Avoyelles Trust & Sav. Bank v. LILIEDAHL'S ESTATE
This text of 348 So. 2d 153 (Avoyelles Trust & Sav. Bank v. LILIEDAHL'S ESTATE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
AVOYELLES TRUST & SAVINGS BANK, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
The ESTATE of Marvin N. LILIEDAHL through Jo Ann Lanell Cooley Liliedahl, Administratrix, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*154 McCollister, Belcher, McCleary, Fazio, Mixon, Holliday & Jones by Donna D. Fraiche, Baton Rouge, James N. Lee, Bunkie, for plaintiff-appellant.
Harold J. Brouillette, Marksville, Onebane, Donohoe, Bernard, Torian, Diaz, McNamara & Abell by Joseph Onebane, Lafayette, for defendant-appellee.
Before WATSON, FORET and HEARD, JJ.
HEARD, Judge.
This case concerns the effect and enforceability of a corporate stock restriction included in the Articles of Incorporation and imprinted on a stock certificate representing 5,000 shares of Liliedahl & Mitchel, Inc. stock which were pledged to secure two promissory notes issued by the president-stockholder of the corporation as evidence of his individual indebtedness to Avoyelles Trust & Savings Bank, appellant herein. The debts evidenced by the promissory notes described as follows:
1. Promissory note dated November 16, 1975, executed by Marvin N. Liliedahl in favor of Avoyelles Trust & Savings Bank in the original amount of $43,500.00, bearing interest at the rate of eight (8%) percent per annum from date until paid plus twenty-five (25%) percent attorney's fees on which there was allegedly an unpaid principal balance as of the date of the filing of this action of $22,125.27, plus eight (8%) percent interest from March 10, 1976, and twenty-five (25%) percent attorney's fees and,
2. Promissory note dated April 4, 1975, executed by Marvin N. Liliedahl in favor of Avoyelles Trust & Savings Bank in the original amount of $50,000.00, bearing interest at the rate of ten (10%) percent per annum from date until paid plus twenty-five (25%) percent attorney's fees, said note being allegedly due in the full amount of the principal, interest and attorney's fees at the time of the filing of this action.
The appellant-bank, as plaintiff, filed suit on July 14, 1976, in the Twelfth Judicial District Court in and for the Parish of Avoyelles, Louisiana, against the Estate of Marvin N. Liliedahl.
Pursuant to a money judgment rendered August 10, 1976, in which the Twelfth Judicial District Court recognized a pledge of the above mentioned shares of stock, a writ of fieri facias was issued by the Twelfth Judicial District Court, Parish of Avoyelles, Louisiana, on October 28, 1976, directed against the Estate of Marvin N. Liliedahl, ordering the Sheriff of Avoyelles Parish to seize and sell the following described property.
"Five thousand (5,000) shares of Liliedahl & Mitchel, Inc. common stock represented by Certificate No. 1, dated April 1, 1971, issued in the name of Marvin Nils Liliedahl."
Advertisement of a judicial sale of said property appeared in the November 25, 1976 issue of the Weekly News, the official journal of Avoyelles Parish, giving public notice that the sale of said property was scheduled for Wednesday, December 8, 1976, at the front door of the Avoyelles Parish Courthouse.
Subsequent to the publishing of the above described notice, but prior to the sale of said stock, a petition of intervention was filed by Mr. Roland Mitchel, individually, and as President of Liliedahl & Mitchel, Inc., appellees herein, seeking a temporary restraining order and preliminary and permanent injunction to enjoin the Sheriff of Avoyelles Parish from conducting the judicial sale or from otherwise disposing of the above described stock.
The suit to enjoin, as prayed for in the petition for intervention, was heard December 14, 1976. The evidence presented included affidavits, exhibits, and stipulations of counsel as well as legal memoranda. No testimony was heard.
*155 The basis for the injunction prayed for by intervenor-appellee was that the above mentioned stock certificate seized under writ of fieri facias and Article VIII of the Articles of Incorporation of Liliedahl & Mitchel, Inc. bore the following restriction:
"No shareholder shall be permitted to sell his stock until he shall have first given written notice to the corporation of his intention to sell the same, stating in such notice the number of shares he or they desire to sell and transfer, the bona fide price at which he or they propose to transfer the same and the name of the person to whom the same is to be sold and transferred. The corporation shall then have an option for a period of thirty (30) days after the notice has been given to purchase the stock so offered for sale at the price stated in the notice. If the corporation desires to accept this option, it must agree to purchase all of the stock offered for sale and it must signify its acceptance in writing to the stockholder who declares to sell the stock. The giving of and the acceptance of the option by the corporation shall be by means of registered mail. The beginning of the thirty (30) day period shall commence at the hour and minute of the date the registered letter of notice is posted and shall expire seven hundred twenty (720) hours from the time of posting. In the event the corporation fails to exercise its option to purchase in the manner hereinabove set forth then in such event the other stockholders shall be notified in like manner as hereinabove provided for notice to the corporation and the other shareholders shall then have the right of purchasing at said price the stock desired to be sold in the proportion that the amount of stock owned by each in this corporation bears to the total issued stock and shall notify by registered mail the shareholder so desiring to sell of their intention to purchase within ten (10) days of receiving notice of said intended sale and transfer. In the event any stockholder or stockholders do not express their desire to purchase said offered stock, then the other stockholders or stockholder may exercise said privilege in the manner last above herein set forth. The provisions of this paragraph shall not apply to any sale or other transfer from a stockholder to the following relatives: ascendants and descendants, brothers, sisters, husbands and wives. This article shall be printed on all stock certificates issued by this corporation and the provisions of the same may be waived in writing by all of the shareholders of this corporation."
On December 16, 1976, the Opinion of the Court on Application for Preliminary Injunction was rendered in favor of intervenors-appellees. Judgment was stipulated to apply as to the permanent injunction as well, and the same was signed January 4, 1977. From this judgment, the plaintiff-appellant brought the present appeal.
Appellant contends:
A. That the stock certificate adjudged legally pledged to appellant can be judicially sold to satisfy debt.
1. The only sale or transfer prohibited by the stock restriction is a voluntary sale.
2. A judicial sale of stock to satisfy a pledge is not a voluntary sale as contemplated by the restriction.
3. The legal notice of the restriction extended only to potential purchasers, not to pledges of the stockholders.
B. That the philosophic basis for stock transfer restrictions relative to small business corporations is not a valid basis for the imposition of an injunction on an involuntary sheriff's sale.
C.
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