Carvel v. Andreas Holdings Corp.

698 A.2d 375, 1995 Del. Ch. LEXIS 138, 1995 WL 929030
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 24, 1995
DocketCivil Action 14520
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 698 A.2d 375 (Carvel v. Andreas Holdings 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
Carvel v. Andreas Holdings Corp., 698 A.2d 375, 1995 Del. Ch. LEXIS 138, 1995 WL 929030 (Del. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

JACOBS, Vice Chancellor

Pending is a motion by the defendants, Andreas Holdings Corp. (“Andreas”) and Betty Godley (“Godley”), to stay this action.

In this proceeding, brought pursuant to 8 Del. C. § 225, the plaintiffs, Agnes and Pamela Carvel, ask this Court to declare that: (i) Agnes Carvel (“Agnes”) is the sole stockholder of Andreas and entitled to vote all of its shares, (ii) Agnes remains the President of Andreas, and Pamela Carvel (“Pamela”) remains Andreas’ Vice President and Secretary, and that (iii) actions taken at a purported stockholders’ meeting of Andreas on May 2, 1995, in which the plaintiffs were ousted as officers of Andreas and defendant Godley was elected a director and officer, are void and of no effect.

Both sides agree that the critical issue in this case is whether the owner of the Andre-as stock is Agnes or the Estate of her deceased husband, Thomas Carvel. That issue, defendants argue, is presently before the Surrogate’s Court in Westchester County, New York (the “New York Court”), which has administered Thomas Carvel’s Estate since 1991 and will decide the stock ownership question sometime after February 1996. Defendants argue that the New York Court has previously asserted jurisdiction over An-dreas by issuing an Order providing for its interim governance, and that only the New *376 York Court can definitively determine the ownership of the Andreas stock, for purposes of establishing whether the stock is an asset of the Estate. Therefore, defendants conclude, the policies favoring comity and the efficient administration of justice dictate that the New York Court — and not this Court — • determine that stock ownership issue.

For the reasons next discussed, I conclude that the motion is well founded and should be granted.

I.

Before addressing the motion, a recital of certain background facts and events is required. Except where noted, those facts are not in dispute.

Until his death in 1990, Thomas Carvel was (and Mrs. Carvel still is) a resident of New York. Before 1988, Mr. and Mrs. Carvel jointly owned the stock of two corporations, Carvel Corporation and Chain Locations, Inc. (“Chain Locations”). Under a revised estate plan agreed to in February 1988, the stock of Carvel Corporation was transferred of record into the sole name of Thomas Carvel, who sold that stock to a third party in 1989. As part of that transaction, Thomas Carvel repurchased a subsidiary of Carvel Corporation known as All American Sport City, Inc. In the fall of 1989, Mr. Carvel formed a new Delaware corporation known as CCCC Holdings Corp. and contributed to it his All American Sport City, Inc. stock. In 1990, CCCC Holdings Corp. merged with All American Sports City, Inc. and certain other companies that Mr. Carvel owned. As part of that merger, CCCC Holdings Corp. changed its name to Andreas Holdings Corp.

Thomas Carvel died in 1990. Under the terms of his Will, Agnes and Pamela Carvel, Betty Godley, Robert Davis, Mildred Arcadi-pane, Herbert Roth, and Anthony J. Cerrato became the co-Executors of Mr. Carvel’s Estate under the supervision of the New York Court. From their appointment in February 1991 until mid-1994, all the co-Executors confirmed in publicly-filed documents that the Estate owned all of the stock of both Andreas and Chain Locations.

Until May 1995, Agnes and Pamela Carvel served as officers and directors of both An-dreas and Chain Locations. The other director was defendant Godley, one of the co-Executors of the Estate. In April 1994, the co-Executors other than Agnes and Pamela filed accountings with the New York Court, representing that the Estate owned all of the stock of Andreas and of Chain Locations. In response, Pamela and Agnes filed formal exceptions to those accountings, claiming for the first time that Agnes owned 50% of the stock of Chain Locations. That claim was amended in January 1995 to assert that Agnes owned 93.5% of the outstanding stock of Chain Locations.

From that point forward, the co-Executors became embroiled in an acrimonious legal dispute involving the Estate, the co-Executors, Chain Locations, and Andreas. In October 1994, Agnes and Pamela Carvel petitioned the New York Court for a decree revoking the letters testamentary and letters of trusteeship of co-Executors Robert Davis and Mildred Arcadipane. That petition charged Davis and Arcadipane with self-dealing and breaches of fiduciary duty as Executors of the Estate and of the Carvel Foundation.

Thereafter (according to affidavits filed by the defendants), in November 1994 and January 1995, Pamela, in her capacity as an officer of Chain Locations and Andreas, caused Chain Locations to pay approximately $2 million to Agnes, who then transferred those monies to a London, England bank. In February 1995, Pamela (again, in her officer capacity) caused Andreas to confess judgment for over $4.1 million in favor of Chain Locations.

After the remaining co-Executors learned of these acts, they called a stockholders meeting of Andreas on May 2,1995. At that meeting the co-Executors voted, on behalf of the Estate as Andreas’ purported sole stockholder, to remove Agnes and Pamela as directors of Andreas. Based in part upon that vote, the New York Court entered an interim Order on July 5, 1995 suspending Agnes’ power to act as an Executor of the Estate, suspending Pamela’s and Agnes’ powers to act as directors or signatories of Chain Loca *377 tions and Andreas, and directing Pamela to turn over to Godley all books and records in her possession relating to those corporations.

The New York Court scheduled a final hearing on the subject of that interim order, namely, whether Pamela and Agnes Carvel should be permitted to serve as officers and directors of Andreas and Chain Locations. That hearing was, however, continued at Pamela’s and Agnes’ request. On August 16, 1995, the New York Court gave Pamela and Agnes the choice of (i) proceeding to a final hearing on August 27,1995, or (ii) postponing that hearing and leaving in place the July 5 Order suspending Pamela’s and Agnes’ powers to act as officers and directors of Andre-as and Chain Locations. Pamela and Agnes elected to postpone a final hearing, and did not seek further expedition of the New York Court proceeding.

Instead, on September 5, 1995, Agnes and Pamela filed this § 225 action, seeking a declaration that (i) Agnes is the sole stockholder of, and entitled to vote, all of Andreas’ shares, (ii) the actions taken by the eo-Exec-utors at the May 2, 1995 shareholders’ meeting of Andreas, ousting Pamela and Agnes from their positions as officers of Andreas and substituting Betty Godley, were legally invalid, and (iii) that Agnes and Pamela remain as officers of Andreas.

Ten days later, on September 5, 1995, the remaining co-Executors filed a petition in the New York Court to remove Pamela and Agnes as Executors of the Estate, to vacate the Andreas confession of judgment, and to restrain Pamela and Agnes from further prosecuting this action. The New York Court has fixed a schedule, agreed to by counsel for all parties (including counsel for Pamela and Agnes), that calls for the completion of discovery on that petition in early February 1996. The issue of who owns the Andreas stock would be determined when the New York Court decides the petitions presently pending before it.

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Bluebook (online)
698 A.2d 375, 1995 Del. Ch. LEXIS 138, 1995 WL 929030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carvel-v-andreas-holdings-corp-delch-1995.