Finn Bondholders, Inc. v. Dukes

26 So. 2d 802, 157 Fla. 642
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 25, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 26 So. 2d 802 (Finn Bondholders, Inc. v. Dukes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finn Bondholders, Inc. v. Dukes, 26 So. 2d 802, 157 Fla. 642 (Fla. 1946).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.:

Storm center of this litigation seems to be George J. Deeb, stockholder, director, and president of Finn Bondholders, Inc., (of which individual appellees are minority stockholders) who, appellees assert, does busines under the firm name of Deeb Welbilt Homes, who dominates and controls Deeb Construction Company, a corporation, and who is interested in Peninsular Building Supply Company, either a “business . . . owned by [him] ... or ... a partnership composed of [him] and one of his brothers.” His stewardship of Finn Bondholders, Inc., was challenged in the bills of complaint containing prayers for accounting of money paid by Finn Bondsholders, Inc., to him and to the corporation and partnership in which he is interested, for the appointment of a receiver and the ultimate dissolution of Finn Bondholders, Inc. As a basis for the relief, it was charged that he had secured a majority of the stock of the corporation in question, accomplished the election of himself as president and himself and friends as directors, than by virtue of his dealings with the other businesses had fraudulently enriched himself to the detriment of Finn Bondholders, Inc., and had manipulated and mismanaged its affairs — no end.

After voluminous testimony had been taken, the chancellor entered a final decree reviewing at considerable length a *644 history of Deeb’s introduction into the corporation and of the transactions he had caused to be conducted between it and himself, trading as Welbilt Homes, Deeb Construction Company, which he controlled, and Peninsular Building Supply Company, which he, or he and his brother, owned. The court concluded that the prayer for receivership and for liquidation and dissolution of the corporation should be denied. Incorporated in the order, however, were directions that Deeb repay five distinct sums of money held by the court to have been improperly disbursed.

The bases for the principal questions we apprehend should be determined in this appeal are two provisions in the final decree which appear somewhat unique. One of them enjoined for two years the making of any contract or the assumption of any liability or the disbursement of any funds exceeding $100 “without first giving written notice to the minority stockholders ... at least ten days” beforehand, with the exception of certain payments which it does not seem necessary now to detail; the second was an injunction against Finn Bondholders, Inc., and Deeb, as president and director of the corporation, prohibiting any transactions with the other businesses in which Deeb is interested “without the approval of the minority stockholders.”

The restrictions were doubtless imposed by the chancellor because, though no such mismanagement had been established, or rather the state of affairs from mismanagement had not reached such a point as would justify the drastic remedy of dissolution and liquidation sought by the plaintiffs, he wished to prevent a repetition of the dealings he had disapproved. He cited in support of his conclusion the cases of News-Journal Corporation v. Gore, 147 Fla. 217, 2 So. (2nd) 741, and Tampa Water Works Company v. Wood, 97 Fla. 493, 121 So. 789. And here we come to a sharp issue between the parties, appellees asserting in their cross assignment of errors that the court was very wrong when it did not order the corporation dissolved. They concede in their brief that the first of these decisions, together with the one in Bills Development Corporation v. Shipp & Head, Inc., 126 Fla. 490, 171 So. 533, “narrowly defined the condition under which the charter of *645 a corporation may be arrested and the corporation dissolved,” but they seem to regard the opinion in Tampa Water Works Company v. Wood as such a modification of the rule announced in the others as to warrant the relief they are seeking.

We think the chancellor was correct in his conclusion that the affairs of the corporation had not been so mishandled as to call for liquidation. In Mills Development Corporation v. Shipp & Head, Inc., we held that liquidation and distribution of corporate assets was not to be decreed “unless corporation [had] practically discontinued all of its business, or [was] no longer capable of being made to carry out the corporate functions,” although in case of mismanagement a court of equity had “inherent power to . . . redress . . . such wrong.” The holding in News-Journal Corporation v. Gore was the same. We do not find, as appellees intimate, that the opinion in Tampa Water Works Company v. Wood contains any variance of the rule. The part of the opinion quoted by appellees deals with the exception, stated in Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, to the rule that courts of equity cannot or will not dissolve corporations. It was written there that dissolution may be adjudicated if the corporation had “ ‘failed of its purpose because of fraudulent mismanagement and misappropriation,’ ” which is but another way of saying that this harsh remedy will be granted where the “purposes for which the company as formed are impossible of attainment” or the corporation may no longer be made to effectuate the corporate functions.

The chancellor declared certain payments from Finn Bondholders, Inc., to Deeb and his concerns improper, but he did not regard the transactions as so flagrant and far-reaching that they defeated the corporate purpose or frustrated the corporate function. We expressly recognized in News-Journal Corporation v. Gore and Mills Devepoment Corporation v. Shipp & Head, Inc., the right of stockholders to redress for mismanagement and to restoration of moneys improperly spent. In the instant case the chancellor designated the expenditures he found improper and ordered the amounts of them returned to the corporate treasury. It does not follow that because they were wrong they were prompted by fraud *646 and, in fact, the chancellor, who heard all the testimony, expressly recited that no fraud had been proved. So the situation is much the same as those reflected in the cases to which we have referred. Stockholders complained about the use of the corporate funds; the chancellor sustained their position and ordered certain moneys repaid to the corporation. Misconduct of the affairs in this regard was not of the degree which would require liquidation or dissolution.

We turn now from the complaint of the appellees to the one of the appellants concerning the restrictions on future transactions. We think that Finn Bondholders, Inc., and George J. Deeb should not have been restrained for two years from making contracts, incurring obligations, or disbursing funds in excess of $100 without notice to minority stockholders, and should not have been restrained from having any dealings with George J. Deeb individually, Deeb Welbilt Homes, Deeb Construction Company, Peninsular Building and Supply Company, or “any other firm, corporation or association in which George J. Deeb had any right, title, interest or ownership .. . without the approval of the minority stockhold ers(Italics supplied.) Such a curb on the appellants is not necessary to full protection of the rights of appellees, and the authority of the corporation and its directors and president should not be bridled by placing an implied veto power in the hands of minority stockholders.

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Bluebook (online)
26 So. 2d 802, 157 Fla. 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finn-bondholders-inc-v-dukes-fla-1946.