Bio-Medicus, Inc. v. Shareholders Committee in Opposition to the Management of Bio-Medicus, Inc.

608 F.2d 1155
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1979
DocketNos. 78-1422, 78-1430, 78-1511, 78-1582, 79-1406, 79-1456 and 79-1739
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 608 F.2d 1155 (Bio-Medicus, Inc. v. Shareholders Committee in Opposition to the Management of Bio-Medicus, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bio-Medicus, Inc. v. Shareholders Committee in Opposition to the Management of Bio-Medicus, Inc., 608 F.2d 1155 (8th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

HANSON, Senior District Judge.

These consolidated appeals, interlocutory in character, are from four separate orders by two different judges1 denying three of plaintiffs’ motions for preliminary injunc-tive relief in the above-styled case. Because we find no abuse of discretion in connection with the denial of any of the motions, we affirm in each instance.

I.

The case arose out of a 1977 contest for control of Bio-Medicus, Inc., a publicly-held Minnesota corporation. Plaintiffs Kletsch-ka and Rafferty founded the company in 1970 and since then had served on its board of directors and as its chief executive officers. The defendant Shareholders Committee, composed of the individual defendants, was formed on June 29, 1977, for the pur-póse of initiating the proxy contest already mentioned. Without going into great detail, we note that the members of the Shareholders Committee were unhappy with Kletschka and Rafferty’s management of the company; with their resistance to bringing in outside managerial talent (and Kletschka’s alleged threat to bankrupt the company if this were attempted); and with their hotly-disputed claim that the board of directors had authorized them, at a December 1976 meeting, to convert their past-due salaries to shares of Bio-Medicus at the rate of $.01 a share. Payment of the back salaries at this conversion rate would have given Kletschka and Rafferty some 70% of the shares in the corporation.

The proxy contest was waged during July and August, 1977. This suit was filed on August 22, 1977, seven days before the annual meeting of the Bio-Medicus shareholders scheduled for August 29. In the complaint and by separate motions filed the same day and again four days later, plaintiffs alleged that defendants’ proxy materials were false and misleading in numerous respects, in violation of Section 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78n(a), and regulations thereunder,2 and sought among other things to have the district court enjoin defendants’ use of the materials, the holding of the annual meeting, or the voting of any proxies defendants had solicited if the meeting was held. The court did not issue any of these requested injunctions, but did postpone the annual meeting until September 7, 1977. It is not clear from the record before us whether the district court ever made an explicit ruling on the motions for injunctive relief just mentioned; in any case no appeal was taken from the court’s failure to grant them.

At the annual meeting held on September 7, 1977, the Shareholders Committee was [1157]*1157able to elect its slate of directors. A local bank served as judge of the election, and certified the results of its tabulation of the votes on September 14, 1977. After the election the new board took control of the company, although not without some difficulty. Kletschka and Rafferty refused to recognize the validity of the election, and during the next two months they continued in various ways to try to assert authority as directors and officers of the company, despite instructions to the contrary from the new board. The new board finally suspended them from their executive offices without pay on November 14, 1977; and on November 21,1977, plaintiffs made the first and most important of the motions with which we are here concerned, moving the court to

enjoin the Defendants ... by Preliminary Injunction, from anywise inter-ferring with [Kletschka and Rafferty’s] duties ... to [Bio-Medicus] as officers, directors, and employees thereof . so as to preserve the status quo pending further proceedings herein.

Without ruling on this motion, the district court arranged a temporary truce between the parties that allowed the new board to retain control of the company and stopped Kletschka and Rafferty from holding themselves out as officers and directors, but required the new board to pay Kletschka and Rafferty certain amounts as salaries; and on November 30, 1977 the court referred the case to a Special Master,3 who was empowered to hold hearings and directed to issue a report and recommended disposition of pending matters.

Pursuant to this order, the Master held 13 days of formal hearings during which 15 witnesses testified and 174 exhibits were received. On March 14, 1978, the Master issued his lengthy final report and recommendations. The principal matter dealt with in the report was plaintiffs’ November 21, 1977 motion for a preliminary injunction. Applying both the tests set forth in Fennell v. Butler, 570 F.2d 263 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 437 U.S. 906, 98 S.Ct. 3093, 57 L.Ed.2d 1136 (1978), to the factual and legal situation as he found it to be, the Master concluded that plaintiffs’ motion should be denied, on the ground that they had met neither branch of either Fennell test. On April 20,1978, the district court adopted the Master’s report and denied plaintiffs’ November 21, 1977 motion. The first two of these appeals ensued.4

While those appeals were pending, the time came for the 1978 annual meeting of the Bio-Medicus shareholders. Plaintiffs made a motion in the district court for a preliminary injunction against the convening of this meeting, the solicitation of proxies, or the voting of proxies or shares. The motion was set for hearing before the Magistrate,5 who concluded that plaintiffs had demonstrated neither irreparable injury nor a balance of hardships tipping decidedly in their favor if the meeting was allowed to go on as planned, and recommended that their motion be denied. This was done by order dated June 27, 1978, and plaintiffs again appealed. At the 1978 meeting, defendants’ slate of directors, which was not opposed by plaintiffs, was again elected to office.

The four appeals taken as of the summer of 1978 were consolidated for briefing and argument. In their brief plaintiffs pointed out that prior to adopting the report of the Master in its April 20, 1978 order, the district court had neither obtained a transcript of the proceedings before the Master nor held a hearing on plaintiffs’ objections to the report. On motion of defendants, this Court remanded the case to the district court for further consideration of the Master’s report pursuant to Rule 53(e)(1) and (2), F.R.Civ.P.6 The district court held an [1158]*1158initial hearing on February 1, 1979; the parties waived oral argument and agreed to file briefs; and transcripts were made available. On April 30, 1979, the district court in effect reissued its order of April 20, 1978, again adopting the Master’s report and denying plaintiffs’ November 21, 1977 motion for a preliminary injunction. Plaintiffs again appealed. On April 30,1979, the judge who had until then been handling the case, Judge Lord, also recused himself from further involvement with the case.

While the quickly-multiplying appeals were again pending before this Court, the time came for the 1979 annual meeting of the Bio-Medicus shareholders.

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