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Page 444
166 A.2d 444
39 Del.Ch. 447
Ralph N. CRAIG, Plaintiff,
v.
GRAPHIC ARTS STUDIO, INC., a Delaware
corporation, Graphic
Supply Company, a Delaware corporation,
Graphic Investment
Corporation, a Delaware corporation, Warren
D. Miller and
James Herdman, Defendants,
v.
REPRODUCTION CENTER, INC., a Delaware
corporation,
Additional Defendant to Counterclaim.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New
Castle County.
Sept. 30, 1960.
Page 445
[39 Del.Ch. 448] G. A. Peterson,
Wilmington, for plaintiff.
Joseph A. Rosenthal of Cohen &
Morris, Wilmington, for defendants, Graphic
Arts Studio, Inc., Graphic Supply Co.,
Graphic Investment Corp. and Warren D.
Miller.
Clement C. Wood of Allmond &
Wood, Wilmington, for defendant,
Reproduction Center, Inc.
No appearance for defendant,
James Herdman.
SEITZ, Chancellor.
Plaintiff's original complaint
made claim for money advanced for stock and
unpaid wages and expenses. The
court-approved stipulation and agreement of
January 22, 1960, signed by all the then
parties, including defendants' then counsel,
fixed the rights of such parties. I am
satisfied that under its terms the [39
Del.Ch. 449] defendants could not thereafter
litigate the 'original' merits. They were
limited to the assertion of defenses which
may have arisen after the execution of the
Stipulation and Agreement. No such defenses
were asserted in the pleadings or at trial
and consequently plaintiff is entitled to
judgment on the unpaid balance of his claim.
However, no action to enforce it will be
permitted until complete disposition is made
of the counterclaim and cross-claim.
I come now to the counterclaim of
certain defendants ('defendants') against
plaintiff and their cross-claim against
Reproduction Center, Inc. ('Reproduction').
They are based on the allegation that
plaintiff violated his fiduciary duty to
Graphic Supply Company ('Graphic') by virtue
of his connection with Reproduction at a
time when he was still working for Graphic.
Delaware had adopted the view
that a corporate officer or director is
entirely free to engage in an independent
competitive business, so long as he violates
no legal or moral duty with respect to the
fiduciary relation that exists between the
corporation and himself.
Guth v. Loft, Inc., 23 Del.Ch. 255, 5 A.2d
503. This appears to be the law generally.
See 64 A.L.R. at page 784.
The first question here is
whether the proof shows that plaintiff
violated his fiduciary duty in his
relationship to Reproduction Center, Inc. at
any time while employed by Graphic. The
clientele and business activities of Graphic
and another defendant, Graphic Arts Studio,
Inc. ('Graphic Arts') were such as to make
them complementary. The two were so
interrelated in ownership and operation that
their financial futures were tied together.
I mention this because while technically
employed by Graphic, plaintiff in fact
helped to mold the welfare of both.
Plaintiff and one Moser discussed
the formation of a competitive enterprise
approximately six weeks prior to the date
plaintiff was discharged by Graphic. At that
time plaintiff was a stockholder in Graphic
and Graphic Arts and was president of
Graphic, of which Moser was an employee.
Plaintiff was also in charge of Graphic's
operation and in close touch with its
customers.
[39 Del.Ch. 450] Moser left the
employment of Graphic in the latter part of
August 1959. Reproduction was incorporated
September 1, 1959. Plaintiff and Moser each
owned one-half of the stock of Reproduction
and became officers and directors thereof.
Plaintiff made a $1,000 capital contribution
to Reproduction about the middle of
September, which was about the time it
commenced business. Plaintiff was discharged
by Graphic and Graphic Arts on September 23,
1959 when his connection with Reproduction
was discovered.
The evidence shows that the
corporate defendants were, along with one
other company,
Page 446
the only organizations doing this particular
kind of business in the general area. The
evidence also reveals that the work was of
such a nature that there were a limited
number of customers, most of whom were known
to those in the business. I believe it is
clear that plaintiff had made up his mind to
terminate his employment with the corporate
defendant and go with Reproduction some time
before he was discharged and that he only
stayed on in order to clear a note which he
had endorsed.
While the matter is not free from
doubt I conclude that plaintiff did not
solicit business for Reproduction while he
was still employed by Graphic. He admittedly
did so immediately after his discharge.
