Belle Isle Corporation v. MacBean

61 A.2d 699, 30 Del. Ch. 373, 1948 Del. Ch. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 6, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 61 A.2d 699 (Belle Isle Corporation v. MacBean) 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
Belle Isle Corporation v. MacBean, 61 A.2d 699, 30 Del. Ch. 373, 1948 Del. Ch. LEXIS 78 (Del. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Seitz, Vice-Chancellor:

This is another decision in the running battle taking place between two factions which, as is so often the case, now find it worth their while to have control of plaintiff corporation. Here they literally struck oil.

*376 This is a complaint to cancel certain stock issued to the defendant MacBean, to his wife and to the MacBeandominated Oakdale Contracting Company, Inc. Three separate transactions are under attack and the factual picture developed at the final hearing differs somewhat from the picture presented at the hearing on the preliminary injunction. See Belle Isle Corporation v. T. Leonard MacBean, et al., 29 Del.Ch. 261, 49 A. 2d 5.

The first transaction involves the issuance of 66,259 shares of the common stock of Belle Isle to the defendant Oakdale Contracting Company, Inc. (hereinafter called “Oakdale”), on April 24, 1940. This transaction was purportedly ratified by the board of directors at their meeting of June 22, 1940. Plaintiff contends that there was no quorum present at the directors’ meeting which purported to ratify the transaction and that the stock was issued for inadequate consideration. Oakdale challenges both contentions.

Was there a quorum present at the directors’ meeting of June 22, 1940, when this transaction was ratified? As of June 22, 1940, the corporate bylaws admittedly provided for ten directors, and they also provided that a majority constituted a quorum. Up to that time seven directors had been elected and no one had ever been elected to the other three directorships. The reason for the existence of the unfilled directorships is not now important.

At the directors’ meeting of June 22, 1940, Milton K. Huppuch was purportedly elected a director. Plaintiff contends that he was elected to fill one of the three directorships never theretofore filled. Oakdale contends that he was elected pursuant to agreement to succeed his father, W. A. Huppuch, Sr., who was then a director. However, Oakdale says that even if he was elected to fill one of the three previously unfilled directorships, such action was a nullity under the Delaware Corporation Law.

The oral testimony as to whether or not Milton K. *377 Huppuch was succeeding his father as a director is in sharp conflict. Under the circumstances of this case, I prefer to rely on documents prepared by the defendant MacBean, or statements admittedly made by him, since he was in practical control of Oakdale. The minutes of the directors’ meeting of June 22, 1940, were prepared by MacBean and signed by a Mr. Corcoran, who was clearly a MacBean representative on the board. These minutes state that Mr. Milton K. Huppuch was elected a director to fill “one of the existing vacancies in the Board”. The use of the plural “vacancies” clearly indicates that reference was being made to the three unfilled directorships. It is conceded that Mr. Huppuch, Sr., had not resigned up to this time and the minutes show that he actively participated in the business of the meeting after the election of Milton K. Huppuch as a director. Moreover, the undisputed statement made by the defendant MacBean at a directors’ meeting held on October 15, 1946, indicates that even up to that time he was not contending that there was an agreement whereby Milton K. Huppuch was elected a director in 1940 to succeed W. A. Huppuch, Sr. Thus MacBean said at the October 15, 1946 meeting “we are entitled to elect a director to fill a vacancy which has existed for some time, namely, the vacancy created by the death of Winfield A. Huppuch, no director having ever been elected to succeed him and fill that vacancy.”

I conclude that the directors at their meeting of June 22, 1940, purported to elect Milton K. Huppuch to fill one of the three previously unfilled directorships and not to succeed W. A. Huppuch, Sr. Did the directors have the power to take such action?

This court has concluded on several occasions that newly created directorships do not create vacancies as that term is used in Section 30 of the General Corporation Law, Rev. Code 1935, § 2062. Johnston v. Automatic Steel Products, ante p. 324, 60 A.2d 455. This court has also recently held that the stockholders may not delegate to the directors by way of a bylaw provision the right to vote for the election *378 of directors to fill newly created directorships. Johnston v. Automatic Steel Products, supra. Since the three directorships mentioned had never been filled, it follows under the Delaware decisions that they were not “vacancies”, and the directors could not therefore legally elect Milton K. Huppuch to fill one of these positions. This is so because the bylaw provision purporting to authorize them so to do is invalid under the Automatic Steel Products case. The fact that such authority also appeared in the certificate of incorporation does not alter the result. Consequently, Milton K. Huppuch was not legally elected a director at the meeting of June 22, 1940.

We thus proceed on the premise that on June 22, 1940 there were only seven directors, and there were no vacancies as that term is used in Section 30. It was held in Bruch v. National Guarantee Credit Corp., 13 Del.Ch. 180, 184, 116 A. 738, 740, that

“The rule is that the number necessary to constitute a quorum, under a by-law such as appears in this case, is a majority of the entire board notwithstanding there may be vacancies in the board at the time.”

Since “vacancies” as used by the court in the Bruch case did not include newly created directorships, we must determine whether the newly created but unfilled directorships are included for quorum purposes.

Section 9 of the General Corporation Law, Rev.Code 1935, § 2041, provides in part that

“The Directors shall hold office until their successors are respectively elected and qualified, and a majority of them shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business, unless the by-laws shall provide that a different number shall constitute a quorum * *

The present bylaw provides that “A majority of the directors shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.” Thus, the bylaw appears to follow the statute. The quoted language of Section 9 says that the directors shall hold office until their successors are elected and qualified. This language can only refer to directorships which *379 have been filled at some time. It goes on to say in the same sentence that a majority of them—referring to a majority of the directorships which have been filled at some time— shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business unless the bylaws provide for a different number. However, it is clear that the right to enact a bylaw providing for a different number for quorum purposes refers to directorships which have been occupied at some time and does not encompass newly created directorships.

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Bluebook (online)
61 A.2d 699, 30 Del. Ch. 373, 1948 Del. Ch. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belle-isle-corporation-v-macbean-delch-1948.