Dubin v. Muchnick

108 Misc. 2d 1042, 438 N.Y.S.2d 920, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2331
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 108 Misc. 2d 1042 (Dubin v. Muchnick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dubin v. Muchnick, 108 Misc. 2d 1042, 438 N.Y.S.2d 920, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2331 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Richard S. Lane, J.

At the core of this close corporation family feud lie requirements for a supra-majority vote (80%) for the transaction of any business by the stockholders or the directors. These requirements are contained in a written stockholders’ agreement but are not reflected in either the certificate of incorporation or the by-laws.

In the happier days of corporate birth in 1973, plaintiff and one Lester Pape each held 40% and defendant Joseph Caspi held the remaining 20%. Plaintiff was president and he together with Mr. Pape and all three defendants constituted the board of directors. When Mr. Pape withdrew in [1043]*10431978, the stock was redistributed with defendants Nathan Muchnick and Sheldon Schwartz becoming stockholders and signatories to an amended stockholders’ agreement which referred to the change in ownership and otherwise ratified the original agreement.

On or about February 19, 1981, plaintiff received a notice of a special meeting by directors to be held in the afternoon of February 25 with an agenda including among other matters the election of a new director to fill Mr. Pape’s vacancy and the removal of plaintiff as president. With his corporate position threatened and what he deemed his rightful veto power about to be flouted, plaintiff commenced this action seeking a permanent injunction against violation of the stockholders’ agreement together with reformation of the certificate of incorporation and bylaws on the grounds of inadvertent mistake, and at the same time brought on this motion for a preliminary injunction returnable on one day’s notice on February 25.

On the call of the calendar on February 25, the court granted defendants’ request for an adjournment for the purpose of putting in answering papers, but also orally issued a temporary restraining order pending hearing of the motion. Defendants have now cross-moved for multiple relief including dismissal of the complaint as barred by the Statute of Limitations and a temporary injunction against various alleged activities of plaintiff. These activities may all be subsumed under the heading of conduct favoring plaintiff’s solely owned enterprise engaged in the same business and sharing the same premises as the corporation, and these activities form the basis of defendants’ charge that plaintiff has breached his fiduciary obligations to the corporation. Plaintiff of course has denied these activities.

The meeting of the directors was held in the afternoon of February 25 as called. Despite the court’s temporary restraining order, defendants over plaintiff’s objection proceeded to elect a new director by a 3 to 1 vote. They next by a 4 to 1 vote directed the removal of corporate production to separate facilities under their exclusive control. They also ratified by a 4 to 1 vote the opening of a new corporate bank account with checks drawn thereon to be signed by [1044]*1044the president or vice-president and the secretary or treasurer. Actually this resolution conformed to a provision in the stockholders’ agreement whereas the previously existing account did not. In deference to the court’s restraining order, consideration of plaintiff’s removal as president was adjourned.

Plaintiff’s retort to the conduct of the meeting was the companion motion now also pending to punish defendants for contempt. In opposition thereto defendants argue that election of a director is not encompassed in the words “the transaction of any items of business” for which the stockholders’ agreement requires an 80% vote of all of the directors, and that the other actions taken received an 80% affirmative vote. Nevertheless defendants have advised the court that the newly elected director has resigned and that they have revoked that part of the resolution which excluded plaintiff from participation in control of the corporate business at the new separate facilities.

Patently the first issue to be considered is defendants’ cross motion to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint. Defendants’ argument is two-tiered. First, defendants assert that reformation premised on mistake as opposed to fraud is governed by the six-year Statute of Limitations set forth in CPLR 213 which begins to run when the mistake is committed, here sometime in 1973 after the execution of the original stockholders’ agreement. Second, defendants assert that without reformation the supra-majority provisions are unenforceable because they have not been incorporated in the charter as required by sections 616 and 709 of the Business Corporation Law.

With respect to the first tier argument defendants clearly are correct (Nichols v Regent Props., 49 AD2d 847). Plaintiff only disputes the date on which the statute commences to run relying on Kronenberg v Sullivan County Steam Laundry Co. (91 NYS2d 144, affd without opn 277 App Div 916). The procedural pattern in Kronenberg is indeed strikingly similar — a notice that defendants intended to vote their majority stock in violation of a stockholders’ agreement assuring plaintiffs equal participation in control, an action commenced by plaintiffs to declare their rights under the agreement and to reform the certifi[1045]*1045cate of incorporation to embody it, a motion for a preliminary injunction against defendants’ threatened action, a cross motion to dismiss the complaint as barred by the Statute of Limitations. The court in Kronenberg granted the preliminary injunction and denied the motion to dismiss holding that the statute began to run from the date of defendants’ threat. In support the court struggled to find constructive fraud (as opposed to mistake) in defendants’ unabashed power grab after over 20 years of adherence to the agreement. No such perfidious conduct can be brought home to defendants here (see Green v Karlson Assoc., 159 NYS2d 245, 247).

With respect to the second tier argument, defendants again appear to be stating hornbook law (Model, Roland & Co. v Industrial Acoustics Co., 16 NY2d 703; Mook v Berger, 6 NY2d 833; Matter of Faehndrich, 2 NY2d 468; Long Park v Trenton-New Brunswick Theatres Co., 297 NY 174; Benintendi v Kenton Hotel, 294 NY 112; 11 NY Jur, Corporations, § 417). Some of the earlier authorities antedate sections 616 and 709 of the Business Corporation Law and their predecessor, section 9 of the Stock Corporation Law which for the first time permitted variation from normal corporate procedure. The spirit of the earlier authorities apparently carried over into an initial strict construction of the new liberalizing statutes. As the so-called “incorporated partnership” became an increasingly common participant on the commercial scene, however, Shubin v Surchin (27 AD2d 452, 455) and Beresovski v Warszawski (28 NY2d 419,425) pointed the way to a less rigid approach (see, also, Hornstein, Judicial Tolerance of the Incorporated Partnership, 18 Law & Contemporary Problems 435). And now, although it was interpreting Delaware rather than New York law, the Court of Appeals in Zion v Kurtz (50 NY2d 92, 102) has apparently swept all of the earlier authorities into the realm of legal history stating as follows: “Since there are no intervening rights of third persons, the agreement requires nothing that is not permitted by statute, and all of the stockholders of the corporation assented to it, the certificate of incorporation may be ordered reformed, by requiring Kurtz to file the appropriate amendments, or more directly he may be held estopped [1046]

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Bluebook (online)
108 Misc. 2d 1042, 438 N.Y.S.2d 920, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dubin-v-muchnick-nysupct-1981.