Yarnall Ware. & Tr., Inc. v. Three Ivory Bros. Mov. Co.

226 So. 2d 887
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 3, 1969
Docket68-477
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 226 So. 2d 887 (Yarnall Ware. & Tr., Inc. v. Three Ivory Bros. Mov. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yarnall Ware. & Tr., Inc. v. Three Ivory Bros. Mov. Co., 226 So. 2d 887 (Fla. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

226 So.2d 887 (1969)

YARNALL WAREHOUSE & TRANSFER, INC., a Florida Corporation, Appellant,
v.
The THREE IVORY BROTHERS MOVING COMPANY, a Michigan Corporation, Ivory Bros. Transfer and Storage Company, a Florida Corporation, and Allied Van Lines, Inc., a Delaware Corporation, Appellees.

No. 68-477.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

October 3, 1969.

Ezra J. Regen, Sarasota, for appellant.

Joe T. Martin, Lake Wales, for appellees.

*888 PIERCE, Judge.

Yarnall Warehouse & Transfer, Inc., a Florida corporation, (hereinafter Yarnall) appeals a final judgment entered by the Polk County Circuit Court against Yarnall, plaintiff therein, and in favor of The Three Ivory Brothers Moving Company, a Michigan corporation, (hereinafter Michigan Ivory), Ivory Bros. Transfer and Storage Company, a Florida corporation, (hereinafter Florida Ivory), and Allied Van Lines, Inc., a Delaware corporation, (hereinafter Allied), defendants therein.

Yarnall filed its amended complaint seeking, among other things, a decree declaring the approval by Allied's directors of the application of Michigan Ivory for a branch office at Bartow to be contrary to the bylaws and regulations of Allied and therefore ultra vires and unlawful; directing Allied to rescind its approval of that application and to revoke the branch agency; restraining Allied from establishing any other branch agency in Polk County unless it has complied strictly with the bylaws and regulations pertinent thereto; and awarding Yarnall money damages for loss of profits and injunctive relief for unfair competition.

Michigan Ivory, Florida Ivory, and Allied filed their joint answer and defenses and after trial the Court entered final judgment in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff, reserving jurisdiction to tax defendants' proper costs against the plaintiff.

Yarnall is a Florida corporation with its principal office in Lakeland and branch offices in Winter Haven, Lake Wales and Sarasota. For many years it has been engaged in the storage and intrastate and interstate transfer of household goods and is a stockholder in and authorized agent for Allied, from which it derives its interstate authority. Yarnall has no established exclusive agency agreement with Allied.

Michigan Ivory is a Michigan corporation with its principal office in Detroit. It is engaged in the storage and interstate movement of household goods. It is also a stockholder in and authorized agent for Allied, from which it derives its previously surrendered interstate authority in Florida.

Florida Ivory is a Florida corporation with its principal office at the Bartow Air Base near Bartow. It is largely or wholly owned by principal stockholders and officers, and is a branch agency, of Michigan Ivory. As such branch agency it has only interstate authority, its application for intrastate authority having been denied by the Florida Public Utilities Commission. The granting of authority to establish this branch agency by Allied gave rise to this litigation.

Allied, a Delaware corporation, is a nonprofit association of independent and frequently competing transfer and storage companies. It is a nationwide booking agency or clearing house for interstate shipment and handling of household goods. Each authorized agent is the holder of one share of stock in Allied. Allied is financially maintained by a percentage of certain revenues paid into it by its stockholder-agents.

John Ivory is the president and director of Michigan Ivory and he and his brother are the principal stockholders of that corporation as well as Florida Ivory. He was elected to Allied's 18-man board of directors on February 1, 1963, at which meeting the board approved Michigan Ivory's application, made in 1962 before John Ivory became a director of Allied, to establish a branch office at Bartow Air Base. As soon as Yarnall learned of this action it protested to the executive officers of Allied, and its president and secretary personally appeared before Allied's board on May 1, 1963. The application was referred back to the agency committee for re-examination. On May 3, 1963, the agency committee recommended to the board that the branch agency application be approved and the board affirmed the *889 granting of the branch agency. The minutes reflect that John Ivory was present at the May 1 and May 3 meetings of the board and testimony indicates that he spoke in favor of affirming the application. After further protests by Yarnall, this suit was filed.

Allied and Michigan Ivory assert and Yarnall concedes that the Allied agency agreements, including that held by Yarnall, are not territorially exclusive. Certain of the exhibits show that in many communities there are neighboring competing Allied agents.

The lower Court found inter alia: that the granting of Michigan Ivory's application for a branch agency at Bartow was a proper function of Allied's board of directors which did not violate Rule 26 and Article I, Section 3(c) of Allied's corporate bylaws; that there was no sufficient evidence that John Ivory exerted, or that the board was subjected to, duress or coercion by virtue of John Ivory's position; that "neither poor business judgment of the Board of Directors * * * objectively demonstrated nor business disadvantages to * * * Yarnall subjectively demonstrated constitutes bad faith, discrimination or breach of any fiduciary duty"; and that the granting of the branch agency under the facts and circumstances then prevailing was not "an ultra vires act committed in bad faith or in breach of the fiduciary duty imposed on the board of directors", nor was it an abuse of discretion or departure from the "business judgment rule" such as would permit the Court to set aside the board's action. The Court further found that while the agency committee was required to study agency, branch agency and agency transfer applications resulting in some applications recommended by the committee being approved while others were denied by the board, the evidence did not support the conclusion that Allied's board abused its discretion in this instance by improperly delegating a duty which involved the exercise of judgment and discretion to the chairman of the agency committee; that the granting of the agency by Allied did not constitute an attempt to prevent competition in transportation of commodities in violation of Article X, Section 2, of Allied's bylaws; and that the Court would not substitute its judgment for that of corporate management absent a clear showing of bad faith, discrimination or abuse of business judgment.

In determining whether Yarnall was entitled to any relief it sought, the Court held that its damage, if any, was conjectural and the amount thereof would be purely speculative and that Yarnall was not entitled to a declaration of the Court that the creation of the branch agency was null and void or a decree requiring the revocation of that authority. The Court concluded that Yarnall did not sustain its burden of proof by the greater weight of the evidence.

Yarnall contends that the Court placed an undue burden upon it with respect to proof of bad faith and abuse of discretion. It asserts that after it introduced evidence of bad faith and abuse of discretion, the burden should have shifted to the defendants, particularly Allied, to overcome this prima facie showing. Yarnall argues that the evidence shows that Allied's directors were not acting in good faith nor in a fair and reasonable manner in granting Michigan Ivory's application for a branch agency in a territory which Yarnall had occupied without competition for a number of years.

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Bluebook (online)
226 So. 2d 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarnall-ware-tr-inc-v-three-ivory-bros-mov-co-fladistctapp-1969.