Summary
reasoning that " clearer case for the application of [res judicata] could hardly be imagined than one involving successive attempts to litigate the same question by a corporation and by its owner"
Summary of this case from Blue Heron Commercial Grp. v. WebberOpinion
Argued January 3, 1956 Argued November 30, 1955
Decided February 17, 1956 Decided February 17, 1956
Appeal from the Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department, McGRATH, S.
F. Walter Bliss and Lawrence R. Condon for appellants in the above-entitled accounting proceeding. Arthur F. Driscoll and John Drew for Edward C. Raftery and others, respondents in the above-entitled accounting proceeding. Thomas K. O'Brien and Arthur E. Sullivan for Edmund C. Grainger and others, respondents in the above-entitled accounting proceeding.
F. Walter Bliss and Lawrence R. Condon for appellants in the above-entitled arbitration proceeding.
Thomas K. O'Brien and Arthur E. Sullivan for respondent in the above-entitled arbitration proceeding.
Although these two appeals were argued at different times, we believe that clarity is promoted by treating them both in one opinion. They revolve about an extended controversy between the heirs of the estate of Maurice A. Shea and the executors and trustees of that estate, Edmund C. Grainger and Edward C. Raftery. In Matter of Shea, the heirs appeal from the Appellate Division's affirmance of a decree of the Surrogate of Bronx County judicially settling the final account of the executors and trustees. Matter of Grainger ( Shea Enterprises) is an appeal by two corporations, wholly owned by the estate, from an order granting an application brought by Grainger to compel arbitration of certain disputes which have arisen between him and the corporations; a cross claim asserted by the corporations against Grainger is also involved.
M.A. Shea was the owner of a large chain of motion picture theatres in the eastern United States. He conducted the business through Shea Enterprises, Inc., a wholly owned corporation, and various subsidiary corporations. In 1936, Shea entered into a contract with Edmund Grainger, a man of high repute and considerable experience in the theatre management field, employing him as general manager of all the theatres. The agreement, calling for the payment to Grainger of a weekly salary and a bonus, specifically recited that, "if any dispute of any kind or character arises between the parties as to any matter contained in this agreement, then such dispute shall be referred to arbitration". Originally to terminate in 1946, the contract was extended, by a 1939 agreement, to run until December 31, 1951.
In 1940, M.A. Shea died. The will named his widow, his children and a son-in-law (coincidentally, also a Shea, named Gerald) as sole beneficiaries of his estate. It provided for a ten-year testamentary trust; during the existence of the trust, the income from the business was to be paid to the beneficiaries, and, on its termination, the ownership of the corporations was to be turned over to them. Grainger, Edward C. Raftery and one Dennis F. O'Brien (since deceased), all close friends of Shea, were named as executors and trustees. Pursuant to the decedent's wishes as expressed in the will, they elected themselves directors of the various corporations, and Grainger was made president of Shea Enterprises. In addition, as indicated, Grainger was employed as general manager of the business, and his voice was the leading one in guiding its affairs.
In 1942, as the result of a corporate reorganization effected to achieve certain tax benefits, control of the corporations was shifted from Shea Enterprises to Jamestown Amusement Corporation and, as part of the operation, Enterprises transferred and assigned to Jamestown all its right, title and interest in the 1936 employment contract, as amended in 1939, between Grainger and M.A. Shea. In June, 1946, a fourth contract was made, between Grainger and both corporations, extending his employment as general manager from December 31, 1951, to December 31, 1956, and stipulating that "Except as expressly provided by this agreement the previous agreements shall remain in full force and effect." The 1946 contract was expressly approved and ratified in writing by all the Shea heirs except William Shea an incompetent.
The business prospered. In the ten-year period covered by the trust, from 1940 to 1950, its net worth rose from about $1,000,000 to over $3,000,000, and dividends of $1,200,000 were paid to the Shea beneficiaries.
In 1949, Grainger and Raftery, the surviving executor-trustees, filed their intermediate account, covering the period from decedent's death to September, 1949. The beneficiaries made no objections to the account, and it was judicially settled by the Surrogate as filed.
