G & N AIRCRAFT, INC. v. Boehm

743 N.E.2d 227, 2001 Ind. LEXIS 194, 2001 WL 206010
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 2001
Docket45S05-0003-CV-221
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 743 N.E.2d 227 (G & N AIRCRAFT, INC. v. Boehm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G & N AIRCRAFT, INC. v. Boehm, 743 N.E.2d 227, 2001 Ind. LEXIS 194, 2001 WL 206010 (Ind. 2001).

Opinion

ON PETITION FOR TRANSFER

BOEHM, Justice.

This case deals with the obligations of a majority shareholder in a close corporation and the remedies available to a minority shareholder for breach of those duties.

Factual and Procedural Background

G & N Aircraft, Inc., is an Indiana corporation engaged in overhauling and rebuilding piston engines for aircraft. G & N was founded in 1962 by Paul Goldsmith and Ray Nichols. By the early 1990s, G & N was owned 34% by Erich Boehm, 26% by Goldsmith, 16 2/3% each by Richard Gilliland and James McCoy, and 6 2/3% by Greg Goldsmith, Goldsmith's son. Goldsmith served as the president, Boehm as the vice-president, and Gilliland as the see-retary of the corporation. Both Goldsmith and Boehm were employees of G & N. The board of directors consisted of the five shareholders.

G & N operated its business in a hangar at Griffith Airport owned by Goldsmith individually. Its principal supplier of engine parts was Edgecumbe G & N, Inc., which was owned by Goldsmith, Gilliland, and McCoy. G & N's annual sales were on the order of $5 million and its annual net profit was approximately $220,000.

Goldsmith was the sole owner of several other aviation-related corporations. None of these was profitable, and one was in default on a $1.2 million loan that Goldsmith had guaranteed personally. Goldsmith began to explore means of paying down the loan and was told by his tax advisor that if he became the sole owner of G & N and converted it from a Subchapter S corporation to a C corporation, G & N could shelter its operating income and thereby increase its cash flow by taking advantage of $1.8 million in operating loss carryforwards of the other companies. In 1994, Goldsmith began negotiating with a bank to finance his acquisition of all of G & N. He obtained an appraisal of G & N's shares from its corporate counsel and accountant that valued the corporation at $961,000. Goldsmith approached Gilliland and McCoy about selling their shares, but his loan application was rejected and no *233 transactions were consummated at that time.

Approximately one year later, Goldsmith renewed his efforts to consolidate G & N, which was still profitable, with his other eompanies. In negotiations and letters detailing his plans to the bank, Goldsmith expressed his desire to buy out Boehm and the other shareholders, convert G & N to a C corporation, and then merge the companies to take advantage of the tax loss carryforwards. He also detailed plans to use his control of G & N and his position as landlord of the hangar to coerce his fellow shareholders to sell their G & N stock. He believed he could force all of the other G & N shareholders to sell their interests by increasing G & N's rent at the hangar from $6,500 per month to $30,000, which would raise the prospect of an expensive relocation. Goldsmith also believed that if he threatened to eliminate Edgecumbe as G & N's supplier, he could force Gilliland and McCoy to sell their G & N shares to preserve the value of their holdings in Edgecumbe.

On April 26, 1995, Goldsmith offered Boehm $200,000 for his 34% interest in G & N. Boehm refused to sell. Two days later, Goldsmith sent Boehm a notice of his resignation as president of G & N. Acting as landlord of the hangar, Goldsmith accompanied the notice with an eviction notice giving G & N thirty days to vacate its facilities. On May 1, Gilliland and McCoy agreed to trade their G & N shares to Goldsmith for Goldsmith's holdings in Ed-gecumbe. Both selling shareholders retained their positions on the G & N board of directors. As a result of these transactions, Goldsmith owned 59 1/3% of G & N's shares, Greg owned 6 2/3% and Bochm 34%. At a board meeting on May 22, 1995, Boehm proposed alternate locations for G & N's operations, which were rejected by the board. In that same meeting, the board reelected Goldsmith as the president of G & N by a three to one vote, with Boehm dissenting.

The bogrd met again on June 14, 1995 to discuss the dividend for 1994. For many years, G & N had declared annual dividends in the amount of its net profits for the preceding calendar year. Because its cash flow in 1998 was inadequate to distribute its entire net profit for that year, the company had taken out a $300,000 bank loan to pay its dividend. By the spring of 1995, as a result of this borrowing and obligations to trade creditors, Matt Hunniford, Goldsmith's personal accountant, determined that G & N was not in a financial position to distribute the 1994 earnings as a dividend. No dividend was declared. At the same meeting, the board also discussed the possibility of relocating G & N. Goldsmith expressed the view that this might have "negative effects," and withdrew his notice of eviction.

One week later, Goldsmith wrote Boehm a letter demanding that Boehm sell his stock in G & N to Goldsmith for $250,000. The letter stated that if Boehm did not sell his stock, as a shareholder he would suffer the consequences of Goldsmith's merger plan, which included capital outlays that would preclude dividends for at least three years. -In this letter, Goldsmith also asked for Boehm's resignation as vice president and as a board member and demanded that Bochm vacate his office and remain off the premises. When Boehm refused Goldsmith's offer, Goldsmith changed the locks on Boehm's office. He then fired G & N's bookkeeper and transferred G & N's accounting function to employees of one of Goldsmith's businesses.

On June 27, 1995, Boehm filed a complaint against Goldsmith and G & N asserting both shareholder derivative claims and direct claims for breach of fiduciary duty. Boehm alleged that G & N was purposefully reducing its profitability and was not maximizing long-run returns for its owners. On August 10, 1995, Boehm obtained a preliminary injunction and thirteen days later amended his complaint to include claims of Goldsmith's conflicts of interest, breach of Goldsmith's fiduciary *234 duties to G & N and to Boehm, and breach of shareholder agreements by Goldsmith, Gilliland, and McCoy.

Goldsmith and G & N responded by asserting that Boehm had failed to comply with the requirements of Trial Rule 28.1 for a shareholder derivative action. G & N also filed a counterclaim for attorney's fees, claiming that Boehm's lawsuit was frivolous. Boehm dismissed his claims against Gilliland and MeCoy and, on July 31, 1996, sought summary judgment on G & N's counterclaim against him. Goldsmith and G & N filed eross-motions for summary judgment.

The trial court denied Goldsmith's and G & N's motions for summary judgment after finding that there were genuine issues of material fact. The trial court granted Boehm's motion for summary judgment as to G & N's counterclaim and ordered G & N to pay Boehm's costs and attorney's fees after finding the counterclaim baseless. After a four-day bench trial, the trial court entered judgment directing G & N and Goldsmith to pay $521,319 in exchange for Boehm's G & N stock. The court also awarded Boehm damages of $173,989 for back dividends, plus any future dividends until the sale was closed, $175,000 in punitive damages, and attorney's fees.

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Bluebook (online)
743 N.E.2d 227, 2001 Ind. LEXIS 194, 2001 WL 206010, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-n-aircraft-inc-v-boehm-ind-2001.