Deltona Transformer Corporation v. Deltran Operations USA, Inc., Carson Clarke, Chase Clarke, Michael Prelec, Jr., Michael Prelec, Sr., and Evin Dyon

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 26, 2026
Docket5D2024-1156
StatusPublished

This text of Deltona Transformer Corporation v. Deltran Operations USA, Inc., Carson Clarke, Chase Clarke, Michael Prelec, Jr., Michael Prelec, Sr., and Evin Dyon (Deltona Transformer Corporation v. Deltran Operations USA, Inc., Carson Clarke, Chase Clarke, Michael Prelec, Jr., Michael Prelec, Sr., and Evin Dyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deltona Transformer Corporation v. Deltran Operations USA, Inc., Carson Clarke, Chase Clarke, Michael Prelec, Jr., Michael Prelec, Sr., and Evin Dyon, (Fla. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

FIFTH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA ________________________________

Case No. 5D2024-1156 LT Case No. 2021-11378-CIDL ________________________________

DELTONA TRANSFORMER CORPORATION,

Appellant,

v.

DELTRAN OPERATIONS USA, INC., CARSON CLARKE, CHASE CLARKE, MICHAEL PRELEC, JR., MICHAEL PRELEC, SR., and EVIN DYON,

Appellees. _______________________________

Nonfinal appeal from the Circuit Court for Volusia County. Kathryn Diane Weston, Judge.

Daniel E. Nordby and Tara R. Price, of Shutts & Bowen LLP, Tallahassee, and Eric C. Christu and Devon A. Woolard, of Shutts & Bowen LLP, West Palm Beach, for Appellant.

Hala Sandridge, of Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC, and Stanley T. Padgett, of Padgett Law, P.A., Tampa, for Appellees Deltran Operations USA, Inc.

John J. Agliano, of Bajo Cohen Agliano P.A., Tampa, for Appellees, Carson Clarke, Chase Clarke, and Michael Prelec, Jr.

No Appearance for Remaining Appellees. June 26, 2026

MAKAR, J.

This case involves a dispute among a father and family members over the control and operation of Deltona Transformer Corporation (“DTC”), a family-owned and closely held corporation, and its former subsidiary, Deltran Operations USA, Inc. (“Deltran”). DTC sought to dissolve Deltran, and Deltran countered with an “irrevocable” election to buy out DTC’s shares in Deltran. At issue is the application of Florida’s buyout election statute, which deems an election “irrevocable” yet allows courts to “set aside or modify” an election on equitable grounds. See § 607.1436(1), Fla. Stat. (2026).

I.

In 1965, Michael G. Prelec founded DTC, which later developed the commercially successful Battery Tender® line of products centered around battery chargers and related items. In 2004, his son, Michael Prelec, Sr. (father), assumed control of DTC. In 2013, Deltran was formed as a subchapter C corporation with DTC as its sole shareholder. In 2016, Deltran authorized issuance of 100 Common Class A shares of stock and one Common Class B share of stock. The Class A shares were issued to the father’s family members as follows: Michael Prelec, Jr. (son), 35 shares; Evin Dyon (daughter), 35 shares; Carson Clarke (nephew), 15 shares; and Chase Clarke (nephew), 15 shares.

DTC retained the sole Class B share, which entitles the holder to vote on certain matters that require the unanimous consent of all shareholders. The holder of the Class B share can essentially veto major corporate matters such as the payment of dividends. It is an unusual stock because it has no entitlement to dividends but has powerful voting rights. Both classes of stock grant the holders a lifetime seat on Deltran’s board of directors.

Family discord over the operation of the companies eventually ensued. As a result, DTC, the father, and the daughter (Petitioners) filed an eight-count complaint against Deltran and its

2 remaining shareholders—the son and nephews (“Individual Shareholders”)—alleging various acts of malfeasance in the operation of Deltran. Petitioners sought a dissolution of Deltran.

