Toledo Trust Co. v. Nye

588 F.2d 202, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7263
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 6, 1978
DocketNos. 77-3189, 77-3190
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 588 F.2d 202 (Toledo Trust Co. v. Nye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toledo Trust Co. v. Nye, 588 F.2d 202, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7263 (6th Cir. 1978).

Opinion

CELEBREZZE, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff brought this action in the district court alleging violation of § 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 19341 and Securities and Exchange Commission Rule 10b — 52 and several common law claims. The case hinges on the legal effect of a stock option contained in a corporation’s by-laws allowing the corporation to purchase the stock of a deceased shareholder. All of the numerous individual and corporate defendants appeal from a total judgment of roughly $500,000 entered against them after a bench trial. They contend that the facts developed below support neither the federal nor state claims for relief asserted by plaintiff. We agree and reverse.

Henry T. Ritter was a minority shareholder in Lantana Flower Farms, Inc. (Lantana), a closely-held Florida corporation engaged in the commercial flower business in Florida. At the time of his death on May 17, 1968, Ritter owner T43 of the 930 outstanding shares of common stock of Lantana. Article XI of Lantana’s by-laws, which provision is the crux of this litigation, restricted the transfer of the corporation’s stock.3 Article XI is a variation on a typical theme for closely-held corporations and gave Lantana an option to purchase all df the shares of a deceased shareholder, exercisable for thirty days after death. (Article XI, Section 2(a)(iii) & (b) & (c).) It also provided that the price of any shares so purchased was to be their “fair market value . . . as of the end of the month immediately preceding the exercise of the option. . . .” “Fair market value,” however, was artificially defined as either (a) any price the parties could agree upon or [204]*204(b) failing agreement, the higher of (i) “the book value of such shares as shown on the balance sheet of the corporation” or (ii) ten times the average per share earnings of such shares over the last three fiscal years. (Article XI, Section 2(e).)

On June 7, 1968, Lantana timely exercised its option to purchase Ritter’s 143 shares.4 The letter exercising the option stated that the “corporation believes the fair market value of said shares to be $50.00 each, or a total of $7,150.00 for all 143 shares.”5 It was proposed that the shares be transferred on June 14, 1968. Plaintiff, the executor of Ritter’s estate, requested an extension of time, which was approved by Lantana’s president and counsel. Plaintiff also requested and later received Lantana’s financial statement as of June 30, 1968, its fiscal year end. No other significant progress was made toward resolution of this matter until April 1969.

In the meantime, in December 1968, two representatives of United Fruit Company6 visited Lantana’s operations and talked with its president, defendant William Nye.7 The United representatives did not identify themselves as such and were known to Nye only as friends of an acquaintance of Nye. The United people contacted Nye again in March 1969 and this time fully identified themselves and their purpose, which was to investigate Lantana as a possible candidate for United to take over in order to get into the commercial flower business.

In early April 1969, Nye and Lantana’s counsel made a new offer to plaintiff for the purchase of Ritter’s shares. They offered $88.27 per share, for a total of $12,-622.61, which they thought to approximate the “fair market value,” viz., book value as set forth in Article XI.8 This offer was not accepted by plaintiff, which sought further financial data on Lantana. Later in April, after Lantana’s accountants had formally calculated the book value of the shares, another offer was made which reflected these new calculations. It amounted to a total of $14,607.24, or about $102.15 per share.9 The letter transmitting this offer to plaintiff advised that if it were not accepted within fifteen days Lantana would deposit the total sum in a Florida bank, with instructions to pay it to plaintiff upon receipt of Ritter’s stock certificates, and cancel the certificates on the books of the corporation, as provided in the by-laws. (Article XI, Section 2(f).) Both of these actions were taken by Lantana in mid-May 1969.

At some point during these negotiations, Nye told one of plaintiff’s trust officers by telephone that Lantana would round the $14,607.24 up to an even $15,000 (about $104.90 per share), which he said was “more than fair,” in order to settle the matter. Advised by counsel that Lantana would prevail in an action to compel sale of the shares, plaintiff accepted the $15,000 offer [205]*205in late May and sent the stock certificates to the Florida bank, which in turn sent the $15,000 to plaintiff in early June 1969.

Also in late May 1969, United began serious negotiations for the takeover of Lantana. At an early June Lantana shareholders’ meeting it was decided by all the remaining shareholders that the sale price would have to be in the “neighborhood of” $3,000,000. By late June 1969 it was agreed to sell all outstanding Lantana stock to United for $2,600,000, plus a $150,000 bonus if Nye could double its production in a year. United also signed Nye to a long-term contract. After an audit of Lantana, the sale was closed in August 1969.10 The per share price received from United by the remaining shareholders of Lantana was roughly thirty times the per share price Lantana had paid plaintiff for Ritter’s shares a few months earlier.

The record does not reveal that any representative of plaintiff had any knowledge of Lantana’s dealings with United until well after the sale of stock. There wás no disclosure of any of these developments by anyone connected with Lantana or United. Plaintiff eventually learned what happened in August 1970, however, and filed this action in August 1972. Joined as defendants were Nye and his wife Shirley L. Nye, Pinckney S. Cook and his wife Erma G. Cook, and Jackson Kamison, who were all the shareholders of Lantana other than Ritter, and Lantana and United.11

After extensive discovery, the district court ruled, in pertinent part, that before his death Ritter had not been coerced into transferring some shares to Nye, that plaintiff was estopped to deny the validity of the exercise of the option by Lantana, that summary judgment was not appropriate on plaintiff’s § 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 claims, and that those claims were not barred by the statute of limitations.12 392 F.Supp. 484 (N.D.Ohio 1975). None of these determinations are contested in this appeal and we have no occasion to rule on them here.13

The district court then heard evidence in a three day bench trial. The court found for plaintiff and entered judgment in its favor in the amount of $407,840, plus $75,-000 for attorneys fees and expenses, plus interest on both sums from August 1969. 426 F.Supp. 908 (N.D.Ohio 1977). The main thrust of the district court’s opinion was that, while Article XI gave Lantana an option to purchase Ritter's shares, Lantana extended the time to close the transaction until June 1969 (when the $15,000 was sent to plaintiff) and the defendants had a duty to disclose to plaintiff all the information that they had through that date concerning the United takeover. The court found complete nondisclosure by all defendants, characterized as “very bad faith indeed,” id.

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The Toledo Trust Company v. William N. Nye
588 F.2d 202 (Sixth Circuit, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
588 F.2d 202, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toledo-trust-co-v-nye-ca6-1978.