Baron v. Allied Artists Pictures Corp.

395 A.2d 375, 1978 Del. Ch. LEXIS 506
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 28, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 395 A.2d 375 (Baron v. Allied Artists Pictures Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baron v. Allied Artists Pictures Corp., 395 A.2d 375, 1978 Del. Ch. LEXIS 506 (Del. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

ON MOTION FOR ALLOWANCE OF COUNSEL FEES AND EXPENSES.

MOTION GRANTED IN PART.

BROWN, Vice Chancellor.

In these consolidated actions, counsel for the plaintiff have petitioned for an allowance of counsel fees in the sum of $276,800 plus the sum of $5,155.70 for expenses incurred in the prosecution of the matter. The defendants Allied Artists Pictures Corporation (“Allied”) and the named individual members of its Board of Directors, oppose the award of any fees and expenses to plaintiff’s counsel and ask further that plaintiff be ordered to reimburse Allied for the costs and counsel fees it was forced to expend in defending what it concludes were meritless actions. Allied’s position is based on the following factors.

During the course of the litigation the plaintiff, John G. Baron, was the owner of 10 shares of Allied’s common stock. The consolidated suits here were brought by him pursuant to 8 Del.C. § 225 to challenge the 1973 and 1974 election of directors to Allied’s Board. The basis for the challenge was that Allied’s Board of Directors, which was then being elected by the preferred shareholders due to an existing delinquency in the payment of preferred dividends, was wrongfully perpetuating its control of the corporation to the detriment of the common stockholders (1) by not paying the accumulated dividend arrearages on the preferred stock and (2) by failing to comply with sinking fund requirements relating to Allied’s preferred stock. Reference is made to Baron v. Allied Artists Pictures Corporation, Del.Ch., 337 A.2d 653 (1975) for the details thereof.

After discovery, briefing and argument, summary judgment was granted in favor of Allied and the other named defendants by means of the above-cited decision. Baron appealed this decision. However, on September 20, 1976 the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal from the bench, noting that the intervening merger of Allied into Allied Artists of Delaware, Inc. had caused the issues on appeal to become moot. This decision was confirmed by subsequent order of September 24, 1976.

In addition to the consolidated actions in this Court various other suits were instituted against Allied by either Baro.n or his nominee, all of which sought relief similar to that requested here. In 1973 a Court in California denied an injunction sought for the purpose of barring Allied’s preferred shareholders from voting at the 1973 shareholders meeting. In 1974 a New York court stayed one action pending the outcome of the first of these consolidated Delaware suits and dismissed a second action brought to declare the 1973 election of a majority of Allied’s Board to be unlawful. An action in the Delaware United States District Court was initially stayed and ultimately dis *378 missed when Baron failed to file an amended complaint within a deadline to which he had previously agreed. In January 1976 Baron filed an additional action in this Court seeking to enjoin the very merger which ultimately rendered his appeal of these actions moot. That application was also denied. He also complained to the Securities and Exchange Commission about Allied’s 1973 proxy statement, but without success. Allied notes that the theme common to all of these lawsuits is that Baron failed to prevail upon any of them.

Allied also points to the fact that Baron did not purchase his 10 shares of stock until the fall of 1973, and thus after he was aware of the pertinent matters relating to the preferred shareholders’ control of Allied. This was also after two similar actions had been brought by one Bruce D. Stuart — one of Baron’s lawyers — who Baron later admitted was acting on his behalf in so doing. Stuart purchased his shares the day before he verified his complaint in the first action brought by him. At the time Baron was employed as the manager of a Los Angeles movie theatre at a salary of $180 per week. His other means were not substantial. Thus, in addition to contending that Baron’s claims fall into the category of a purchased grievance (an argument made by Allied but not decided in these actions in view of the decision made on the merits), Allied doubts that it could have been Baron himself who was financing the “cross-country multicourt litigation” against it.

Petitioners take a different view of the matter. They point out that from 1967 onward control of Allied had rested with the holder of a majority of the preferred stock due to the dividend arrearages. They point out that this majority owner, Kalvex, Inc., had purposefully acquired a majority of the defaulted preferred and had thereafter remained in control, using funds when available to expand business rather than to pay the dividend arrearages which petitioners characterize as “relatively minor.” They acknowledge, as they must, the unsuccessful judicial record that they compiled along the way. They contend, however, that this unrelenting pressure was of necessity a factor in bringing about the merger of Allied and Kalvex through Allied Artists of Delaware, Inc., and that as a result of that merger the goal of their litigation efforts was accomplished in that (1) all preferred dividend arrearages were paid, (2) all preferred stock was redeemed (the purpose of the sinking fund), and (3) voting rights were returned to Allied’s common stockholders. It is contended that this result justifies an award of counsel fees and reimbursement of their expenses.

Petitioners also point out that while Baron lost the summary judgment issue in this Court on the basis that it had not been established by the record that Allied’s management had abused its business judgment under the existing circumstances in failing to liquidate the dividend arrearages, the decision of this Court was nonetheless subject to the following admonition set forth at 337 A.2d 660:

“It is clear, however, that Allied’s present board does have a fiduciary duty to see that the preferred dividends are brought up to date as soon as possible in keeping with prudent business management. * * It cannot be permitted indefinitely to plough back all profits in future commitments so as to avoid full satisfaction of the rights of the preferred to their dividends and the otherwise normal right of the common stockholders to elect corporate management.”

It was not until after the appeal was taken from the decision embodying this caveat, and after Baron’s opening brief had been filed in the Supreme Court, that the proxy statement concerning the proposed merger between Allied and its controlling preferred shareholder, Kalvex, Inc., was sent to Allied’s shareholders. Since it was in this setting that the appeal became moot as a result of the merger which accomplished all the relief that Baron was seeking, petitioners take the position that the actions brought in other jurisdictions do not detract from the merits of their fee application here.

*379

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
395 A.2d 375, 1978 Del. Ch. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baron-v-allied-artists-pictures-corp-delch-1978.