Also, while it is true that plaintiff and
Moser took orders for Graphic and Graphic
Arts knowing that they could not then fill
the orders, I am not satisfied that this was
done to make the customers dissatisfied with
defendants. I say this because they followed
such practice for several years and I
believe it was done because of the 'hand to
mouth' nature of the operations of Graphic
and Graphic Arts.
Under the facts of this case,
have the defendants shown any breach of
fiduciary duty by plaintiff while employed
by Graphic?
In the California case of
Hall v. Dekker, 45 Cal.App.2d 783, 115 P.2d
15, 17, the court cited with approval
the New Jersey case of
Hussong Dyeing Mach. Co. v. Morris, 89 A.
249, where the court had stated:
'* * * It was not lawfully possible for
the defendant while a director and treasurer
of complainant corporation, to enter [39
Del.Ch. 451] into an opposition business in
his own behalf of such a nature that it
would cripple or injure the corporation that
he represented, * * *'
The California court went on to
say that the facts in their case,
'* * * disclosed that defendant Dekker,
while a director and officer of plaintiff
corporation, unlawfully assisted in
organizing defendant corporation and aided
his codefendants in entering into a
competing business with that in which
plaintiffs were engaged, knowing that to do
so would injure plaintiff corporation, and
which in fact did deprive plaintiff
corporation of business and thus caused it
monetary injury.'
See also 3 Fletcher, Cyc. of
Corps. (perm. ed.), § 856 and 19 C.J.S.
Corporations § 785.
I emphasize that the facts in the
present case show that plaintiff became an
undisclosed 50% owner of a competitive
business at a time when he was in effect the
manager of Graphic's business. Moreover, it
was the type of business which had limited
area and customer appeal. The only
reasonable inference that can be drawn is
that the growth of Reproduction had to be in
part at the expense of Graphic's business.
It is contrary to human nature to suppose
that plaintiff, while continuing to run
Graphic's business with knowledge that in
time he was leaving and going with 'his' own
company, would be diligent in seeking to
further the business of Graphic. While he
was a small shareholder in Graphic and
Graphic Arts it is clear that his real
interest was in the future of Reproduction.
Thus, there was a real conflict between
Graphic's interest and plaintiff's interest
up until the date of his discharge.
I therefore conclude that
plaintiff was guilty of a breach of a
fiduciary duty owed Graphic. Under the facts
Reproduction must be considered equally
responsible. The next question is what
injury, if any, resulted to Graphic by
virtue of plaintiff's actions? The
defendants do not seek an injunction and so
the court is solely concerned with damages.
Reproduction was in operation for only a
period of one week prior to plaintiff's
discharge. Consequently, the [39 Del.Ch.
452] court is not clear as to what the
nature and measure of damages should be
under the circumstances. I therefore deem it
desirable for counsel to advise me in
writing
Page 447
within ten days as to their views on these
points so that I may decide them before any
accounting takes place.
It is not clear that defendants
base any claim exclusively on plaintiff's
conduct subsequent to his discharge and I
therefore do not consider that problem.
On Motions for Reargument
Both parties filed motions for
reargument. Plaintiff's motion is denied
because his reasons relate solely to the
measure of damages which he has been granted
permission to discuss.
The defendants' motion for
reargument is denied with one exception.
That exception will be decided without
further argument. Defendants suggest that
the court should take notice of plaintiff's
lack of clean hands because of the court's
finding of a breach of fiduciary duty. It
does seem to the court that absent some
special circumstance, which does not here
appear, the plaintiff should not be
permitted to maintain an action in this
court to recover compensation from his
employer for the period when he was
violating his fiduciary duty, i. e., after
September 15, 1959. To the extent the claim
includes compensation for that relatively
small period it will be disallowed.
The bulk of plaintiff's claim is
not subject to the clean hands' defense
because it accrued before any breach of
duty. I believe my conclusion is entirely
consistent with
Ely v. King-Richardson Co., 265 Ill. 148,
106 N.E. 619, L.R.A.1915B, 1052. I say
this because the Ely case involved a claim
which accrued before the period when the
employee breached his duty and the court
held that it was not subject to the clean
hands' doctrine. It clearly appears that the
court was not concerned with a claim for
compensation for the period when the
employee was in violation of his fiduciary
duty.
The parties may agree on the
amount of the claim subject to the clean
hands' defense.
Present order on notice.
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