Gerlach v. Gillam
This text of 139 A.2d 591 (Gerlach v. Gillam) 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.
Opinion
Kingsley H. GERLACH, Kingsley H. Gerlach, Jr., and Reeves Lewenthal, Plaintiffs,
v.
Grant GILLAM, Wrightson Christopher and United Printers & Publishers (Incorporated), a Delaware corporation, Defendants.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.
Arthur G. Logan, Wilmington and Ernest A. Gross of Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle, New York City, for plaintiffs.
Aaron Finger, Wilmington, Carlos A. Spiess and Roger W. Barrett of Mayer, Friedlich, Spiess, Tierney, Brown & Platt, Chicago, Ill., for defendant, United Printers & Publishers, Inc.
MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.
Plaintiffs, who claim to be the holders of a substantial number of shares of the defendant corporation, an established manufacturer of calendars, greeting cards and the like, sue on behalf of themselves and all other stockholders of United similarly situated, and "* * * in the right of United". The original complaint charges the defendant, Gillam, with having so dominated the corporate defendant through an unusual management contract that over a period of some twenty years he has been able to select *592 the directors of the corporation and otherwise control its management to such a degree that in the autumn of 1957 he caused such a board to approve contracts between the corporation and himself and others as stockholders of three Canadian corporations, which contracts are allegedly not in United's best interests. These Canadian corporations, which are not parties to this action, bear the names, Rust Craft Ltd., Friendship House Ltd., and Volland Ltd.
The original complaint sought an accounting from the defendants, Gillam and Christopher, concerning United's past business transactions with the Canadian corporations, and also claimed that Gillam's control of United having been seriously threatened last summer by the efforts of plaintiffs and other stockholders to call a special meeting and vote in additional directors independent of Gillam, he reacted by rapidly developing a plan to sell stock of the Canadian corporations to United in a transaction which would, if consummated, result in Gillam and his associates receiving 150,322 shares of United stock in exchange for their Canadian stock, thereby giving them control of the corporation as a practical matter. As of now, Mr. Gillam is allegedly not a stockholder of United.
Injunctive relief was sought not only against consummation of such purchase and sale, which had been approved by the directors other than Gillam subject to stockholders ratification, but also the continued performance of certain so-called color separation supply contracts now in force between United and the Canadian corporations. Under these contracts United supplies positives of card designs to the Canadian corporations, thereby eliminating for them a substantial and costly step in card production. The original complaint charged that incomplete and even misleading information had been sent to stockholders by the Gillam dominated management for a number of years, and in an amended and supplemental complaint it was specifically alleged that management had solicited votes and proxies for a special stockholders' meeting convened on November 19, 1957 for the purpose of passing on the plan to purchase stock in the Canadian corporations "* * * by false and misleading statements and by statements lacking the candor requisite to obtain a valid proxy * * *" In the amended and supplemental complaint, plaintiffs prayed that the Court declare that despite a numerically favorable vote such proposal had not been legally ratified at such meeting because of such statements.
Prior to the meeting and on the basis of the original complaint and supporting affidavits, plaintiffs had moved to enjoin the special stockholders' meeting, and on November 15, this Court, while declining to enjoin the holding of such meeting, entered an order which restrained United "* * * from putting into effect the three agreements relating to the proposed acquisition by United of the outstanding shares of the three Canadian companies * * *" This order, while technically a preliminary injunction issued on a ten days rule to show cause has been treated by counsel as a restraining order, and this is the decision of the Court as to whether or not such order should be dissolved and the corporation permitted to consummate the transaction complained of prior to trial.
Following the November 19 meeting, management filed a certificate to the effect that at the meeting at which 520,200 shares of common stock were entitled to vote, 246,609 shares voted for adoption of a resolution ratifying the agreements for the purchase of stock of the Canadian corporations in exchange for 150,322 shares of United common stock, and 204,670 shares against such purchase. On the basis of such vote management asks to be permitted to carry out the contemplated exchange of stock free of interference by this Court.
The corporation's basic contention in support of its motion for the lifting of the present injunction is that regardless of the wisdom of the contracts under attack, they have been ratified by the stockholders *593 after approval by allegedly non-interested directors at a meeting which Mr. Gillam did not attend and that as an elementary matter of corporate democracy there is no conceivable basis to support plaintiffs' claim for injunctive relief. It is contended and cannot be denied that where a majority of fully informed stockholders ratify action of even interested directors, an attack on the ratified transaction normally must fail. Counsel for the corporation further point to the long drawn out battle for control of the corporation which began last summer (a contest in which plaintiffs actively participated), the use of proxy material by plaintiffs and their associates since that date, and charge that plaintiffs' present contention that defendant's proxy material for the November 19 meeting was false and misleading, is simply an exhibition of poor sportsmanship.
The situation presented by the papers before me is the reverse of the one found in the ordinary case involving the purchase and sale of corporate assets. A sale of assets case often involves a charge of conflict of interest on the part of a corporate fiduciary who is at the same time the direct or indirect would-be purchaser of his corporation's assets. Here, on the other hand, a corporation has agreed in exchange for its own shares to purchase shares of stock largely owned by the fiduciary, so that the Delaware statute and cases which control in the field of presumptions and burdens of proof when a sale of corporate assets is attacked are not strictly in point but do provide a guide. See 58 Columbia Law Review, 251 at 256 et seq.
First of all in the present situation I have no doubt concerning Mr. Gillam's obligation to exhibit complete candor in dealings involving a conflict between his personal interests and those of United's stockholders. Under a unique arrangement originating in 1932, first through General Management Corporation and later through a partnership known as General Management Company, Mr. Gillam for a fee to be paid originally to his corporation and then to his partnership was given broad managerial powers over the affairs of United, which at the inception of the arrangement was in serious financial straits.
The 1937 version of this continuing and essentially unchanged contract between United and General Management Company, of which Mr. Gillam was the controling partner, provided in part:
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139 A.2d 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerlach-v-gillam-delch-1958.