Goldstein v. Weisman

185 F. Supp. 242, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3506
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 14, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 185 F. Supp. 242 (Goldstein v. Weisman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldstein v. Weisman, 185 F. Supp. 242, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3506 (S.D.N.Y. 1960).

Opinion

HERLANDS, District Judge.

This motion to compel the plaintiffs in a stockholders’ derivative action to post security under Section 61-b of the New York General Corporation Law requires a consideration and application of the factors determining when and in what amount such security should be furnished. Since the controlling desiderata come into play only in the context of a particular litigation, it is necessary to subject the facts to close examination.

This stockholders’ derivative action, commenced on November 30, 1959, is brought by two minority shareholders of Crane Carrier Industries, Inc. (hereinafter “Crane”) on behalf of and for the benefit of Crane. The complaint names eighteen defendants: Crane and seventeen individuals. None of the individual defendants is presently a director, officer or employee of Crane.

The two plaintiffs together own 600 shares of Crane common stock having a market value of less than $1,800. The 600 shares are %ooths of 1 percent of the 2,661,228 outstanding shares of Crane’s common stock.

Jurisdiction is based upon diversity of citizenship.

Thus far, only five defendants have been served and have entered an appearance : Crane, Murray C. Spett, Samuel S. Allan, Milton Altmark and Arnold M. Gotthilf.

The Motion at Bar

Pursuant to New York General Corporation Law, Section 61-b, Crane moves to require plaintiffs to post $70,000 as security for the reasonable expenses, including attorneys’ fees, which may be incurred by Crane and by the other parties defendant. Crane also moves for a stay of all proceedings by plaintiffs in the action pending the deposit of the requested security. The four individual defendants appearing herein support Crane’s application.

The Complaint

Twelve of the seventeen individual defendants are alleged to have served as directors of Crane at various dates between June 25, 1954 (the earliest date given) and September 3, 1957 (the latest date given); and three of the twelve were also officers of Crane (Complaint, pars. Eighth and Ninth).

Some of the defendants (Celler and Allan) were never directors or officers, but were members of the law firm that served as legal counsel to Crane at certain times (Complaint, par. Tenth).

The complaint refers to six of the defendants as the “Weisman Group” and four other defendants as the “Howard Group” (Complaint, pars. Eleventh and Twelfth).

The complaint (based upon information and belief) sets forth three unrelated claims as follows:

1. The First Claim

The first claim, charging a conspiracy, is set out in paragraphs Thirteenth to Thirty-Seventh. It names nine persons as defendants (Morris H. Gotthilf, Arnold M. Gotthilf, David Shindler and “The Weisman Group,” consisting of six defendants). Additional alleged conspirators are named but not as defendants.

The charges levelled against the defendants must be examined closely in order to determine just what the named defendants are accused of and in what capacity they are alleged to have acted.

The words and phrases describing the defendants’ alleged acts and their alleged capacities must be gathered from various paragraphs of the complaint and then assembled in order to solve a jigsaw puzzle of pleading. As pieced together, the first claim makes the following assertions :

Shindler “exercised control,” had “actual control,” and had “participation in control” of Crane during a period of time starting “prior to December 15, 1953” and continuing up to “in or about April 1954.” During that period, Shindler was [245]*245employed at a monthly salary of $1,250 by Crane “to obtain for it profitable acquisitions,” i. e., “to acquire for the company the acquisition of other profitable companies.” For these services Shindler “caused” Crane to pay him $1,250 monthly. In addition, Shindler “caused” Crane to engage the services of a person who acted as Shindler’s representative and who also acted as “chief executive officer of Crane during 1953 and during the early part of 1954.”

The following relationships existed between the defendants: Defendant Morris H. Gotthilf was the uncle of defendant Shindler and the father of defendant Arnold M. Gotthilf. The latter was Shindler’s partner in an accounting firm. Shindler was a personal friend and business associate of defendant Spett, defendant Weisman and one Milton Altmark (the latter not being named as a defendant in the first claim). In December 1953, “the law firm of which Spett and Weisman were members were the attorneys for Crane.”

An alleged conspiracy to defraud Crane was formed and carried out in stages as follows:

A. On or about December 2, 1953, defendant Morris H. Gotthilf contracted to acquire the stock of Watson Elevator Company (hereinafter “Watson”) from Watson’s stockholders.

B. On or about December 11, 1953, defendant Shindler, the two defendants Gotthilf, the defendants Spett and Weisman, and Altmark caused to be formed a corporation known as Cadilly Holding Corporation (hereinafter “Cadilly”) in order to acquire the Watson stock that defendant Morris H. Gotthilf had contracted to acquire. At about the same time, the latter individual assigned his interest in the Watson stock contract to Cadilly.

C. On or about December 15, 1953, defendant Shindler “caused the board of directors of Crane to consider the acquisition” of Cadilly stock in exchange for 750,000 shares of Crane to Cadilly stockholders and Crane’s assumption of notes payable to Watson. On or about January 6, 1954, Crane’s board of directors authorized the Watson stock acquisition deal.

D. In or about April 1954, 750,000 shares of Crane stock were issued to Ca-dilly’s stockholders; and Crane “was caused to spend at least $867,000 in excess of the actual fair price of the acquisition of the stock of Watson.”

E. The 750,000 shares of Crane stock were “received” by defendants Morris H. Gotthilf, Spett and Weisman, by Alt-mark, and by other persons, firms and corporations variously described as relatives, friends and associates of the named defendants. Lumping all of these defendants and the other persons together, they made profits of several million dollars through the deal.

• F. At the times of the various transactions involved in the foregoing deal, (i) the “Weisman Group” was “in collusion with Shindler and had acquired actual control of Crane”; (ii) the “Weisman Group,” Shindler and “other persons” associated with them controlled Cadilly; (iii) Spett, Weisman and their law firm were Crane’s attorneys; (iv) Shindler, Spett, Weisman “and the persons associated with them” were members of “a conspiracy * * * to defraud Crane of its property by diverting from it to Cadilly the business opportunity of acquiring Watson, for the personal benefit and enrichment of” the co-conspirators; (v) Shindler violated his “duty to Crane of obtaining acquisitions for it on the best possible terms”; (vi) Spett, Weisman and their law firm violated their “duties and obligations owed to Crane and its stockholders” as Crane’s attorneys; and (vii) all of the alleged foregoing acts were done in furtherance of the alleged conspiracy.

2. The Second Claim

This claim is set forth in paragraphs Thirty-Eighth to Fifty-Second of the complaint. The transaction and related acts that are the gravamen of this claim took place in March and April 1955.

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Bluebook (online)
185 F. Supp. 242, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldstein-v-weisman-nysd-1960.