Comac Partners, L.P. v. Ghaznavi

793 A.2d 372, 2001 WL 1819337
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 30, 2001
DocketCivil Action 18971
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 793 A.2d 372 (Comac Partners, L.P. v. Ghaznavi) 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
Comac Partners, L.P. v. Ghaznavi, 793 A.2d 372, 2001 WL 1819337 (Del. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

Defendant Anchor Glass Container Corporation has not held an annual meeting of its stockholders for over four years. As such, it is undisputed that Anchor must hold an annual meeting, as the plaintiffs have requested in this action pursuant to 8 Del. C. $211 and § 225. The question that remains hotly disputed is whether all the seats on Anchor’s board of directors will be open for election at the meeting, or whether a minority of the board seats are *374 up for grabs. 1

In this opinion, I conclude that all of the seats on the Anchor board are up for election at the next annual meeting. This conclusion best comports with the relevant provisions of Anchor’s certificate of incorporation and bylaws, as well as the Delaware General Corporation Law (“DGCL”). Therefore, I grant plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment.

I. Factual Background 2

A. The Relevant Provisions Of Anchor’s Governing Instruments

Anchor was formed as a Delaware corporation in 1997. Its original certificate of incorporation was filed on January 3, 1997. The original certificate provided for nine “Initial Directors” to serve during an “Initial Period,” which was to expire on December 18,1999. 3

On February 5, 1997, Anchor filed an amended and restated certificate of incorporation (the “Restated Certificate”). The Restated Certificate provided that Anchor would have three classes of common stock during the Initial Period, Classes A-C. During that Period, the Class A stockholders had the right to elect four members of the Anchor board, and the Class B stockholders had the right to elect the other five. The Class C stockholders had no voting rights. On June 11, 1998, the Restated Certificate was amended yet again, 4 to increase the number of directors during the Initial Period to eleven and extend the Initial Period to February 5, 2000. The two additional directors were to be elected by the Class B holders, thus giving them the right to elect seven of the eleven board members. The amendment also provided that Classes A, B, and C of Anchor’s stock would be converted into a single class of common stock upon the expiration of the Initial Period.

The Restated Certificate also sets forth the process by which the board of directors is to be determined at the end of the Initial Period. In pertinent part, § 7.2(b) of the Restated Certificate provides:

Upon the expiration of the Initial Period, the Board of Directors shall determine the number of directors which shall thereafter constitute the Board of Directors. Such number of directors shall then be divided into three classes (“Classes”), which shall be as nearly equal in number as possible. The term of office of the first Class of directors shall expire at the first annual meeting after their election; the term of office of the second Class of directors shall expire at the second annual meeting after their election; and the term of office of the third Class of directors shall expire at the third annual meeting after their election. At each annual meeting, the number of directors equal to the Class whose term has expired at the time of such meeting shall be elected to hold office until the third succeeding annual meeting. 5

The composition of the Anchor board is also influenced by the rights of the eompa- *375 ny’s preferred stock. Pursuant to an amended Certificate of Designation, the Series A Preferred stockholders of Anchor have the right to elect five directors when the company has failed to pay dividends for a period defined in the Certificate. 6

B. The Composition Of The Anchor Board At The End Of The

Initial Period

When the Initial Period ended on February 5, 2000, the Anchor board was comprised of eleven directors (the “Holdover Board” or “Holdover Directors”).

The following “Class B Holdover Directors” were elected through written consent by the Class B common stockholders: John J. Ghaznavi, David T. Gutowski, M. William Lightner, C. Kent May, Paul H. Farrar, Richard Deneau, and Steven Friesen. The Class B common stock was held by Consumers U.S. Inc. and others affiliated with John J. Ghaznavi, who is indirectly Consumer U.S.’s controlling stockholder and was then Anchor’s Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer.

The Class A common stockholders had elected, by written consent, the following “Class A Holdover Directors”: Robert Ru-occo, Christopher Mackey, William J. Shaw, and Myron Sheinfeld. The plaintiffs in this case owned Class A common stock before the expiration of the Initial Period.

C. The Holdover Board’s Decisions Regarding The First Classified Board

On March 8, 2000, the Holdover Board as then composed met. Among the issues that were on the table was the size and classification of the board in the wake of the Initial Period’s expiration. According to the minutes of the meeting, the following action was taken:

WHEREAS, Section 7.2(b) of the Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation (the “Certificate”) of Anchor Glass Container Corporation, a Delaware corporation (the “Corporation”), provides, among other things, that:
(a) from and after the expiration of the Initial Period (i.e., February 5, 2000), the number of directors and the manner of their election, removal and the filling of vacancies are to be in accordance with the Corporation’s Bylaws, subject to the requirements of Section 7.2(b) and Section 7.8 of the Certificate;
(b) upon the expiration of the Initial Period, the Board of Directors of the Corporation shall determine the number of directors which shall thereafter constitute the Board of Directors; and
(c) such number of directors shall then be divided into three classes (individually a ' “Class” and collectively, “Classes”), which shall be as nearly equal in number as possible; and
(d) the term of office of the first Class of directors shall expire at the first annual meeting after their election and the term of office of the second Class of directors shall expire at the second annual meeting after their election and the term of office of the third Class of directors shall expire at the third annual meeting after their election.
WHEREAS, Section 3.4 of the Corporation’s Bylaws provides that, subject to the rights of the holders of any series of Preferred Stock to elect additional directors under circumstances specified in a Preferred Stock Designation, and ex *376

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
793 A.2d 372, 2001 WL 1819337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comac-partners-lp-v-ghaznavi-delch-2001.