Deann M. Totta v. CCSB Financial Corp.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 31, 2022
DocketC.A. No. 2021-0173-KSJM
StatusPublished

This text of Deann M. Totta v. CCSB Financial Corp. (Deann M. Totta v. CCSB Financial 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
Deann M. Totta v. CCSB Financial Corp., (Del. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

EFiled: May 31 2022 09:02PM EDT Transaction ID 67677152 Case No. 2021-0173-KSJM IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

DEANN M. TOTTA, LAURIE ) MORRISSEY, CHASE WATSON, and ) PARK G.P., INC., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2021-0173-KSJM ) CCSB FINANCIAL CORP., ) ) Defendant. )

POST-TRIAL MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: February 17, 2022 Date Decided: May 31, 2022

Kevin H. Davenport, John G. Day, PRICKETT, JONES & ELLIOTT, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Counsel for Plaintiffs Deann M. Totta, Laurie Morrissey, Chase Watson, and Park G.P., Inc.

Aaron. E. Moore, MARSHALL DENNEHEY WARNER COLEMAN & GOGGIN, Wilmington, Delaware; Brett A. Scher, Patrick M. Kennell, KAUFMAN DOLOWICH & VOLUCK, LLP, New York, New York; Counsel for Defendant CCSB Financial Corp.

McCORMICK, C. The defendant is a holding company that owns a small community bank. Its

directors faced a proxy contest by an insurgent who has held stock in the company for more

than a decade, and who has had an antagonistic and litigious relationship with the board.

The directors feared that if the stockholder gained control of the board, then he would

destroy the community bank that many of the directors had lovingly served for years.

To counter this perceived threat, the directors invoked a provision in the company’s

charter that prohibits a stockholder from exercising more than 10% of the company’s

voting power in an election (the “Voting Limitation”). The directors adopted a new

interpretation of that never-before-invoked provision under which the board could

aggregate multiple stockholders’ holdings if the board perceived the stockholders to be

acting in concert with one another. Relying on that interpretation, the board instructed the

inspector of elections not to count any votes above the Voting Limitation that were

submitted by the insurgent, his slate of nominees, and an entity affiliated with a nominee’s

father. Due to this instruction, the insurgent’s nominees lost the election.

The plaintiffs are the insurgent’s company and nominees. They have sued under

Section 225 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (the “DGCL”) to invalidate the

board’s instruction to the inspector of elections. The parties stipulated to trial on a paper

record. This post-trial decision holds that the board improperly applied the aggregation

principles of the Voting Limitation to disenfranchise the plaintiffs. This decision further

concludes that the board’s conduct was invalid under equitable principles. For these

reasons, judgment is entered in favor of the plaintiffs. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The court held a half-day trial on a paper record on February 17, 2022. The record

comprises 113 trial exhibits, depositions from nine witnesses, and forty-six stipulations of

fact. These are the facts as the court finds them after trial.1

A. CCSB And The Voting Limitation

CCSB Financial Corp. (the “Company”) is a Delaware corporation that wholly owns

Clay County Savings Bank (the “Bank”).2 The Bank operates three branches near Kansas

City in Clay County, Missouri.3 The Bank has underperformed financially compared to its

peers.4

The Company’s shares are thinly traded in the over-the-counter market. As of

December 3, 2020, which was the record date for the meeting of stockholders at issue in

this case (the “Record Date”), the Company had 743,071 shares of common stock

outstanding, comprising all of the Company’s outstanding voting power.5 As of the Record

Date, the Company’s board of directors (the “Board”) comprised David Feess, Mario

1 The Factual Background cites to: C.A. No. 2021-0173-KSJM docket entries (by docket “Dkt.” number); trial exhibits (by “JX” number); the trial transcript (Dkt. 75) (“Trial Tr.”); and stipulated facts set forth in the Parties’ Joint Pre-Trial Order (Dkt. 69) (“PTO”). The parties lodged the deposition transcripts of the following witnesses: David Feess, David Johnson, Deborah Jones, Stephanie Kalahurka, Laurie Morrissey, DeAnn Totta, Mario Usera, Chase Watson, and David Watson. The deposition transcripts are cited by reference to the witnesses’ last names and “Dep. Tr.” 2 PTO ¶ 5. 3 Id. 4 JX-48 at 4. 5 PTO ¶ 5.

2 Usera, Deborah Jones, Louis Freeman, Debra Coltman, Robert Durden, and George

McKinley.6 Feess served as Board chairman. Usera has been the Company’s and the

Bank’s president and CEO since 2013 and has been employed by the Bank since 1997.7

Usera reported beneficially owning 78,442 shares, or 10.56% of the Company’s

outstanding stock on the Record Date, though he testified at his deposition that he

mistakenly failed to include his daughter’s shares when reporting his beneficial

ownership.8 Collectively, the Board beneficially owned 23.39% of the Company’s

outstanding stock on the Record Date.9

The Bank was founded in March 1922 as a savings and loan association.10 The

Company was incorporated in September 2002 as a holding company for the Bank, which

converted to a federally chartered savings bank in 2003.11 The prospectus for the

conversion stated that the Board “believe[d] that it is appropriate to adopt provisions

permitted by federal regulation to protect the interests of the converted association and its

stockholders from any hostile takeover.”12

6 Id. ¶ 6. 7 Id. ¶ 9. 8 Id.; Usera Dep. Tr. at 145:18–146:14. 9 PTO ¶ 16. 10 JX-93 (Bank Website Page “Our History” Printout) at 1. The court congratulates the Bank on recently celebrating its hundredth birthday. 11 Id. 12 JX-104 at 142.

3 Those anti-takeover provisions appear in Article FOURTH of the Company’s

certificate of incorporation, which was filed September 13, 2002, and has never been

amended.13

Article FOURTH established the Voting Limitation, which provides that “in no

event” shall any “person” who “beneficially owns in excess of ten percent (10%) of the

then-outstanding shares of Common Stock . . ., be entitled, or permitted to any vote in

respect of the shares held in excess of the Limit.”14 The Voting Limitation is quoted in full

in the legal analysis.

Article FOURTH defines “person” and “beneficial owner” using concepts like

“affiliate” and “acting in concert” that result in the aggregation of shares across owners.

Those definitions and their implications are quoted and discussed in the legal analysis.

Article FOURTH empowers the Board to interpret and enforce the Voting

Limitation. Article FOURTH (C)(3) grants the Board the “power to construe and apply

the provisions of this section and to make all determinations necessary or desirable to

implement such provisions,” including whether the aggregation principles apply.15 Article

FOURTH (C)(6) then provides that “[a]ny constructions, applications, or determinations

made by the Board of Directors pursuant to this section in good faith and on the basis of

such information and assistance as was then reasonably available for such purpose shall be

13 JX-1 (“Certificate of Inc.”) at 1–2; Trial Tr. at 49:8–16. 14 Certificate of Inc., art. 4(C)(1). 15 Id. art. 4(C)(3).

4 conclusive and binding upon the Corporation and its stockholders.”16 This decision refers

to Article FOURTH (C)(6) as the “Conclusive-And-Binding Provision.”

It is undisputed that, before the Company’s 2020 annual meeting and director

election, the Board had never applied the Voting Limitation.17 This was so despite the fact

that, in at least one prior election, a stockholder holding more than 10% of the Company’s

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