Alpert v. 28 William St. Corp.

124 Misc. 2d 512, 478 N.Y.S.2d 443, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4183
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 124 Misc. 2d 512 (Alpert v. 28 William St. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alpert v. 28 William St. Corp., 124 Misc. 2d 512, 478 N.Y.S.2d 443, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4183 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Edward J. Greenfield, J.

After trial, this court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

The controversy involves a 17-story commercial office building located at 79 Madison Avenue in the Borough of Manhattan. The building had been owned for many years by a corporation known as 79 Realty Corporation. That corporation was controlled by the Kimmelman-Zauderer interests who owned approximately two thirds of the shares of the stock, with a minority interest being held by the plaintiffs, Jack Alpert, Joseph Alpert, Charles Alpert and Bonn & Company, among others. The minority owned approximately one third of the shares, and 26% was owned by the plaintiffs herein.

In mid-1979, Robert Carmel, on behalf of the Williams Real Estate Company, began to discuss with Messrs. Kimmelman and Zauderer the purchase of the building at 79 Madison Avenue. First a price of $5,500,000 was mentioned by Mr. Kimmelman. By early 1980, he was asking $6,000,000 and then $6,300,000.

At that point, another potential buyer, Aaron Diamond, had lost interest in acquiring the property and the proposition was put to Mr. Jerome Cohen, the president of Williams Real Estate Company.

[514]*514A net figure of $6,350,000 was agreed upon at first. It was later increased to $6,500,000.

Analysis was made of the prospective capital maintenance expenses and of what the prospects of the building would be in the future based upon an analysis of the existing leases, what was then being charged, and what the potential was for charging the tenants upon the renewal of those leases as they came up. It, appearing to be an attractive proposition, was discussed with Citibank. After Citibank had reviewed and analyzed the figures, an agreement was worked out that Citibank, through its trust and pension funds held by an entity known as Reef 79, would put up 80% of the funds, and that the Williams Real Estate Company interests would form a partnership known as Williams 79 which would put up 20% of the funds, and that together Williams 79 and Reef 79 would form a limited partnership known as Madison 28, which would acquire the 67% stock interest of Kimmelman and Zauderer and then proceed to offer the same price per share to the minority stockholders, in order to acquire 100% of the shares of 79 Realty Company.

The avowed purpose of the acquisition of 100% of 79 Realty Company was then to dissolve that corporation and to have the fee ownership devolve to the limited partnership interests.

In accordance with this plan, on June 2,1980, a contract was entered into for the purchase of the Kimmelman-Zauderer interests with the closing to take place in September of 1980. Before that closing could take place, inquiry had been made of Mr. Alpert as to whether he was amenable to the selling of his shares. While he did not give any affirmative indication at that time, he thereafter commenced litigation to prevent the transfer of ownership. Alpert proceeded vigorously to attempt to enjoin the meetings, the proposed merger, and dissolution of the corporation.

After the acquisition of the Kimmelman-Zauderer stock interests, Mr. Cohen became the sole officer and director of 79 Realty. In October of 1980, he named his associates Edward G. Roos, Robert Carmel and Edward Riguardi as directors of that corporation. They in turn called for a [515]*515shareholders’ meeting, having approved the concept of the merger in minutes which set forth the purposes at some length. A shareholders’ meeting was scheduled for November 5, 1980 for the purpose of approving the proposed merger.

The holding of that meeting was restrained by an ex parte temporary restraining order (T.R.O.), but on November 7,1980, upon the obtaining and posting of a $1,000,000 bond the T.R.O. was vacated and the shareholders’ meeting proceeded. At that meeting, the planned merger was approved, the mechanics of which were to buy out the minority shares at the same price that the majority shares had been acquired for, and then to dissolve the corporation for the beneficial purposes which the majority stockholders believed would accrue.

In connection with the proposed merger, a statement of intention was sent out to the shareholders outlining the planned procedure to be followed, together with the financial statement of 79 Realty Corporation as of the end of the previous year, December, 1979.

In this lawsuit, it is argued that there was no proper corporate purpose for the proposed merger and dissolution and that the business judgment of the directors was clouded by self-interest.

There is not, as I understand it, in this case, any claim of fraud or gross illegality. What is contended is twofold: That the proposed merger and dissolution was unfair; and that it was motivated by self-interest and not by unclouded and dispassionate views of directors acting as fiduciaries for a corporation.

Under the law, corporate directors elected by a majority of shareholders are accorded a great deal of leeway in their dealings with the corporation. The courts generally have adopted the view that any actions taken by directors which can be considered a proper exercise of business judgment are not to be reviewed in the courtroom. The forum for such considerations is the boardroom. If it appears that the directors have gone beyond their proper scope and what they are dealing with is not a business decision but something which unfairly impacts on shareholders, then that indeed may be subject to judicial review.

[516]*516Courts always must be wary of imposing themselves and their own views upon the proper exercise of business judgment by businessmen. The statutes clearly permit the kind of merger with which we are here dealing where the owners of two thirds of the corporate shares decide to merge that corporation with another entity, after which the corporation will lose its own corporate identity and its property will pass to other hands or, as in this case, into the hands of a limited partnership controlled 80% by Citibank and 20% by the Williams Real Estate interests.

The only limitation is one which is judicially engrafted, that is, that the merger must be for a legitimate corporate business purpose and not solely in the self-interest of majority shareholders who might otherwise be taking advantage of their leveraged position to the disadvantage of minorities unable to protect themselves by vote.

The authorities have been reviewed by this court and others in Tanzer Economic Assoc. v Universal Food Specialties (87 Misc 2d 167) and in Schulwolf v Cerro Corp. (86 Misc 2d 292) and elsewhere.

The focus of the inquiry must always be the purpose involved in situations where control is acquired and then the minority interests are sought to be eliminated. The inquiry must be whether that minority interest is eliminated solely for the financial betterment and aggrandizement of the majority holders or whether legitimate business purposes exist.

The standard which has been enunciated by the Appellate Division is whether there is some proper corporate purpose for the merger. And this court, in Tanzer (supra), used similar language in stating that the presence of a legitimate corporate business interest over and above the self-interest of the investors tends to negate the “raiding” or the “milking” which might justify the court’s equitable intervention.

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Bluebook (online)
124 Misc. 2d 512, 478 N.Y.S.2d 443, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alpert-v-28-william-st-corp-nysupct-1983.