Deibler v. Atlantic Properties Group, Inc.

652 A.2d 553, 1995 Del. LEXIS 11, 1995 WL 12466
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 11, 1995
Docket42, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 652 A.2d 553 (Deibler v. Atlantic Properties Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deibler v. Atlantic Properties Group, Inc., 652 A.2d 553, 1995 Del. LEXIS 11, 1995 WL 12466 (Del. 1995).

Opinion

ALLEN, Chancellor.

This appeal is from an order of the Superi- or Court issuing a writ of possession to ap-pellee Atlantic Properties Group, Inc. (“Atlantic”). The real property in question is operated as the Olde Dinner Bell Inn in Rehoboth Beach Delaware; it constitutes substantially all of the assets of a Delaware corporation, The Olde Dinner Bell Inn, Inc. (“Dinner Bell, Inc.”). Atlantic’s right to the writ of possession arises from its purchase at a 1993 sheriffs sale of all of the issued and outstanding shares of capital stock of Dinner Bell, Inc. The sheriffs sale was ordered as part of the execution of a judgment obtained by the law firm Prickett, Jones, Elliott, Kris-tol & Schnee (the “Prickett Firm”) against that firm’s former clients, David H. and Carrie J. Deibler (the “Deiblers”), who had owned all of the outstanding capital stock of that corporation and two others. At the sale itself an exceedingly small amount was obtained when the true value of the property in issue is considered. Nevertheless, after taking evidence at a contested hearing, the Superior Court confirmed the sale and enforced it by issuing the writ of possession.

The Deiblers have appealed the granting of the writ, asserting that the sheriffs sale process was fatally defective in several respects. Moreover they claim that the amount realized by the sale was itself such as to compel the conclusion that the Superior Court abused its discretion in failing to require that the property go through another sale process. For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that the sale process fully complied with the requirements of law and that, in all events, the Deiblers have no standing to complain about the amount realized from the sale, as they deliberately attempted to subvert the judicial process and that attempt contributed to the outcome of the sale. We thus affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I.

For purposes of this appeal a brief outline of the facts will suffice. In November 1992 the Prickett firm obtained a judgment against the Deiblers in the sum of $121,-250.08. Discovery in aid of execution uncovered the fact that the Deiblers owned stock in three Delaware corporations. Distant Horizon Dream, Inc. (“Distant Horizon”), Coastal Resorts Properties, Inc. (“Coastal”) and Dinner Bell, Inc. Following attachment of the Deiblers’ stock of these corporations, on July 2, 1993 the Superior Court entered an order for the sale of 500 shares of Dinner Bell, Inc. stock, and ten shares of Coastal stock. The sale was scheduled for July 30, 1993. On July 2, 1993, the Superior Court considered and rejected a request by the Deiblers that the notice of public sale required by Section 4972 of Title 10 be distributed or published more broadly than that statute provides. The court instructed the Deiblers that they were free to engage in wider or different advertisement of the forthcoming sale if they thought it beneficial. The notice of public sale that was employed was skeletal. It identified the property to be sold as “100 Shares of Stock-Distant Horizon Dream, Inc”; “500 Shares of Stock-The Olde Dinner Bell Inn, Inc.”; and “10 Shares of Stock-Coastal Resort Properties, Inc.” No description of the number of authorized and outstanding shares of any of these corporations was set forth, nor were assets and liabilities summarized. It was stated that the property was “the property of David H. Deibler and Carrie J. Deibler.”

Shortly before the sale was to occur, and despite the attachment of the stock, the Dei-blers purported to dissolve all three corporations by filing certificates of dissolution with the Secretary of State and purported to deed to themselves the real estate that constituted the principal assets of Dinner Bell, Inc. and Coastal. This maneuver was discovered at the last moment by the Prickett firm who brought the matter before the Honorable T. Henley Graves, the judicial officer who had entered the sale order. In a conference telephone call the day before the sale Judge Graves orally instructed the Deiblers to re *555 verse the steps that they had purported to take. The Deiblers did not, however, attempt to do so promptly. At the sheriffs sale, according to the opinion below, which is not challenged in this respect, “the sale proceeded, but the Deiblers made the decision not to reverse the dissolutions and not to convey the real property back to the respective corporations. This was announced at the sale.” Atlantic Properties Group, Inc. v. Deibler, C.A. 93M-11-001 (Graves, J., Jan. 6, 1994) at 4, 1994 WL 45433.

At the sale only one bidder participated. Atlantic, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Guardian Capital Corporation (“Guardian”), a creditor of the Deiblers with a substantial mortgage on the Dinner Bell Inn property, bid $5,000 for the Deiblers’ Dinner Bell, Inc. stock and $12,000 for their Coastal stock. No bid was made for the Distant Horizon stock. The Deiblers made no bid of their own, nor did the Prickett firm which had come to an agreement with Guardian concerning the bidding. That agreement was to the effect that the Prickett Firm would not bid if Guardian promised either to bid $100,-000 or to pay to the Prickett Firm, if Guardian (i.e., through Atlantic) prevailed in the bidding at a price less than $100,000, the difference between its winning bid and $100,-000.

After the sale, the Deiblers continued to resist the process. On November 2, 1993 Atlantic ñled a civil action in the Superior Court to obtain a writ of possession to the Dinner Bell Inn, which, as noted above, constituted the sole substantial asset of Dinner Bell, Inc. That action drew into issue the validity of title to the stock of Dinner Bell, Inc. acquired by Atlantic as a result of the sheriffs sale. Following two days of taking evidence, the court rejected each of the positions advanced by the Deiblers and granted the writ of possession to Atlantic, requiring the Deiblers to give up possession of the Inn itself to Atlantic. This appeal followed.

II.

The Deiblers advance three grounds in support of their position that the granting of the writ of possession was reversible error. First, they assert that the notice of sale was entirely inadequate fairly to apprise any potentially interested buyers of the value of their stock. Even if the notice employed did meet the skeletal statutory requirements of Delaware law, they assert that nevertheless it did not in these circumstances afford to them due process of law which is assured to them by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Second they claim that the Superior Court’s conclusion that the results achieved in the sheriffs sale were not such as to make necessary another further effort to sell this property at sheriffs sale was incorrect and constituted an abuse of judicial discretion. Logically related to this contention is the subsidiary claim that the court’s determination of the fair market value of the Dinner Bell Inn and of Dinner Bell, Inc. stock was against the weight of the evidence. Third, and also related to the claim that the value achieved was not such as to permit the trial court to confirm the sale, is the claim that the court inappropriately “modified” the record after the close of the evidence to enhance the amount realized from the sale.

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Bluebook (online)
652 A.2d 553, 1995 Del. LEXIS 11, 1995 WL 12466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deibler-v-atlantic-properties-group-inc-del-1995.