearing the case fully on its merits, the Court is not disposed to change its view with respect to these two points. However, the Court finds that, on the evidence, for the reasons herein [214]*214fully stated, the complaint must be dismissed.

This is a suit founded upon allegations of gross fraud. More specifically, the objects of the suit are as follows, as set forth in the amended bill of complaint:

First, to set aside the sale which the plaintiff made to defendants of forty shares of stock in the defendant corporation, the Afro-American Company, plaintiff having acquired these shares under the will of his grandfather, plaintiff ‘ asserting, (a), that he was induced to part with this stock by fraudulent representations made to him by the individual defendants to the effect that he was not in fact selling the stock to them, but that it was being transferred to them merely as security for a loan to him of $1200; and (b), that the transaction, if in fact a sale, constituted a breach of trust in that two of the individual defendants, John H. Murphy, Jr., and David W. Arnett Murphy, as surviving trustees under the will of John H. Murphy, Sr., were personally interested in the stock and failed to disclose to the plaintiff, who was one of the beneficiaries under the' will, either their interest or the true value of the shares transferred, and further that the transfer was for a grossly inadequate consideration, namely, $30 a share.

The second object of the suit is to secure an accounting and reimbursement to the plaintiff for the alleged wrongs done him by the defendants as trustees in breaching the trust.

The third object is to secure an accounting for the alleged wrong committed by the individual defendants as officers and directors of the corporate defendant, the Afro-American Company, against the plaintiff as a stockholder in that company.

The Court finds the following facts clearly and definitely established by the weight of the credible evidence. The plaintiff is 45 years old. For 16 years he worked for the defendant company. In 1929 he moved to New York for the purpose of taking a course in linotyping so that he might return to the defendant company in Baltimore and be better able to advance in its employment. In 1930, while still residing in New York, and being hard up for funds, he communicated with three of the individual defendants, George, Carl and Arnett Murphy, his uncles, asking them for information as to what his forty shares of stock in the defendant company were then worth and whether he could dispose of them for the purpose of obtaining funds whereby he might continue his technical education in New York. As a result, plaintiff was invited to come to Baltimore to discuss the matter with his uncles. They read to him the provisions of his grandfather’s will, by virtue of which he had acquired the forty shares of stock in the defendant company, and he was advised by them not to dispose of his stock. However, he insisted upon doing so-, and after a good deal of discussion and further correspondence he still maintained that he wanted to’ sell the shares.

.It is plaintiff’s position that throughout the negotiations had with his uncles it was, merely a loan which he asked for and' intended to obtain, and thought he had obtained, and not a sale of his stock. However, his uncles all testified to the contrary, namely, that the question of lending the. plaintiff money on his stock was not considered by them or by the plaintiff, and that their entire negotiations related to an outright purchase of the plaintiff’s forty shares-

Since the two surviving trustees under the trust had been merely passive and had utilized the corporate defendant to handle the stock under the trust, i. e., to make, any transfers thereof, and to disburse dividends thereon, etc.; and because, by the trust, there were restrictions imposed, against the stock’s acquisition by other than, ■members of the Murphy family, the trustees, laid before the board of directors of the company in September, 1930, the question of acquiring plaintiff’s stock. It was thereupon agreed by them that the company should buy this stock for $30 a share, the-total purchase price, namely $1200, to be-paid in installments of $33 a month, except, that the first payment, to be made at the-time the contract was executed, should consist of four such installments. This method, of payment was provided because it was felt [215]*215by the defendants that the plaintiff was not careful in his spending. What they really feared was that, being hard up and rather improvident, the plaintiff might dispose of his stock to someone outside of the family, which would be contrary to the close family corporation which the testator, plaintiff’s grandfather, had expressly provided for in his will. Whether such was a wise thing to have done is not a material question here. But it is a fact, as appears clearly from the provisions of the will, and the manner in which the defendants were operating the newspaper company.

The contract with the plaintiff for the purchase of his stock was embodied in a formal agreement dated December 27, 1930, which the plaintiff and the trustees of the defendant company each personally signed. There was also executed simultaneously a paper whereby the trustees sold the stock to the defendant company. Proper receipt was given to plaintiff for the stock and the installment payments were regularly and fully made. When the full amount of $1200 had been paid to plaintiff in May, 1933, he signed a formal written receipt to this effect, which recited that he had received full payment for forty shares of Afro-American Company stock. At this time the plaintiff was again residing in Baltimore and working for the defendant company, he having returned the previous year.

Until 1941, the plaintiff never raised with any of the individual defendants any question concerning the stock which he had transferred in 1930, that is, not until eleven years later, when he asked his uncle, Carl Murphy, then president of the defendant company, what had become of the dividends on his stock, saying that he had understood the stock had been transferred merely in connection with a loan which the company made him. The plaintiff thereupon was informed by his uncle that such was not so - — that he had made an out and out sale of his stock, and that the terms of his written agreement were expressly to that effect. The same information was given him by his other relatives, who' had either actively participated in, or approved of the execution of the agreement in 1930.

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Bluebook (online)
92 F. Supp. 213, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-afro-american-co-mdd-1950.