Arcadia Theatre Co. v. Sablosky

209 A.2d 375, 418 Pa. 34, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 3, 1964
DocketAppeal, No. 215
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 209 A.2d 375 (Arcadia Theatre Co. v. Sablosky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arcadia Theatre Co. v. Sablosky, 209 A.2d 375, 418 Pa. 34, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 370 (Pa. 1964).

Opinion

Opinion by

This appeal is part of a complex of litigation among the parties for control of the Arcadia Theatre Com-' [37]*37pany, a Delaware Corporation. The sole asset of the corporation is an operating theatre in Philadelphia. The entire outstanding issue of stock of the corporation is sixty shares, of which forty shares are owned by Samuel and Edna Shapiro, husband and wife, as joint tenants with right of survivorship, and twenty shares are in the name of Morton J. Sablosky.

Marital difficulties arose between Samuel and Edna Shapiro and they separated in January, 1962. Their sons, Merton and Bennard Shapiro instituted an action in equity for specific performance under an agreement which gave each son an option to purchase ten shares of stock owned by their parents.1 The parties and Morton J. Sablosky, not a party in the action for specific performance although the owner of one-third — 20 shares — of the stock of Arcadia entered into a stipulation and consent decree in April, 1962. The substance of the consent decree was that there would be no change in corporate structure or in the personnel of the officers or directors pending final hearing. Another consent decree was filed on December 21, 1962, which, inter alia, referred to a meeting on November 26, 1962, in which a de facto board of directors was elected. Morton J. Sablosky was released from any restriction imposed upon him in the use of his stock as agreed to in the consent decree of April, 1962. The December, 1962, consent decree sought to establish some order in the operation of the theatre pending the chancellor’s adjudication. The adjudication was filed in August, 1963. On September 4, 1963, Edna Shapiro and Morton J. Sablosky issued a call for a special meeting of Arcadia stockholders to be held on September 12, 1963.

A few days later, the within action was commenced —a complaint in equity filed and preliminary injunction granted — and hearing date set. Counsel for the [38]*38parties, by stipulation approved by tbe court, agreed to tbe appointment of tbe Master and “2. That tbe powers and duties of said Master shall be as follows: (a) To supervise the collection and distribution of all receipts until the next election of Directors of Arcadia Theatre Company with the object in view to see they are proper, (b) ... (c) To consider and pass upon the question when it shall be proper for Arcadia Theatre Company to hold its next meeting of shareholders for the purpose of electing a Board of Directors, (d) To act as chairman and judge, and to rule upon all dis-' putes, at the next election of Directors of Arcadia Theatre Company. 3. That immediately after the next election of Directors of Arcadia Theatre Company the powers and duties of the said Master shall cease and determine.”

The Master commenced the performance of his duties, in pursuance of the stipulation filed, immediately after his appointment on September 24, 1963. He filed his written report on November 27, 1963.

Plaintiffs filed a motion to dismiss and suppress the master’s report for the reason that “it now appears that counsel entered into the Stipulation . . . [providing for the Master] unwittingly, and without an awareness of [the Pennsylvania] Rule of Civil Procedure 1514.” Exceptions were also filed to the report of the master assigning, among other reasons, that the master exceeded his authority in many respects and ignored certain provisions of the bylaws of Arcadia.

The court approved the master’s report and adopted the findings of fact and conclusions of law and entered the following order: “1. Plaintiffs’ motion to suppress or dismiss the Master’s report is denied. 2. Plaintiffs’ exceptions to the Master’s report are dismissed. 3. The stockholders meeting of November 26, 1962, is declared invalid. 4. The directors’ meetings of November 26, 1962, December 17, 1962, August 29, 1963, and Octo[39]*39ber 4, 1863, are invalid. 5. The special stockholders meeting held on November 5, 1963, was a valid special stockholders meeting and the board of directors, consisting of Morton J. Sablosky, Bennard Shapiro, Nathan Markovitz and Edna Shapiro was duly elected at that meeting and may, henceforth, act as the board of directors of the Arcadia Theatre Company until the next valid election of directors.”

Appellants assign as error: I. The master was without any authority to make any factual or legal determinations. II. Authority for the master could not be supplied by consent or otherwise. III. The master violated the injunction of September 9, 1963, which was continued in full force and effect under the stipulation of September 24, 1963. IV. Acts of de facto officers and directors are binding on all persons who acquiesce in their management and direction. V. The validity of the election of November 26, 1962, was beyond the scope of the issue and not determinable in an equity proceeding. VI. In fixing the date for the special meeting of shareholders, the master ignored sections of the bylaws.

The really dominant issue here is the extent of the master’s participation. Rule 1514 of the Rules of Civil Procedure provides: “Except as otherwise provided by Act of Assembly or rule of the Supreme Court, no examiner, master or auditor shall be appointed.”

The office of master in chancery was abolished in 1894. Abuses had developed from its use to the detriment of litigants in numerous respects. The responsibility of the court and its functions were being delegated to masters in chancery. In Commonwealth ex rel. v. Archbald, 195 Pa. 317, 318, 319, 46 A. 5 (1900), the Court, in speaking of the adoption of the rule abolishing the office of master in chancery in 1894, spoke of the evils which had arisen in the use of the master: “This application is founded on that portion of the [40]*40amended equity rules adopted in 1894 (see 159 Pa. 25 [XXV]), which provides that ‘the office of master in chancery is hereby discontinued, except in proceedings where decrees or interlocutory orders are to be executed, or their execution supervised by an officer of the court.’

“The object of the revision of the equity rules was to lessen the delay and expense of the proceedings, and in furtherance of the principle which is the proudest feature in the history of Pennsylvania jurisprudence that equity is part of the common law of the state, to assimilate as closely as may be, the practical administration of justice in the two forms of procedure. . . . By insensible degrees the office of master outgrew its position as a mere executive or administrative arm of the court, and usurped or had imposed upon it, functions which were strictly judicial. This state was not alone in its experience in this regard. ‘It is not competent for a court of chancery on its own motion or upon the request of one party to abdicate its duty to determine by its own judgment the controversy presented, and devolve that duty upon any of its officers:’ Beach on Modern Equity Practice, sec. 673, citing Kimberly v. Arms, 129 U. S. 512.

“It was to obviate this tendency among other reasons, that the present rules were adopted by this court. But the office of master though ‘discontinued’ with reference to its general use in the then existing practice was not abolished. It is a necessary part of the equipment of a court of chancery, extending back at least to the time of Edward the Third: Bennet, The Master’s Office in the Court of Chancery, p. 1.

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Bluebook (online)
209 A.2d 375, 418 Pa. 34, 1964 Pa. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arcadia-theatre-co-v-sablosky-pa-1964.