In response, Deltran filed a notice of election to purchase the Deltran shares owned by DTC (one Class B Share) and the daughter (35 Class A shares) for fair value pursuant to section 607.1436(1), Florida Statutes. This statute, entitled “Election to purchase instead of dissolution,” is designed to promote the buyout of a complaining shareholder’s ownership interest rather than dissolve or liquidate a corporation. The Individual Shareholders filed their own notice of election to purchase the shares if Deltran could not do so.

Petitioners moved to set aside Deltran’s notice of election, arguing that the equities of the situation justified doing so. The trial court, however, determined it lacked “the power to entertain the [Petitioners’] motion” because the “election that the [Individual Shareholders] made, shall be irrevocable” pursuant to section 607.1436(1), which states:

In a proceeding under s. 607.1430(1)(b), the corporation may elect or, if it fails to elect, one or more shareholders may elect to purchase all shares owned by the petitioning shareholder at the fair value of the shares. An election pursuant to this section shall be irrevocable unless the court determines that it is equitable to set aside or modify the election.

§ 607.1436(1), Fla. Stat. (emphasis added). In the trial court’s view, the highlighted language must be read such that only the electing shareholders can revoke an election. The trial court ultimately held evidentiary hearings and entered a valuation judgment to effectuate the buyout election from which DTC now appeals.1

1 The daughter settled her claim and is not a party in this

appeal.

3 II.

At issue is the application of section 607.1436(1), Florida Statutes, which creates an option to a judicial dissolution of a corporation that allows the target corporation or its shareholders to buy out the petitioning shareholder’s interest. As a commentator has described:

Judicial dissolution of a closely held corporation, the “corporate divorce,” is one of the most acrimonious, expensive, and, by almost all accounts, unpopular of legal remedies available in business litigation. Modern corporate statutes tend to reflect this widely held aversion by providing courts and litigants with a variety of alternatives to ending a business’s existence. The buyout election, for example, a sort of call option patterned after common law remedies and American Bar Association (“ABA”) model legislation, provides one means by which shareholders and corporations can avoid the extreme remedy of corporate dissolution by forcing complaining shareholders to sell their stock to them.

See Matthew C. Lucas, Revoking the Irrevocable Buyout: Aligning Equity with Due Diligence in Corporate Dissolution, 75 Alb. L. Rev. 15, 15 (2012). Section 607.1436(1) is Florida’s version of the buyout election. The interpretative question presented, in part, is whether a notice of election can be set aside or modified on equitable grounds by a petitioning shareholder—here, DTC.

DTC argues that the trial court erred in its interpretation of the buyout statute in concluding that section 607.1436(1) precluded it from entertaining DTC’s motion to set aside Deltran’s election on equitable grounds; DTC further claims the trial court erroneously concluded that the statute allows only an electing shareholder to seek revocation on equitable grounds, not a petitioning shareholder. Deltran counters that vacating an election for equitable reasons renders the statutory purchase right meaningless; instead, the election right is “absolute” and designed to afford the corporation and remaining shareholders the power to end destructive litigation.

4 As discussed below, appellate courts nationwide have fallen on both sides of the interpretative question of whether a section 607.1436(1)-type election is irrevocable. Does it create an absolute right to purchase shares, or is it conditional based on equitable considerations that either party can raise?2 No Florida court has yet weighed in.3

To begin, the plain language of the statute seems to answer the primary question. An election is “irrevocable unless the court determines that it is equitable to set aside or modify the election.” § 607.1436(1), Fla. Stat. (emphasis added). It is apparent that the statute “serves as a streamlined solution for breaking a corporate deadlock” and that its “plain language . . . provides the corporation or its shareholders a substantive right to end a deadlock by purchasing a petitioning shareholder’s shares and places timelines on the process.” Royal United Props., Inc. v. Royal, 370 So. 3d 1020, 1023 (Fla. 6th DCA 2023).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Deltona Transformer Corporation v. Deltran Operations USA, Inc., Carson Clarke, Chase Clarke, Michael Prelec, Jr., Michael Prelec, Sr., and Evin Dyon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deltona-transformer-corporation-v-deltran-operations-usa-inc-carson-fladistctapp-2026.