W. H. Roquemore v. Ford Motor Company

400 F.2d 255
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 1968
Docket25322_1
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 400 F.2d 255 (W. H. Roquemore v. Ford Motor Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. H. Roquemore v. Ford Motor Company, 400 F.2d 255 (5th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:

In this diversity action we must determine whether a breach of fiduciary duty by a local real estate agent is excused because it was directed, with moderate success, against Ford Motor Company. Concluding as we do that even corporate colossi should not be targets of fraud, we affirm the award of the district court.

The following condensation of material facts is uncontested. About May 1, 1964, representatives of Ford Motor Company contacted Wendell Holmes Roquemore, a *256 real estate agent licensed under the laws of Texas, regarding the purchase of land m Fort Worth Texas. Ford wished to acquire a site for a truck sales and service center m Fort Worth and desired to have Roquemore act as a dummy or “front man” m order to prevent public disclosure of Ford’s interest. During one of the meetings that followed, Ford s district sales manager m Dallas, Ken Stoepel, informed Roquemore that a vacant tract owned by H. T. Priddy was available for sale. Stoepel disclosed to Roquemore that Ford would pay no more than 50 cents per square foot for the property, approximately $270,000. Ro-quemore, upon learning the identity of the seller’s real estate agent, assured Stoepel that because this agent owed him a favor he would be able to negotiate a good price.

At Stoepel’s request to lay out the proposed transaction for the home office, Roquemore submitted to Ford a leather-bound brochure dated May 12, 1964, which analyzed the property’s location in the Fort Worth business community and praised its potential as a truck sales and service center. The final page in the brochure was composed of seven “Conclu-clusions,” the most relevant of which we quote below:

“1 — The primary objective is to locate a suitable Truck Sales and Service Site for FORD division.
2 — * * * Since it is desirable not to reveal FORD MOTOR COMPANY as the ultimate principal or sponsor, I am prepared to be the optionee solely for the benefit of your Company. [Emphasis added.]
******
5„You will observe that my refer. ence to ,and CQgt wag <on a bagis not to exceed m per square foot/ My efforts as negotiator will be to effect' a land cost at the lowest bU figur& but not fo exceed a6o„e figure.” [Emphasis in original ag to only ^ lagt gix words ]

Both Stoepel and Herbert Q. French, a truck dealer operations manager at Ford’s headquarters in Dearborn, Michigan, read the brochure and gave approval for Roquemore to place the property under option. (Whether Stoepel later instructed Roquemore to “tie the property up any way he could,” as is claimed by Roquemore, is a contested fact which we find lacking in material significance.^ Roquemore thereupon negotiated a written contract dated May 27, 1964> for the purchase of the property for $127,660.00, a figure far below Ford’s estimate at 500 per square foot. 1 The purchase was made subject to the Fort Worth Ci1Y Council’s re-zoning the proper^7 ^or light industrial use.

Roquemore immediately advised Stoepei that the property was “tied up.” On June 19, 1964, he wrote a letter to Ford’s Dallas district sales office advising them, }n part: “j can now confirm the negotiated sale price of this 12.372 acre tract to be $247,660.00.” We find the entire letter to be relevant to the issues at bar and therefore quote it in full:

Gentlemen
In the proposal which I submitted to you on May 12th, 1964 reference was *257 made to land cost of the subject Fort Worth property as ‘on a basis not to exceed .500 per square foot.’ In my opinion this is a reasonable and fair valuation.
At your request I have secured another appraisal of this land from a competent and unprejudiced source, the original of which I herewith enclose. I call your attention to his fair market value figures of ‘from $270,-000.00 to $275,000.00.’
Mr. H. C. Nowlin is a man of high standing, as well as long experience, in Fort Worth real estate dealings. His judgment of Commercial and Industrial land values in the Fort Worth area is second to none.
I can now confirm the negotiated sale price of this 12.372 acre tract to be $247,660.00. At this figure the square foot price is between .450 and .460.
With respect to the factor of change in zoning, the formal application will be filed before Friday, June 26th. All adjoining property owners have been talked to and have agreed to join us in our re-zoning petition. It is reasonably assumed that the Forth Worth Zoning Board will look with favor on our request.
Yours very truly,
W. H. ROQUEMORE”

Nowlin had indeed appraised the value of the land to be “from $270,000 to $275,-000.” However, Nowlin testified at trial that his appraisal was based, not on the value of the land as it was, but rather “on what he [Roquemore] told me of what he hoped would be built on it.” 2

On June 22 Roquemore furnished Stoepel a copy of the purchase contract with Priddy (the purchaser being Roque-more’s personal holding company) with the amount of earnest money and the total consideration deleted therefrom. He also presented to Stoepel an option contract providing that in consideration of $5,000 cash Stoepel or his assigns would be granted an option to purchase the property for $247,660, which option would be subject to a re-zoning of the property to “light industrial” use. Stoepel signed the contract as purchaser pursuant to his authorization from Ford.

Before a re-zoning of the property had been approved by the Fort Worth City Council, Ford’s real estate division received information concerning Roque-more’s purchase price from Priddy. Upon confirming this information a representative of the real estate division called Roquemore advising him that Ford would not purchase the property. The City Council approved re-zoning of the property a few days thereafter, and Roquemore, who could not have paid the purchase price to Priddy, was forced to find another purchaser. He did so and concluded all transactions with a profit of $17,500 plus the $5,000 advance payment which he had received from Ford.

On April 23, 1965, Roquemore filed suit against Ford in a state district court for recovery of the difference between the unpaid contract price with Ford and his final profit, a sum of $102,500. Ford removed the case to the federal district court and filed a counterclaim for return of its $5,000 option payment to Roque-more.

*258 The district court filed a pre-trial order on November 5, 1965, which in addition to summarizing the opposing arguments and issues acknowledged the following admissions by Roquemore:

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Bluebook (online)
400 F.2d 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-h-roquemore-v-ford-motor-company-ca5-1968.