Westerly Theatre Operating Co. v. Pouzzner

162 F.2d 821
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 17, 1947
DocketNo. 4236
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 162 F.2d 821 (Westerly Theatre Operating Co. v. Pouzzner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westerly Theatre Operating Co. v. Pouzzner, 162 F.2d 821 (1st Cir. 1947).

Opinion

MAHONEY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in favor of plaintiffs-appellees. Jurisdiction was based on diversity of citizenship and the sum in controversy exceeded $3,000 exclusive of interest and costs.

Plaintiffs-appellees own and control 50 percent of the outstanding common stock, the sole class of stock of the Westerly Theatre Operating Company, Inc. Morris Pouzzner, the principal plaintiff, and his nominee, Oakley A. Kunz, are officers and directors of the corporation. John B. Find-lay, an individual defendant, owns or controls the remaining 50 per cent of the common stock of the corporation. He is president and resident manager of the corporation and he and Henry Harris, his nominee, comprise the remainder of the board of directors. The business of the Westerly Theatre Operating Company consists in the operation of theatres in and about Westerly, Rhode Island, and at the time of the filing of this action the company operated the United Theatre and the Central Theatre and had previously operated the Lyric Theatre, all in the general neighborhood of Westerly. This business had on the whole been conducted on a profitable basis.

Prior to the formation of the Westerly Theatre Operating Company on June 22, 1928, Findlay held the lease on the Lyric Theatre and was also the assignee of a lease on the United Theatre. Findlay likewise owned the fixtures in both theatres and had operated these theatres prior to the incorporation of the Operating Co. The Central Theatre was owned and operated by one John L. Weyet in competition with the Lyric Theatre. Findlay and Weyet in 1928 decided to form a corporation to control and operate all three theatres and both agreed to lease or sublease to the corporation the theatres that each controlled. The Central Theatre was conveyed to the Westerly Central Theatre Realty Co., which Pouzzner subsequently controlled, and by it leased to the Operating Company for a term of 17 years and 7 months commencing June 1, 1928. Pouzzner then acquired Weyet’s stock in the Operating Company and thereafter Weyet dropped out of the picture. Findlay on June 30, 1928 subleased to the Operating Company the United Theatre for the same term as the lease of the Central Theatre and also subleased the Lyric Theatre for a term of 11 months from June 1, 1928. These leases and subleases were the shareholder’s contributions to the corporation and constituted the chief if not the only assets of the corporation.

The Central Theatre lease forms no part of the present controversy and hence does not merit further discussion. With respect to the other leases the district court made detailed findings of fact substantially not in dispute which will not be here repeated but are reported in 67 F.Supp. 874. The following facts are necessary to an understanding of the matter in controversy.

The sublease of the United Theatre which was to run for 17 years and 7 months, the remaining term of the original lease (with its renewal options) which had been assigned to Findlay, provided for an increasing scale of rents some $1,500 to $1,800-annually less than the rent provided for in. the original lease. This difference the district court attributed to the fact that two-stores located in the theatre building which were included in the original lease were not part of the sublease, and the court concluded that the rent collected by Findlay on these two stores accounted for the difference in rent. About two years before-the renewed lease and the sublease on the-United Theatre were to terminate, Pouz-zner raised the question of obtaining a new lease and Findlay agreed to contact the-lessor to ascertain the type of a lease he-would require and also to hold, if possible,, the rents to their present level. At a shareholders’ meeting a year later in January,, 1944 Findlay -reported that he had con[823]*823tacted the lessor regarding a new lease on the United Theatre and that the lessor was willing to execute a new lease but at an increased rental. Findlay was requested to renew negotiations in an effort to secure more reasonable rent. The minutes of the February 8, 1945 shareholders’ meeting indicate that Findlay reported that he had negotiated a new lease on the United Theatre which was in his name, but at a higher rental than in the original lease. Pouzzner and Findlay were thereupon appointed a committee to negotiate for new leases on the Central and United Theatres for the benefit of the company. Because other matters in dispute between Findlay and Pouzzner were not settled to the satisfaction of Findlay, he refused to execute a sublease of the United Theatre to the Operating Company but instead he organized the United Theatres Company and subleased the United Theatre to that new corporation for a rental substantially in excess of the previous rent and also in excess of the rent to be paid by him to his lessor. It was the contention of the Pouzzner interests below that Findlay held this United Theatre lease for the benefit of the Operating Company and that his refusal to execute a sublease to that company and his execution of a sublease to the new corporation constituted violations of a fiduciary ■duty owing to the Operating Company. With this contention the district court concurred. Its opinion and findings of fact indicate that the court below found that in negotiating for the acquisition of the new United Theatre lease Findlay was acting on behalf of the corporation as its representative or agent and not in his individual capacity as an assignee-lessee. Because Findlay was acting in a fiduciary capacity in negotiating this new lease the district court concluded that he was a trustee for the Operating Company of the theatre portion of the United Theatre lease and, accordingly, Findlay and his United Theatres Company were ordered to cancel the sublease to that company, Findlay was ordered to tender a sublease of the United Theatre to the Operating Company in the same form as the original 1928 sublease with necessary modifications as to rent and •'terms, the Westerly Central Theatre Realty Company was ordered to tender a similar lease of the Central Theatre, and the Westerly Theatre Operating Company was ordered to accept such leases. With respect to this portion of the controversy defendants argue that the court erred in finding Findlay to be trustee for the Operating Company of the United Theatre lease. They urge that since Findlay was a lessee in his individual capacity he had a right to take a new lease in his own name and that he was under no duty to execute a sublease to the Operating Company. They further argue that the court committed error by excluding testimony of the original lessor to the effect that he would have refused to execute a lease directly to the Operating Company.

The other issue in this controversy relates to the Lyric Theatre sublease. Find-lay’s original lease on this property called for a term of two years commencing May 1, 1927 at $175 per month with an option for renewal for 3 years at the same rent and a further option for a second 3 year renewal period at $192.50 per month. On June 30, 1928 Findlay subleased this Lyric Theatre to the Operating Company for the balance of the two year term at $175 per month and included in the sublease the same renewal options as in his original lease.

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162 F.2d 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westerly-theatre-operating-co-v-pouzzner-ca1-1947.