Dolese Bros. v. Brown

157 A.2d 784, 39 Del. Ch. 1, 1960 Del. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 27, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 157 A.2d 784 (Dolese Bros. v. Brown) 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
Dolese Bros. v. Brown, 157 A.2d 784, 39 Del. Ch. 1, 1960 Del. LEXIS 106 (Del. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

Southerland, Chief Justice:

This is a minority stockholders’ suit to redress corporate wrongs alleged to have been committed by the president and dominating director of Dolese Bros. Co., a Delaware corporation.

The following statement of facts is based on the complaint, the allegations of which must, for the present purpose, be taken as true.

For some years prior to September, 1946 (a time hereafter shown to be important), Dolese Bros. Co. was engaged in quarrying and selling limestone, gravel and other building materials and in conducting a “transit-mix” concrete business. It was a closely held family corporation. There were 3,000 shares of stock outstanding, 1200 of which were owned or controlled by the Schofield branch of the family. The other shares were owned, legally or equitably, by Roger Dolese, by his brother, David, by his mother, Jane Dolese, and by his sisters, Margaret and Mary.

Roger was the president and his brother-in-law, William Schofield, the vice-president. They managed the business.

On February 6, 1942, in order to preserve the family control, all the stockholders executed an agreement that they would not sell any of their stock in Dolese Bros, to any one not a stockholder of that company without first offering it to the other stockholders “and to the company.”

Sometime around September, 1945, a dispute arose and continued between Roger and Schofield relating to matters of business policy. Schofield at times threatened litigation.

In November, 1945, Roger obtained from his sister Margaret a power of attorney purporting to give him full power over her stock, not only in respect of voting, but also in respect of any sale, disposition or pledge of the shares. It purported to be irrevocable during a period ending March 16,1951.

[4]*4Similar powers of attorney were given to him by the other members of the Dolese family.

The disputes between Roger and Schofield came to head in September, 1946. At a stockholders’ meeting held September 9, attended by all the stockholders except the Schofields, William Schofield was eliminated as a director. Roger, Jane, and George Howard (alleged to be subservient to Roger) were elected directors.

About the same time the Schofields offered to sell their stock in Dolese Bros, for $725 a share, or $870,000, a sum less than its real value, as Roger knew.

Plaintiff Margaret Dolese Brown 400 shares Roger Dolese, trustee for plaintiff Mary Dolese Courtis 200 shares Defendant Roger Dolese 600 shares David B. Dolese 400 shares Jane Weber Dolese 200 shares Gertrude Schofield, trustee 600 shares Gertrude Schofield 400 shares Elsie Harrison Dolese 200 shares

The corporate enterprise had prospered. In September, 1946 it had quick assets of upwards of a million dollars, including cash in excess of $870,000. In addition it had extensive credit resources. The transit-mix business was its most profitable part.

At this time Roger occupied a position of trust and confidence with respect to the other members of the family. Margaret and Mary, his sisters, were young and without any experience or understanding of business affairs and relied upon Roger whom they loved and respected.

By virtue of his own holdings, and his representation of his family’s holdings, either as trustee or agent, Roger at the time referred to controlled three-fifths of the voting stock.

[5]*5Having received the Schofields’ offer to sell their shares, Roger proposed to Margaret and Mary that he and they and the other members of the Dolese family should buy the stock. Roger concealed from them the fact that the corporation could have bought it without danger to its business future, and induced them to believe that Dolese Bros, was not in a condition to make the purchase. Roger’s brother and sisters declined to make the purchase, Margaret and Mary lacking the ready cash and being unwilling to borrow money.

Thereupon, the complaint charges, Roger devised a fraudulent plan to enrich himself at the expense of the other Dolese stockholders. The following steps were taken:

(1) Roger incorporated The Dolese Company, wholly owned by him.
(2) Dolese (not Dolese Bros.) on November 19, 1946, agreed to buy the Schofield stock.
(3) On November 26,1946, Roger called and held a special meeting of the directors. It was attended only by Roger and Howard. A resolution was adopted waiving the corporation’s right to purchase the Schofield stock. A formal instrument of waiver was executed, signed for the corporation by Roger as President, by Roger personally, and by Roger as trustee or attorney-in-fact for all the other Dolese Bros, stockholders.
This waiver, it is alleged, was obtained by fraudulent concealment of the corporate right to purchase, of the intention to execute the waiver, and of the corporate financial condition.
(4) On the following day, November 27, Roger called and held a special meeting of stockholders, without giving any actual notice to the other Dolese Bros, stockholders. The meeting was attended by Roger, as a stockholder in his own right and as trustee or attorney-in-fact for the others, and by Howard as attorney-in-fact for Dolese Bros.
The meeting resolved upon a partial liquidation of Dolese Bros., and a distribution of 40% of the physical assets and net current assets to Dolese upon the surrender of the Schofield stock (which was 40% of the outstanding stock of Dolese Bros.) for cancellation and retire[6]*6ment. This distribution was to be made to Dolese by the payment of $587,693.05 in cash and $303,862.48 in property. This was carried out. The property transferred consisted of the assets devoted to the transit-mix business, the value of which, it is alleged, greatly exceeded the sum of $303,862.48.
(5) Roger paid the Schofields for their stock. In effect the payment was made with the cash transferred to Dolese plus a sum of $350,000 borrowed from a bank on the security of Roger’s stock and a chattel mortgage on the assets transferred to Dolese.
(6) On November 29 David, Jane, and Margaret Dolese executed a document certifying that they had read the minutes of the stockholders’ meeting of November 27, and that they ratified and confirmed all the action taken; that Roger had discussed with them, prior to the meeting, the action that would probably be taken, and they had advised him that such action was satisfactory. This ratification, it is alleged, was obtained by the use of false and misleading statements in a number of respects, and was given without full understanding by the signers of the pertinent facts.

The foregoing summary of facts is taken from the allegations of the complaint. These allegations, the Vice Chancellor held, were sufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss.

Defendants appeal.

The case made by the bill is that of a president and dominating director dealing with himself to the detriment of his fellow shareholders. If the allegations are true, Roger, as a result of the various steps taken, has appropriated for himself the most valuable part of the corporate business by using corporate funds for the purpose, and has secured the consent of the other stockholders thereto by false representations and concealment. As to the use of corporate funds see

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Dolese Bros. Co. v. Brown
157 A.2d 784 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
157 A.2d 784, 39 Del. Ch. 1, 1960 Del. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolese-bros-v-brown-delch-1960.