Blumenthal v. Roosevelt Hotel, Inc.

202 Misc. 988, 115 N.Y.S.2d 52, 1952 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1605
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 202 Misc. 988 (Blumenthal v. Roosevelt Hotel, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blumenthal v. Roosevelt Hotel, Inc., 202 Misc. 988, 115 N.Y.S.2d 52, 1952 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1605 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1952).

Opinion

Breitel, J.

Plaintiffs, minority stockholders and voting trust certificate holders, sue for a permanent injunction restraining defendant corporation, which operates the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City, from selling its business, property and assets [989]*989to a wholly owned subsidiary of Hilton Hotels Corporation. Plaintiffs have moved for a temporary injunction. Defendant has moved to dismiss the complaint for legal insufficiency. Certain voting trust certificate holders have moved to intervene as parties plaintiff.

It will only be necessary to discuss defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint for legal insufficiency.

The complaint in substance alleges that the Conrad Hilton interests dominate the ownership and management of defendant through control of a majority of its stock and occupancy of its officership and directorate; that they also dominate, control and manage the Hilton Hotels Corporation, and therefore, the newly created subsidiary which has agreed to purchase the business of defendant; that the agreement Avas not made at arm’s length ” but by these majority interests dealing with themselves; that the business is a prosperous one; that the future course of the business will be increasingly better; that the price is not adequate; that the proposed sale is not in the best interests of the corporation or of its stockholders, but rather in the interests of those who control both defendant and the prospective purchaser; and that the purpose is to eliminate or freeze out ” the scattered minority stockholders. Bad faith is charged generally to defendant’s management; but otherAvise the classic elements of fraud are not spelled out. The action is a representative one, and not a derivative one on behalf of the corporation, and the gravamen of the suit is the alleged purpose to' eliminate the minority stockholders' and the methods by which this purpose is sought to be accomplished. Plaintiffs conceded on argument and in their briefs that mere inadequacy of price would not ground an action, but consider inadequacy of price as an element of proof in showing bad faith.

The question is whether minority stockholders and certificate holders, situated as these plaintiffs are, are limited in remedy to an appraisal of their stock under sections 20 and 21 of the Stock Corporation Law or may they avail themselves of remedies in equity attacking the sale as illegal and fraudulent.

Plaintiffs rely on Kavanaugh v. Kavanaugh Knitting Co. (226 N. Y. 185). In that case the court said (pp. 195-196): “ When a number of stockholders constitute themselves, or are by the law constituted, the managers of corporate affairs or interests they stand in much the same attitude towards the other minority stockholders that the directors sustain, generally, towards all stockholders, and the law requires of them the utmost good [990]*990faith. * * * A court of equity will protect a minority stockholder against the acts or threatened acts of the board of directors or of the managing stockholders of the corporation, which violate the fiduciary relation and are directly injurious to the stockholders. The statute empowers the directors and stockholders, under the prescribed procedure, to dissolve the corporation. The plaintiff took his stock subject to the provisions of the statute. Judicial authority does not extend to enjoining the exercise of a right conferred by legislative authority, The courts cannot pass upon the question of the expediency of the dissolution, for that is the very question which the legislature has authorized the board of directors and the stockholders to decide. They can, however, and will, whenever the facts presented to them in the appropriate action demand, inflexibly uphold and enforce, in accordance with established equitable principles, the obligations of the fiduciary relation. The good faith of the individual defendants is a proper and fundamental subject to be adjudged. Bad faith, fraud or other breach of trust constitutes a foundation for equitable relief.”

The court, in sustaining the complaint in the Kavanaugh case (supra, p. 198), stressed that the action of the majority was “ in bad faith and for the sole purpose of permitting the individual defendants Kavanaugh to dissolve the corporation for the purpose of depreciating the value of the corporate property and the plaintiff’s proportionate interest therein.”

Involved in the Kavanaugh case (supra) was a closed corporation, a scheme and plan to squeeze out the plaintiff, effecting the proposed dissolution of the corporation under the statute, thus throwing the business into a forced sale and for the alleged purpose of depreciating the value of the corporate property and of the plaintiff’s proportional interest in it. As a consequence, if plaintiff proved his allegations, he would have shown that the value of his stock would have been irretrievably reduced in value or destroyed. The statutory procedure chosen by defendants in that case to effect their purpose was one under which there was no right in dissenting stockholders to procure an appraisal of their, stock. Unless the remedy in equity was provided, plaintiff’s property would inevitably be adversely affected.

The principles stated in the Kavanaugh case (supra) are sound principles of law and equity, but the situation that we have in the instant case is not the same as that involved in the Kavanaugh matter.

[991]*991In this case defendant has sought authority from its stockholders pursuant to the statutes to sell the entire business, property and assets of its enterprise. The same statutes provide a remedy to dissenting stockholders to procure an appraisal of the value of their stock under sections 20 and 21 of the Stock Corporation Law. It has been decided that where dissenting stockholders have such a remedy, it is an exclusive one. (Anderson v. International Minerals & Chemical Corp., 295 N. Y. 343; Beloff v. Consolidated Edison Co. of N. Y., 300 N. Y. 11.) The purpose of the appraisal statutes was made clear in the Anderson case (supra), and that purpose is stated to be one to provide a method by which objections can be fairly composed but in order to enable the proposed corporate action to proceed. The court said at page 350: This is plainly one of the cases in which it was intended that the rights of the dissenting minority should be surrendered, subject only to their right, secured by the statute, to fair and just compensation.” The Anderson case involved a consolidation. The Beloff case (supra) involved a merger. But the principles obviously would be no different when applied to a ease involving a sale of all the assets of a corporation.

Plaintiffs contend that the doctrine of the Kavanaugh case (supra) makes an exception to the exclusive remedy principle for which the Anderson and Beloff cases (supra) stand. They argue that where the bad faith affects the invocation of the statutory procedure, the statutory procedure itself is affected with illegality and as a result will not have the effect of limiting the dissenting stockholder to the appraisal procedure as an exclusive remedy. This would be true if plaintiffs had alleged and could show that the statutory procedure was being deliberately used as one of the instruments of defrauding the plaintiffs by, and with that intention, reducing or destroying the value of their stock.

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Bluebook (online)
202 Misc. 988, 115 N.Y.S.2d 52, 1952 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blumenthal-v-roosevelt-hotel-inc-nysupct-1952.