| Page 671 287 A.2d 671
Theodore LEVITT et al., Plaintiffs
Below, Appellees and
Cross-Appellants,
v.
John A. BOUVIER, Jr., Defendant Below,
Appellant and Cross-Appellee,
and
American Mushroom Corp., a Delaware
corporation, Defendant
Below, Appellee. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Jan. 4, 1972.
Page 672
Andrew G. T. Moore, II, of
Killoran & Van Brunt, Wilmington, for
Theodore Levitt and others.
Max S. Bell, Jr., of Richards,
Layton & Finger, Wilmington, for John A.
Bouvier, Jr.
Hugh L. Corroon of Potter,
Anderson & Corroon, Wilmington, for American
Mushroom Corp.
WOLCOTT, C.J. and CAREY and
HERRMANN, JJ., sitting.
WOLCOTT, Chief Justice:
This is an appeal from a judgment
of the Superior Court sitting without a jury
determining the issue of liability. The
plaintiffs are a group of investors. They
alleged fraud and misrepresentation by the
defendant, John A. Bouvier, Jr., and Knaust
Brothers, Inc., and concurrent liability on
the part of American Mushroom Corporation.
Following trial, a judgment was
entered dismissing American Mushroom
Corporation from the case and holding
Bouvier liable to the plaintiffs on two
specific misrepresentations and not liable
on a third alleged misrepresentation.
Bouvier appealed from the
judgment holding him liable, and the
plaintiffs have cross-appealed on the
dismissal of American Mushroom Corporation
from the case, and also from the refusal of
the lower court to find Bouvier liable on
the third alleged misrepresentation.
In 1963 Knaust and K-B Products
Corporation, under the management and
control of Bouvier, were offered for sale.
Knaust, at one time at least, was one of the
world's largest growers of mushrooms, and
K-B operated the canning and sales
facilities for the mushrooms produced by
Knaust. In the course of the negotiations
for acquisition of Knaust and K-B, Bouvier
allegedly made certain representations to
the prospective purchasers which they now
claim were false. On the basis of
information supplied to them by Bouvier, an
investment memorandum based upon his
representations was prepared, which Bouvier
approved stating that to the best of his
knowledge it contained no misrepresentations
of misleading omissions concerning the
financial status of Knaust and K-B.
The represenations made by
Bouvier concerned the price and yield of
mushrooms and the prospect of forthcoming
quotas on mushroom imports from Formosa.
In the course of acquisition, the
plaintiffs caused Knaust to merge with
another mushroom corporation which resulted
in the formation of the defendant American.
Plaintiffs represented to the mushroom
corporation merged with Knaust that, to
their knowledge, there was no outstanding
claim against Knaust, despite the fact that
at the time they knew that they had a
possible claim against Knaust and Bouvier
based on the misrepresentations. Ultimately,
plaintiffs gained control of the enterprise
through a newly formed holding company
called Iron Mountain, Incorporated.
The action was dismissed against
American on the ground that the plaintiffs'
claim against it was barred by their
representations and warranties that no
outstanding claim against Knaust existed.
After trial, the court found for
the plaintiffs against Bouvier by reason of
his representations to them relating to
mushroom prices and yields. The court found
against the plaintiffs and for Bouvier on
the cause of action based upon alleged
misrepresentation
Page 673 by Bouvier upon mushroom import quotas.
We first take up the dismissal of
American Mushroom Corporation as a party
defendant. In their efforts to merge Knaust
with another mushroom company, the
plaintiffs represented that there was no
outstanding claim against Knaust, even
though they had full knowledge that there
was a basis for an action against Bouvier
and Knaust for fraudulent misrepresentation.
Upon the formation of American
Mushroom Corporation, the rights of the
constituent corporations based on the
warranties passed to their successor,
American, pursuant to the agreement of
merger and 8 Del.C. § 259.
The warranty made that there was
no liability on the part of Knaust was
false. This being so, the existence of the
warranty would have worked an estoppel in an
action against the constituent corporations.
Timmons v. Campbell, 35 Del.Ch. 68, 111 A.2d
220 (1955). This being so, plaintiffs
may not be permitted to maintain an action
based on that liability against the
successor corporation, American.
Heit v. Tenneco, Inc., 319 F.Supp. 884
(D.C.1970).
It follows, therefore, that the
dismissal of American as a party defendant
was proper and must be affirmed.
With respect to the issues of
misrepresentation, the facts are sharply in
dispute between the parties. The trial judge
made findings of fact on the questions of
misrepresentation. His findings were based
upon consideration of the documentary
evidence and the testimony and credibility
of 'live' witnesses. In a nonjury case in
which a Superior Court Judge sits as the
finder of fact, an appeal from his decision
is upon both the law and the facts.
DuPont v. DuPont, 216 A.2d 674
(Del.Supr.1966). In such an appeal this
court has the authority to review the entire
record and to make its own findings of fact
in a proper case. In exercising our power of
review, we have the duty to review the
sufficiency of the evidence and to test the
propriety of the findings below. We do not,
however, ignore the findings made by the
trial judge. If they are sufficiently
supported by the record and are the product
of an orderly and logical deductive process,
in the exercise of judicial restraint we
accept them, even though independently we
might have reached opposite conclusions. It
is only when the findings below are clearly
wrong and the doing of justice requires
their overturn that we are free to make
contradictory findings of fact. Application
of Delaware Racing Ass'n, 42 Del.Ch. 406,
213 A.2d 203 (Del.Supr.1965). When the
determination of facts turns on a question
of credibility and the acceptance or
rejection of 'live' testimony by the trial
judge, his findings will be approved upon
review.
Barks v. Herzberg, 206 A.2d 507
(Del.Supr.1965). If there is sufficient
evidence to support the findings of the
trial judge, this Court, in the exercise of
judicial restraint, must affirm.
Brittingham v. American Dredging Co., 262
A.2d 255 (Del.Supr.1970).
If the statements above defining
the scope of review from basic findings of
fact of a trial judge sitting without a jury
are thought to be at variance with
Nardo v. Nardo, 209 A.2d 905 (Del.Supr.1965);
duPont v. duPont, supra, and
David v. Steller, 269 A.2d 203
(Del.Supr.1970), those cases must be
considered to have been modified by the
foregoing, Compare, however,
Nelson v. Murray, 211 A.2d 842, 844
(Del.Supr.1965) as to review of
inferences and deductions.
After reviewing the record made
below and the decision of the trial judge,
we cannot say that his findings are not
supported by sufficient evidence. Neither
does it appear that his findings are clearly
erroneous and that the doing of justice
requires their rejection. We will therefore
not disturb the trial judge's determination
on all the issues of misrepresentation. It
follows, therefore, that the judgment below
holding the defendant Bouvier liable upon
Page 674 two issues of misrepresentation, and
absolving him from liability on the third
issue of misrepresentation must be affirmed.
Finally, the defendant Bouvier
argues that a release received by him from
Iron Mountain, Incorporated, the holding
company, was in essence a release of Bouvier
by all of the individual plaintiffs. The
trial judge denied Bouvier's motion to
dismiss the action on this ground.
The release given by the holding
company to Bouvier had nothing to do with
the representations made by Bouvier to the
plaintiffs. The holding company was not
related to the original investment and came
into being solely by reason of a subsequent
reorganization. The fact that the plaintiffs
were stockholders of the holding company
creates no inference that their cause of
action against Bouvier was assigned to the
holding company.
For the foregoing reasons the
judgment below is affirmed. |