As the term of the trust drew to a close, a difference of opinion arose between Grainger and Gerald Shea, as spokesman for the heirs, concerning the proper method of computing the former's bonus under his employment contracts. In December, 1951, Grainger requested that the matter be submitted to arbitration. The response of the heirs was immediate and dramatic. They discharged him as general manager of the business and instituted a proceeding in the Surrogate's Court in which they charged him and his fellow executor and trustee with fraud and misconduct and sought to have their previously approved intermediate account vacated. They also requested the Surrogate to declare fraudulent and void the 1942 and 1946 contracts adopting and extending Grainger's employment as general manager until 1956. Since Grainger's right to arbitrate depended upon the validity of these contracts, the corporations, opposing arbitration, procured a stay of the Supreme Court proceeding to compel arbitration, pending the Surrogate's determination of that issue.
The Surrogate referred the vacatur proceeding to a Referee to hear and report. After 68 days of hearings, in which a 13-volume record was compiled, the Referee dismissed all of the heirs' objections and sustained the validity of the Grainger employment contracts. He found the administration of the estate and the business to be "without a trace of fraud or constructive fraud by the executors. Rather it is one marked by care and prudence and crowned with exceptional success." The Surrogate confirmed the Referee's report in all respects, the Appellate Division unanimously affirmed ( 282 App. Div. 1013), and this court dismissed a motion for leave to appeal on the ground that the order involved was nonfinal ( 307 N.Y. 676).
After the vacatur proceeding had thus come to an end, Grainger reopened the Supreme Court proceeding against the corporations to compel arbitration. He sought arbitration concerning not only the computation of his bonus but also the propriety of his discharge. The corporations, in continued opposition to the application, sought to relitigate the question of validity of the employment contracts, contending that the decree of the Surrogate against the heirs as individuals was not binding on their wholly owned corporations. The court at Special Term held that the doctrine of res judicata applied to estop them from retrying that issue and ordered that arbitration proceed; as indicated, the Appellate Division affirmed and the corporations' appeal from that decision is one of the cases before us.
In the meantime, in January, 1952, Grainger and Raftery had filed their final account. Appellants again objected, charging numerous acts of misconduct and self-dealing, many identical with those charged in the vacatur proceeding. The Surrogate dismissed all the objections — finding it "regrettable" that the Shea heirs had "been led to make such unwarranted and unjustified accusations against these executors and trustees" — and settled the final account as filed. The appeal of the heirs from the Appellate Division's affirmance of that decree is the other case before us.
As to that appeal, little is to be gained by detailed treatment of each of the accusations of fraud and misconduct leveled at respondents Grainger and Raftery. It is enough to say that, as to the objections relating to transactions occurring before September, 1949, they were thoroughly litigated in the vacatur proceeding and decided against the heirs and that, as to the other objections, the record furnishes ample support for the findings made by the Surrogate, and affirmed by the Appellate Division, that the charges were unwarranted and unjustified. The additional contentions — among them, that the Surrogate erroneously sanctioned "paying out" commissions to Grainger and Raftery and impermissibly awarded counsel fees to their attorneys — have also been considered and found to be not tenable.
The appeal in the proceeding to compel arbitration requires more extended discussion.
There can be no doubt that the employment contracts (the issue of their validity aside) entitle respondent Grainger to arbitration of the disputes concerning the computation of his bonus and his premature discharge. Paragraph 22 of the contract of February, 1936, which remained "in full force and effect" by reason of the June, 1946, agreement, requires arbitration of "any dispute of any kind or character" that arises between the parties "as to any matter contained in" the agreement. The claims obviously come within these terms. The agreements expressly describe the method for computing Grainger's bonus and provide that his term of employment shall run until 1956. The appellant corporations contend, however, that the 1942 and 1946 contracts, adopting and extending the previous ones, are invalid, and that arbitration may not be directed until the issue of their validity is tried and determined by the Supreme Court. As to that, respondent maintains that a trial of that issue has already been held and that appellants are bound by the decree rendered against the Shea heirs in the vacatur proceeding.
