Van Hooser v. Keenon

271 S.W.2d 270, 1954 Ky. LEXIS 1038
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 11, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 271 S.W.2d 270 (Van Hooser v. Keenon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Hooser v. Keenon, 271 S.W.2d 270, 1954 Ky. LEXIS 1038 (Ky. 1954).

Opinion

STEWART, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Fayette Circuit Court awarding $9,375 to plaintiffs, R. W. Kepnon and his wife, Eloise Keenon, this amount representing one-fourth of the sum of $37,500 paid to James D. Van Hooser and Harold J. Utter, and to three other stockholders, all defendants below, for an option to purchase 60% of the stock of Western Kentucky Stages, a small bus line operating in Kentucky and Tennessee. The Keenons own 25% of the total stock in the bus line; defendants hold 63% thereof. We shall hereinafter refer to the parties as "plaintiffs” and “defendants,” and to Western Kentucky Stages as “Western.” The essential facts out of which this litigation arose are not in dispute.

Plaintiffs, R. W. Keenon and Eloise Keenon, and defendants, Harold J. Utter and James D. Van Hooser, and three others who are not parties to this appeal, in November of 1945, acquired a bus line, together with the necessary equipment and facilities, which was to be and thereafter was operated by them under the name of Western Kentucky Stages. After the purchase, a partnership agreement was entered into which, so far as pertinent to this case, provided that no partner should have the right to sell his or her interest in the partnership without the consent of the other partners and without first giving those partners an opportunity to buy such interest. The bus line existed as a partnership from 1946 until the latter part of 1947 or the early part of 1948.

The interests of plaintiffs in the partnership were never held by them but were retained by defendant, Harold J. Utter, as their trustee. The reason for this arrangement was that at the time of the acquisition of Western in 1945 by the above persons plaintiff, R. W. Keenon, had for a ■number of years been, closely connected with Western’s large competitor, Southeastern Greyhound Lines, as the latter’s chief counsel, and, when application was made to the Interstate Commerce Commission for ratification of the purchase of Western by plaintiffs and defendants below, the Commission required as a condition of its approval that the interests of plaintiffs should not be in their names or under their control. Accordingly, in conformity with the 'Commission’s ruling the interests of the Kee-nons in the partnership were vested by written agreements for their benefit in defendant, Harold J. Utter.

During September, 1947, while defendants, James D. Van Hooser and Harold J. Utter, were in Chicago they were approached by the president of Greyhound, Inc., one of the large bus transportation systems of this country, and questioned concerning the possibility of the larger corporation purchasing control of Western. The reaction of the two defendants to this suggestion was favorable and, after some negotiations between them and Greyhound, Inc., the latter offered on October 15, 1947, to pay $37,500 for an option to buy 60% of Western’s stock in the event Western would alter its status from a partnership to that of a corporation. On October 24, 1947, a contract was executed by Greyhound, Inc., on the one hand and the five defendants below on the other, whereby it was agreed to give this larger bus line an option to purchase 60% of the stock of Western when the latter became a corporation. This entire 60% was to be purchased from these five persons who would own an aggregate of 63% of Western’s stock. The contract stipulated that these same persons would “use their best efforts to incorporate” Western. The sum of $37,500 was to be applied toward the purchase price but was to be retained by these persons upon the refusal or failure by Greyhound, Inc., to exercise its option.

Subsequently, in October, 1947, defendants on this appeal sought out plaintiffs and requested that the partnership be changed to a corporation and that the stock be issued to the partners in proportion to *272 their interests in the partnership. Two reasons were advanced by these defendants for the change. First, they asserted they desired to be relieved of the personal liability imposed by the partnership setup and, secondly, they contended they - were having difficulty in persuading the Federal Revenue Department to permit Jennie W. Van Hooser, wife of James D. Van Hooser, and Dagne Utter, wife of Harold J. Utter, to claim as partners their proportionate share of the income from Western. Plaintiffs testified they opposed substituting the partnership for a corporation for some time but they finally yielded to the plan only upon the condition that these five persons who would own 63% of the outstanding stock in the corporation would agree they would not sell their stock without also obtaining for plaintiffs the right to sell their interest in the corporation on the same terms and conditions. This proposal was then adopted, the corporation was organized and the foregoing provision was embraced in an agreement which was drawn up and signed by these parties.

After the partnership became a corporation, the option money that had been paid to defendants on this appeal was later forfeited by the refusal of Greyhound, Inc., to complete its deal and the $37,500 was divided among the five defendants below. Plaintiff, R. W. Keenon, received information through his employer, Southeastern Greyhound Lines, that some sort of transaction had taken place between defendants and Greyhound, Inc. He attempted to induce defendants, James D. Van Hooser and Harold J. Utter, to disclose the nature of this transaction, but this they refused to do. Still later, having since learned the details of the undertaking between Greyhound, Inc., and the five persons involved, Keenon appeared at a meeting of Western’s stockholders and introduced a resolution to the effect that the entire $37,500 representing the option money forfeited to these persons should be paid into the treasury of the corporation for the benefit of all stockholders. The resolution failed for want of a second. The Keenons then instituted suit, claiming 25% of the sum in question.

Defendants on this appeal took the position in circuit court and take the same stand here that the pption agreement was not a dealing with any property belonging to either plaintiff, but the sale, had it been effected, would have only included the 60% interest of the five defendants below in the bus line, and it is argued plaintiffs are claiming a share in a result they did nothing to produce. These defendants admit that knowledge of the contract between the five Western partners and Greyhound, Inc., was purposely withheld from plaintiff, R. W. Keenon, because it is insisted he would have caused Southeastern Greyhound Lines to use its powerful influence to frustrate the optioners’ plan.

Upon submitting their cause to the lower court, plaintiffs first contended defendants as their copartners wilfully made false representations to them as to the true reason for their desire' to change the partnership to a corporation and that as a consequence of these alleged fraudulent acts plaintiffs were induced to consent to incorporation with the result that defendants were enabled to collect $37,500 in option money from Greyhound, Inc. Secondly, plaintiffs insist that defendant, Harold J. Utter, held their interests in the business in trust for them and that he also individually owned a portion of Western, so that, as their trustee, he violated the duty imposed upon him by law when he gave an option on his own individual interest at a considerable profit to himself and deliberately failed and refused to include the interests of these plaintiffs in the option agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 S.W.2d 270, 1954 Ky. LEXIS 1038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-hooser-v-keenon-kyctapphigh-1954.