Vance v. Schulder

547 S.W.2d 927, 1977 Tenn. LEXIS 573
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by120 cases

This text of 547 S.W.2d 927 (Vance v. Schulder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vance v. Schulder, 547 S.W.2d 927, 1977 Tenn. LEXIS 573 (Tenn. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION

FONES, Justice.

The principal issue in this Court is the appropriate statute of limitations applicable to a suit based upon alleged fraudulent representations said to have induced the sale of stock for less than its value.

The five (5) individual defendants were the directors of Hartsville Manufacturing Corporation and of Consolidated Merchandising Corporation. Defendants owned substantially all of the stock of Consolidated Merchandising Corporation and ninety (90%) percent of the stock of Hartsville. Plaintiff, Woodson Vance, owned ten (10%) percent of the stock of Hartsville. Plaintiff filed suit June 23, 1972, alleging that one of defendants, Paul Schulder, “falsely and fraudulently and with intent to deceive and *929 defraud plaintiff” represented on June 18, 1968, that U. S. Industries, Inc. had offered to purchase Hartsville for $360,000; that said representation was false and known by all of defendants to be false; that in fact U. S. Industries had offered the defendants $708,000 for all of the stock of Hartsville; that plaintiff was induced to sell his ten (10%) percent interest in Hartsville for $36,-000 and that by reason of defendants’ misrepresentation he suffered damages in the amount of $34,800.

Defendants denied that any false representation was made and asserted that in fact no separate sum for Hartsville stock was offered or paid by U. S. Industries; that the complaint showed upon its face that it was barred by the statute of limitations, and other defenses.

The material evidence adduced at the trial was as follows:

Hartsville was originally a cabinet shop in which plaintiff was a one-third partner. In 1959 defendants, or a wholly owned corporation of which they were directors and stockholders, bought fifty (50%) percent of Hartsville and later purchased an additional forty (40%) percent with plaintiff retaining ten (10%) percent. Plaintiff was the plant manager and was paid a weekly salary and received an annual bonus of three (3%) percent of the profits before taxes. His contacts with defendants and the parent corporation owned by them were limited almost entirely to Paul Schulder who came to Hartsville frequently and plaintiff was in touch with him on the phone almost daily. The corporate books were kept in New York but he received annual statements and balance sheets from the company. He acknowledged that he could read a financial statement. He testified that Paul Schulder came to Hartsville on June 18, 1968, and told him that the parent corporation, Consolidated Merchandising, had a chance to sell all of the stock of Hartsville; that in order to do so they needed his stock; that they were going to sell to U. S. Industries for $360,000. Plaintiff agreed and executed a ninety (90) day option to sell his stock in Hartsville to defendant for $12,000 cash, $12,000 in sixty (60) days after the exercise of the option and the balance ninety (90) days thereafter. The option was exercised on July 16, 1968.

It was also a part of the agreement that plaintiff would continue as plant manager after the sale to U. S. Industries. Plaintiff testified that in February, 1972, he learned for the first time that U. S. Industries had paid approximately twice the figure of $360,000 for the stock of Hartsville.

Phillip Holder, a certified public accountant testified for the plaintiff. He had no personal knowledge of the negotiations but he had examined the agreement and plan of reorganization between U. S. Industries and Consolidated Merchandising Corporation and the balance sheets and earnings statements of the selling corporation and its six (6) subsidiaries for the purpose of giving his opinion of the value that U. S. Industries might have placed upon the Hartsville stock in arriving at the total sum paid for the seven (7) corporations. The only figure appearing on the face of the sale agreement was the total selling price paid at the time of closing, June 25,1968, which was $4,867,-000. This sum was to be paid by issuing its equivalent in value of U. S. Industries common stock at its closing price on the New York Stock Exchange on said date. The agreement provided that U. S. Industries would issue and deliver to Consolidated Merchandising additional shares for each of the calendar years 1968 through 1972 wherein pre-tax profits exceeded specified amounts. In accordance with the formula specified in the contract additional shares having a value of $1,926,232 were received by Consolidated in 1969 and $1,428,717 in 1970. No additional shares were due in 1971 or 1972 and thus the total sum received for the seven (7) corporations, paid in shares of stock of U. S. Industries, was $8,221,949. The witness Holder compared Hartsville’s book value and performance with that of the Consolidated group, using four different methods of accounting which produced values ranging from $582,837 to *930 $762,218. 1 He conceded that these figures did not give any consideration to intangibles, such as good will, trade names owned by corporations in the group other than Hartsville, nor to any advantages or disadvantages of the sale of seven (7) corporations in one package.

Defendant Paul Schulder denied telling plaintiff that the company would be sold for a specified sum. He said that the book value of Hartsville at the time of sale was approximately $230,000 but the Board of Directors decided that for the purpose of purchasing plaintiff’s stock they were willing to consider that the book value was $360,000; that said value had no relation to any figure placed on Hartsville stock to be paid by U. S. Industries; that no separate value was established for the Hartsville Corporation either in the negotiations or the documents. He emphasized the fact that payment by U. S. Industries was not in cash, which plaintiff received, but in U. S. Industries stock; that restrictions were placed upon the sale of that stock in the hands of the sellers; and that the only assured payment was the $4,867,000, in stock issued June 25, 1968.

The learned Chancellor held that any statute of limitations applicable had been tolled because plaintiff had not discovered the fraud until a few months before the complaint was filed. He found that a fraud had been perpetrated on plaintiff and entered judgment for $34,800 plus interest.

The Court of Appeals reversed finding T.C.A. § 28-305, the three (3) year statute of limitations for tortious property damage, to be applicable and not tolled because plaintiff had not exercised reasonable diligence in attempting to discover the fraud. We agree with the results reached by the Court of Appeals on both issues.

Plaintiff testified that Schulder showed him brochures from U. S. Industries, but admitted that he made no inquiry about any of the details of the proposed sale to that company. Plaintiff made no effort to show that he could not have obtained the full facts about the sale before it was consummated or immediately thereafter. The stock of U. S. Industries, Inc. was traded on the New York Stock Exchange in 1968. A full and complete description of the transaction between U. S. Industries and Consolidated Merchandising Corporation was filed with the Exchange.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
547 S.W.2d 927, 1977 Tenn. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vance-v-schulder-tenn-1977.