The general doctrine of res judicata gives binding effect to the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction and prevents the parties to an action, and those in privity with them, from subsequently relitigating any questions that were necessarily decided therein. (See Matter of New York State Labor Relations Bd. v. Holland Laundry, 294 N.Y. 480, 493; Elder v. New York Pennsylvania Motor Express, 284 N.Y. 350; Good Health Dairy Products Corp. v. Emery, 275 N.Y. 14, 17; Sears Roebuck Co. v. 9 Ave.-31 St. Corp., 274 N.Y. 388, 400.) "`Sound public policy'", this court has written, "`requires that different judicial decisions shall not be made on the same state of facts, and that a judgment rendered jurisdictionally and unimpeached for fraud shall be conclusive, as to the questions litigated and decided, upon the parties thereto and their privies, whom the judgment, when used as evidence, relieves from the burden of otherwise proving, and bars from disproving, the facts therein determined.'" ( Matter of New York State Labor Relations Bd. v. Holland Laundry, supra, 294 N.Y. 480, 493.)
In the case before us, it is indisputable that, if the appellant corporations themselves, rather than the individuals who own all of their stock, had been parties to the vacatur proceeding, they would be bound by the Surrogate's decree sustaining the validity of the employment contracts. The issue was fully and completely litigated and was necessary to the decision; the Surrogate actually denied the specific request of the heirs for a declaration of invalidity. The only question presented, therefore, is whether appellant corporations are in privity with the Shea heirs, who own all of their stock, so that the decision against the heirs is binding upon the corporations. In our judgment, the lower courts properly held that they are.
"Privity" is usually defined as "mutual or successive relationships to the same rights of property." ( Haverhill v. International Ry. Co., 217 App. Div. 521, 522, affd. 244 N.Y. 582; Litchfield v. Goodnow, 123 U.S. 549, 551.) "The ground * * * upon which persons standing in this relation to the litigating party are bound by the proceedings to which he was a party is, that they are identified with him in interest". ( Litchfield v. Goodnow, supra, 123 U.S. 549, 551.) A clearer case for application of the doctrine could hardly be imagined than one involving successive attempts to litigate the same question by a corporation and by its owner or owners. Such attempts have been barred on principles of res judicata or collateral estoppel where all of the corporation's stock was owned by one person (see McNamara v. Powell, 256 App. Div. 554, 558; United States Envelope Co. v. Transo Paper Co., 221 F. 79, 80; cf. Warford Corp. v. Bryan Screw Mach. Products Co., 44 F.2d 713); the owner, it has been said, "will not be permitted to use the corporate cloak as a means to avoid the finality of the former adjudication to which he was a party." ( McNamara v. Powell, supra, 256 App. Div. 554, 558.) Manifestly, the situation is no different where all of the stockholders of a family corporation, rather than an individual who owns the entire corporation, have appeared and participated in the prior action which resulted in an unfavorable adjudication.
The interests of the heirs in the Surrogate's Court proceeding and the appellant corporations in this case are identical. Both have sought to invalidate the 1942 and 1946 contracts because of alleged fraud and self-dealing by respondent and the other executor-trustees with the properties of the Shea estate. It was the heirs, the actual and benefical owners of appellants, who alone stood to lose or gain by the outcome in each case; for all practical purposes, the corporation was the heirs, the heirs, the corporation. If there had been any doubt as to their being represented, their position posited and their interests protected in the Surrogate's Court, the corporations would not have sought to stay the Supreme Court proceeding in 1951 nor requested that the issue of the contracts' validity be determined in the vacatur proceeding. By adopting that course of action, they elected to have that question decided by the Surrogate rather than the Supreme Court, and this circumstance alone is enough to estop them from now attempting to avoid the binding force of the Surrogate's decree. There would have been no purpose in deferring the Supreme Court hearing until the Surrogate had decided the issue of validity, unless his finding was to be decisive in both proceedings.
As earlier indicated, appellants made a cross motion, requesting the submission to the arbitrators of seven so-called cross claims, in the event that arbitration was directed. The court at Special Term ordered the submission of one of them, upon respondent's consent, and denied the other six; the Appellate Division, however, modified, by directing the submission of five of the six remaining cross claims. Appellants contend that the Appellate Division should also have submitted the remaining cross claim, that numbered (6) in their affidavit, which asserts that "Grainger is liable to Shea Enterprises, Inc. for a sum approximating $100,000 in the matter of the calculation of his bonus," because of corporate moneys "which he expended, and for which he allowed no return to the Shea companies."
