Boylan v. Boston Sand & Gravel Co.

25 Mass. L. Rptr. 209
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 2009
DocketNo. 022296BLS1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 Mass. L. Rptr. 209 (Boylan v. Boston Sand & Gravel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boylan v. Boston Sand & Gravel Co., 25 Mass. L. Rptr. 209 (Mass. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Gants, Ralph D., J.

The defendant Manchester Sand, Cement & Gravel Co., Inc. (“Manchester Sand”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the defendant Boston Sand & Gravel Co. (“Boston Sand”), is in the business of acquiring property to mine sand, gravel, and stone that Boston Sand turns into ready-mix cement. Manchester Sand owns roughly 3,000 acres of property in Hooksett, New Hampshire. Most of this land is located on the east side of Route 3, but roughly 250 acres is located about one-half to one mile to the west of Route 3 (“the West Side Property”). Among Manchester Sand’s mined-out property is a 42-acre parcel of land that is part of the West Side Property (“the 42-Acre Parcel”). On May 21, 1996, Boston Sand’s Board of Directors unanimously authorized Manchester Sand to lease the 42-Acre Parcel to defendant, Ankat Properties Inc. (“Ankat”), a corporation owned by two of Boston Sand’s officers and directors, defendant Dean M. Boylan, Jr. (“Dean, Jr.”) and his sister, defendant Jeanne-Marie Boylan (“Jeanne-Marie”), for $2,000 per month, with a three-year option to buy the Parcel for $255,000.

Daniel J. Boylan, Jr. (“Dan”), the uncle of Dean, Jr. and Jeanne-Marie, was a shareholder of Boston Sand and, indirectly, of Manchester Sand (since Boston Sand owns and controls Manchester Sand). Under the Separation Agreement he entered into with Boston Sand on June 15, 1995, Dean, Jr. and Jeanne-Marie were required to give Dan written notice of any proposed related party transaction, such as the proposed lease of the 42-Acre Parcel by Ankat, at least 30 days before Board approval of the transaction and to provide Dan with a copy of any appraisal of the property to be leased or purchased. There is no dispute that Dean, Jr. and Jeanne-Marie failed to provide Dan with this prior notice. After Dan learned of the proposed lease, his attorney wrote Dean, Jr. and stated Dan’s objections to it. He asked the Boston Sand Board again to review this transaction. He attached a letter he had written that day to Boston Sand attorney Lawrence Silverstein stating that he had retained a real estate consultant whose preliminary view was that the purchase price of $7,500 per usable acre was low. Dan’s attorney wrote that he and Dan had authorized a full appraisal of this property and would make a copy of the appraisal available to the Board once it was completed. He asked that no steps be taken to implement this agreement until the Board could consider the new appraisal. Despite this request, on June 30, 1996, Dean, Jr., on behalf of Manchester, and Jeanne-Marie, on behalf of Ankat, executed the Ground Lease (“the Lease") for the 42-Acre Parcel with the terms earlier agreed to by the Board.

On September 23, 1996, Dan’s attorney provided Boston Sand with a copy of the appraisal he had caused to be prepared by David Kirk (“the Kirk Appraisal”) , which opined that the fair market value of the 42-Acre Parcel as of July 1, 1996 was $600,000. This was well above the fair market value opined in the appraisal that had been furnished to the- Boston Sand Board prepared by Applied Economic Research, Inc. (“the AER Appraisal”), a licensed New Hampshire appraisal company, which had estimated that the fair market value of the 42-Acre Parcel as of July 26, 1995 was between $240,000 and $270,000, or roughly $7,000 to $8,000 for each of the roughly 34 usable acres.-1 On November 4, 1996 Dan’s attorney wrote a letter to Dean, Jr. asking the Boston Sand Board to rescind the Ground Lease and prevent the sale of the 42-Acre Parcel in view of the Kirk Appraisal, which he attached, stating that the purchase price under the option in the Ground Lease was “grossly unfair, . . . especially when one considers that the $255,000 purchase price will be paid five years in the future, compared to an appraisal value of $600,000 in July 1996.” At the next regularly scheduled Board meeting on November 19, 1996, the Board discussed Dan’s objections to the Ground Lease but did not vote either to rescind the transaction or to ratify it.

This action was filed in 2002 by the plaintiffs, Dorothy L. Boylan (Dan’s wife) and Paul F. Ryan, as co-executors of Dan’s Estate (“the Estate”). Count I is brought as a shareholder derivative action on behalf of Boston Sand and Manchester Sand, alleging that Dean, Jr. and Jeanne-Marie breached their fiduciary duty by misappropriating a corporate opportunity— the Lease of the 42-Acre Parcel for less than its fair market value. The Estate seeks rescission of the Lease and the disgorgement of all profits earned from the Lease prior to the rescission. Count II alleges that Boston Sand breached the Separation Agreement by causing Manchester Sand to enter into the Lease without prior notice to Dan, as required under that Agreement.

On March 16, 2006, the Boston Sand directors unanimously voted to ratify the Board’s decision on May 21, 1996 approving the Lease of the 42-Acre Parcel to Ankat. All but one of the directors who voted at that meeting (John Mahoney) were the same who had originally voted to approve the transaction on May 21, 1996.2

On March 14, 2007, this Court denied Boston Sand’s motion for summary judgment as to the breach of fiduciary duly claim in Count I and the contract claim in Count II, and ordered that an evidentiary hearing be conducted to determine whether the ratification of the Lease in 2006 by the disinterested Boston Sand directors satisfied the three-tier test established in Houle v. Low, 407 Mass. 810 (1990). [22 Mass. L. Rptr. 290.] At that evidentiary hearing, this Court over six days heard the testimony of four witnesses — Bos[211]*211ton Sand directors John Mahoney, John Graham, and Dean, Jr., and Boston Sand attorney Lawrence Silverstein. Based on the testimony at the “Houle” hearing and the exhibits admitted into evidence, viewed in light of the governing law, this Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

This Court described in detail the background of this dispute in its Memorandum of Decision and Order on Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (“Summary Judgment D ecision”). Familiarity with that b ack-ground is assumed.

The Standard of Review

In this Court’s Summary Judgment Decision, this Court observed that Boston Sand, through the 2006 ratification by its three disinterested directors of the May 21, 1996 decision of the Board, essentially had voted to discontinue this shareholder derivative suit and sought the approval of the Court of that decision, which if granted would result in the dismissal of this action. In discussing the standard of review to be used, this Court wrote:

Essentially, the Supreme Judicial Court in Houle established a three-tiered test to evaluate these corporate decisions:
1. whether the directors who made the decision were “independent, unbiased, and [acted] in good faith,” and, if so,
2. whether the independent directors conducted “a thorough and careful analysis” and, if so,
3. whether the decision was “contrary to the great weight of the evidence.”
This is plainly a “heightened standard of review,” see Harhen v. Brown, [431 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Mass. L. Rptr. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boylan-v-boston-sand-gravel-co-masssuperct-2009.