Constantine v. Minis

910 F. Supp. 657, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19546, 1995 WL 774779
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedDecember 21, 1995
DocketCV 495-239
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 910 F. Supp. 657 (Constantine v. Minis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Constantine v. Minis, 910 F. Supp. 657, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19546, 1995 WL 774779 (S.D. Ga. 1995).

Opinion

ORDER

NANGLE, District Judge.

Before the Court are plaintiffs motion to remand the above-captioned action to state court and defendants’ motion to dismiss the action for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Because the Court finds that the action was not properly removed to this Court, plaintiffs motion to remand will be granted and the Court does not reach the merits of defendants’ motion to dismiss.

BACKGROUND

This action arises out of the division of proceeds from the sale of a corporation between the corporation’s preferred and common stockholders. The corporation, known as Amineo, Inc. (“Aminco”), was a closely-held Delaware corporation with authorized capital stock of 5,000,000 shares of common stock and 1,000,000 shares of preferred stock. The first 675,000 shares of the corporation’s preferred stock were designated as “Series A”, and the owner of a share of Series A preferred stock was entitled to 15 votes. The remaining shares of preferred stock and all shares of common stock entitled their owner to one vote per share.

*659 Defendant, A. Minis, Jr., was the President of Amineo and sat upon the corporation’s Board of Directors. In addition, he owned 278,046 (50.2%) of the corporation’s outstanding shares of Series A preferred stock and individually exercised approximately 48% of the voting power of Amineo stock. Minis’ son, defendant Henry H. Minis, and his daughter, defendant Marguerite Minis Trethewey, also sat upon Aminco’s Board of Directors and owned substantial amounts of the company’s preferred and common stock. Thus, A. Minis, Jr. and his children constituted three of the four directors sitting on the company’s Board and together owned a controlling interest in the company.

Aminco’s principal operating subsidiary was a Georgia corporation known as Carson Products Company (“Carson Products”), which manufactured health and beauty products aimed at the African-American community. In February of 1985, Carson Products created, at the direction of A. Minis, Jr., an Employee Stock Ownership Plan and Trust (“ESOP” or “Plan”) under § 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code. Plaintiff, Linda R. Constantine, was an employee of Carson Products and a participant in the company’s ESOP. She and other Carson Products employees participated in the ESOP by making contributions from their income to the Plan.

Concomitant with the creation of the Carson Products ESOP, defendants transferred 232,410 shares of Amineo common stock 1 to the ESOP in exchange for $2 million, which the ESOP had borrowed. In addition, defendants agreed that the value of their Amineo preferred stock would be “frozen” at a price of $27.50 per share. Defendants agreed to freeze the price of their preferred stock so that they would be entitled to certain estate tax benefits. In order to obtain these benefits, however, their stipulation of value had to be permanent and unalterable. Accordingly, Aminco’s Certificate of Incorporation provides that the Series A Preferred Stock held by Minis and his children shall be redeemed for the price of “$27.50 per share and no more”. The Certificate further provides that the stock may be redeemed by Aminco’s Board of Directors at any time for a price of “$27.50 per share, and no more”.

Consistent with the defendants’ agreement to freeze the price of their preferred stock, Minis assured plaintiff and the other Carson Products ESOP participants that all equity appreciation in Amineo after 1984 would belong to the common shareholders. Accordingly, all stock valuations obtained by Aminco between 1984 and 1993 consistently attributed a value of no more than $27.50 per share to the company’s preferred stock and attributed all of the company’s remaining value to the common stock. These valuations were periodically transmitted to the ESOP participants and were represented to reflect the increased value of the ESOP’s interest in Amineo Delaware’s common stock. In 1994, however, Aminco’s preferred stock was given a value that exceeded $27.50 and, as a result, the total value of company’s common stock was less than it had been in 1993.

In the spring of 1995, defendants solicited an offer from a corporation called DNL Savannah Acquisition, Inc., to purchase Amineo for $96.2 million. Upon learning of the offer, four officers of Carson Products sent a letter, dated May 5, 1995, to defendants expressing their belief that the provision within Amineo’s articles of incorporation entitling the corporation to redeem its preferred shares at the call price of $27.50 was a corporate asset, that the Board of Directors had a fiduciary duty to immediately redeem the preferred stock at that price, and that the Board’s failure to redeem the stock would deprive the common shareholders of more than $30 million in sales proceeds if the corporation were sold in accordance with DNL’s offer.

In response to the letter, defendants initiated an action in the Chancery Court of the State of Delaware against one of the officers of Carson Products, individually and as representative of all members of the Carson Products ESOP. Defendants sought in the action a declaratory judgment that Aminco’s *660 directors were not required to exercise the preferred stock redemption rights and that the allocation of the sale proceeds between Aminco’s preferred and common shareholders was lawful and proper.

Although defendants’ action in the Delaware Court purported to be against all ESOP participants as a class, the ESOP participants allegedly were not provided with either an official, court-ordered notice of the action or the opportunity to “opt out” of the suit. Furthermore, defendants allegedly misrepresented material facts underlying the lawsuit in order to induce a number of the ESOP participants to execute a release that purports to waive any rights that they might have in connection with any claim concerning the division of the proceeds from the sale of the corporation between the preferred and common stockholders.

On August 23,1995, after receiving limited releases from some Carson Products ESOP participants, defendants dismissed the Delaware suit and sold Aminco to DNL for $96.2 million. At the time of the sale, the Carson Products ESOP owned 187,056 (57.8%) of the 323,514 shares of common stock that were outstanding in Aminco. The ESOP was effectively terminated on or about the date of the sale of Aminco, 2 and a resulting ESOP trust holds the proceeds from the sale of the ESOP’s 187,056 shares.

On September 7, 1995, plaintiff brought this action on her own behalf, and as representative of all other similarly situated Carson Products ESOP participants, in the Superior Court of Chatham County, State of Georgia, seeking recovery of the $30 million in sale proceeds that would have gone to Aminco’s common stockholders had the Board of Directors redeemed the corporation’s preferred stock at the call price of $27.50 per share. Plaintiffs complaint alleges three state-law claims against defendants: breach of corporate fiduciary duties, breach of contract and unjust enrichment. Plaintiff also seeks $15 million in punitive damages, as well as other equitable relief.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
910 F. Supp. 657, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19546, 1995 WL 774779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/constantine-v-minis-gasd-1995.