There is no reason to treat this cross claim differently from the others. Whether or no it has merit is not a matter for the courts. Although the claim is described with less than exemplary clarity or specificity, it directly relates to the computation of respondent's bonus and is, therefore, a dispute arising under the employment contracts. Those contracts require arbitration of "any dispute of any kind or character * * * as to any matter contained in" them. Under such a broad clause, appellants are entitled to have any counterclaims or setoffs that they may have against Grainger arising out of the employment contracts submitted to the arbitrators. (Cf. Matter of Stone [ Freezer], 304 N.Y. 649, affg. 280 App. Div. 103; Fudickar v. Guardian Mut. Life Ins. Co., 62 N.Y. 392, 403-404; Matter of Priore [ Schermerhorn], 204 App. Div. 332, affd. on other grounds 237 N.Y. 16; see, also, Sturges on Commercial Arbitrations and Awards [1930], § 75, p. 236.)
Appellants raise one further point. They contend that the Appellate Division improperly directed the arbitrators to apply the six-year statute of limitations to their cross claims, for the reason that the application of the statute of limitations, like other questions of law, is a matter that should be left exclusively to the arbitrators. (Cf. Application of Reconstruction Finance Corp., 106 F. Supp. 358 [S.D.N.Y.]; Sturges, op. cit., § 218, p. 502.) It is not, however, necessary here to consider or pass upon the question. The record reveals that appellants themselves insisted that the statute of limitations be applied to measure and limit the claims asserted against them by respondent Grainger, and the court at Special Term adopted their position. In view of that, they may not be permitted to have the arbitrators decide their own cross claims without regard to that restriction. Whatever, therefore, may be the rule in another case, even-handed justice and principles of common fairness require that we uphold the Appellate Division in ordering that the cross claims also be measured by the statute of limitations.
It follows that the Appellate Division order should be affirmed, except insofar as it denied appellants' request to submit the sixth cross claim. However, in combining and rephrasing the other two cross claims that concern the computation of bonus, one of which covers a period solely from 1941 to 1945, the Appellate Division submitted the latter claim and confined both to that period (Third Decretal Paragraph, item [c]). While this may have been inadvertent, it does patently conflict with that portion of the order limiting all of the cross claims to the six-year statute of limitations, which would bar any claims arising prior to 1948. Consequently, the Third Decretal Paragraph must be modified to make it clear that the arbitrators may consider all matters affecting the computation of the bonus, including appellants' sixth cross claim, subject only to the six-year time limitation which, according to the Final Decretal Paragraph, must govern all the cross claims.
This portion of the order reads as follows: "the arbitrators herein shall consider and pass upon the matters and issues set forth below * * *: (c) the computation of bonus paid to petitioner between the years 1941 and 1945, both inclusive, including but not limited to the participation by petitioner in capital gains realized and his nonparticipation in capital losses sustained".
In the proceeding in the Surrogate's Court, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs to all parties appearing and filing briefs herein, payable out of the estate.
In the arbitration proceeding, the order of the Appellate Division should be modified to substitute for item (c) in its Third Decretal Paragraph the following:
"(c) the computation of bonus paid to petitioner, including but not limited to (1) the participation by petitioner in capital gains realized and his nonparticipation in capital losses sustained and (2) the expenditure by petitioner of corporate moneys without allowing any return to the corporations,"
and, as so modified, affirmed, without costs.
In Matter of Shea: CONWAY, Ch. J., DESMOND, FROESSEL, VAN VOORHIS and BURKE, JJ., concur; DYE, J., taking no part.
Order affirmed, with costs to all parties appearing separately and filing separate briefs payable out of the estate.
In Matter of Grainger ( Shea Enterprises): CONWAY, Ch. J., DESMOND, FROESSEL, VAN VOORHIS and BURKE, JJ., concur; DYE, J., taking no part.
Order of Appellate Division modified in accordance with the opinion herein and, as so modified, affirmed, without costs.