Hall v. Staha

858 S.W.2d 672, 314 Ark. 71
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 27, 1993
Docket92-338
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 858 S.W.2d 672 (Hall v. Staha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Staha, 858 S.W.2d 672, 314 Ark. 71 (Ark. 1993).

Opinions

James R. Van Dover, Special Justice.

This is the second appeal of two consolidated actions of which a shareholders derivative action, filed by appellants under Rule 23.1, ARCP, remains.

Appellants, led by Dr. Billy Hall, are minority shareholders of Dunhall Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (“Dunhall”), a privately traded Arkansas corporation. Dr. Hall is one of Dunhall’s organizers and the only member of its three man board of directors not involved in its daily management. The appellees/ cross-appellants are Dunhall; Monte J. Staha and Jimmy Hatfield, Dunhall’s President and Sales Manager, respectively; MJS, Inc. and RNI, Inc., corporations they own; and Med-Max Associates Limited Partnership (Med-Max), which they control. Staha and Hatfield are the other board members.

Through MED-MAX, Staha and Hatfield gained control of 50.5% of Dunhall’s stock during the summer of 1987. Control was acquired while they were aware that Jones Medical Industries, Inc. (“JMI”) was interested in acquiring “all or substantially all” of Dunhall’s capital stock and that a JMI acquisition would jeopardize the continuation of their executive positions and compensation. The Chancellor found their compensation to be excessive.

A sufficient history of this case appears in the first opinion. It will not be repeated here, except where required. See Hall v. Staha v. Dunhall Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 303 Ark. 673, 800 S.W.2d 396 (1990). In that earlier opinion, three issues were remanded for further development and decisions. The Chancellor conducted a second hearing in June 1991. His three decisions, together with orders incidental to them, are now here.

I. WAS STAHA AND HATFIELD’S CONDUCT, CONCERNING JMI’S OFFER OF JULY 13,1987, TO PURCHASE “ALL OR SUBSTANTIALLY ALL” OF DUNHALL’S STOCK IN THE BEST INTEREST OF DUNHALL AND IF NOT, TO WHAT EXTENT WERE APPELLANTS DAMAGED?

Appellants sought judgment against appellees for profits lost from being deprived of an opportunity to sell their shares to JMI, pursuant to JMI’s “offer” of July 13, 1987. They attribute that loss to Staha and Hatfield’s failure to actively pursue or become informed about JMI’s proposal and to undertake board action concerning it. Protecting their employment contracts was Staha and Hatfield’s alleged motive. The Chancellor denied the judgment after determining that Staha and Hatfield acted in Dunhall’s best interest regarding the purchase proposal; that no evidence of JMI’s continuing interest had occurred through December 1989; and that appellants failed to prove that Staha and Hatfield’s conduct caused any damages. The Chancellor also found that “the actions of Staha and Hatfield in their continuation to purchase stock through MED-MAX was not, in and by itself, inherently in bad faith to the interest of the corporation or the shareholders and not in conflict with Staha’s efforts to communicate with [JMI’s executive officer].” (Emphasis added.)

JMI conditioned their proposal upon its own representatives obtaining basic information from Dunhall’s financial and business records. That work having not been done, the conditions were not satisfied. The July 13 proposal lacked the formalities of an “offer” to any shareholder and appellants cannot successfully say they suffered deprivation. We therefore affirm the Chancellor’s dismissal of Count IV.

Our acceptance of the Chancellor’s ultimate ruling is not an approval of the activities — imputed to Staha and Hatfield — that preceded and followed receipt of the July 13,1987 letter. The Chancellor’s decision that Staha and Hatfield sustained their heavy burden of proving their conduct was inherently fair and a service to the best interests of Dunhall and all its shareholders is clearly erroneous.

Although both Staha and Hatfield had acquired a substantial number of shares prior to April 1987, having absolute control of Dunhall was not essential. However, their attitudes changed and the need to secure that control became imperative when JMI expressed an interest in purchasing the effective control of Dunhall in April 1987,1 and it was made known that neither they nor their positions would be retained under JMI ownership. In the face of Hall’s competing efforts, Staha and Hatfield retained New York counsel, and organized MED-MAX under Delaware law, serving as its general partners. They then personally funded a trust account from which Dunhall’s sales staff drew purchase money funds for Dunhall stock. The salesmen traded their shares to MED-MAX to become its limited partners. Immediately after MED-MAX had 50.5% of the shares, Hatfield and Staha directed that no additional shares be purchased, convened a special shareholders meeting and restored their domination of the board by reducing it from seven to three members. Without securing outside review or seeking to determine comparable salaries being paid in the pharmaceutical industry, the salaries were continued at 4 % of net sales after September 30, in spite of the minority’s protests of excessive compensation.

JMI’s letter of July 13, 1987, arrived in the midst of these efforts to gain control of Dunhall. It followed by only six weeks, JMI’s withdrawal of the April 1987 overture.2 After July 13, Staha made several phone calls in an effort to communicate with JMI. On August 31, 1987, after he had control, he addressed a certified letter to JMI’s chief executive. It documented Staha’s lack of concern.3 Staha and Hatfield attempted to excuse their failure to take affirmative action by pointing to JMI’s failure to begin the “satisfactory review and inspection of the book and records and the due diligence examination by JMFs accountants and lawyers.” Staha also complained that JMFs chief executive officer was unavailable during the intervening six week period of July 13 — August 31.

Attributing increased corporate profits to the preservation of the Staha and Hatfield management team and equating those profits as serving Dunhall’s best interest, the Chancellor failed to recognize the distinction between the community of shareholders and Dunhall, the corporate entity. Because an acquisition by JMI presented personal adversity to Staha and Hatfield, we cannot naively accept profit, a corporate achievement, as being necessarily beneficial to the shareholders. Corporate profits become beneficial to a shareholder only when they are distributed as dividends or cause appreciation in market value. Neither occurred here.

Deciding the proper reaction to a buy-out or takeover is not a decision routinely made in the normal course of every day business. Its impact on shareholders deserves evaluation. Such an opportunity involves the corporation/shareholder relationship to a greater degree. Here, no ready market for Dunhall stock existed. A shareholder, especially one in disfavor with management, was unable to transfer his risk capital to another investment. Staha and Hatfield owed all shareholders an affirmative duty to investigate thoroughly any buy-out opportunity that was made in apparent good faith, to seek an independent appraisal of its consequences, and to refrain from any conduct designed or allowed to thwart it.

We do not separate the activities of MED-MAX from Staha and Hatfield.4 Staha and Hatfield were responsible for its formation and enjoyed the fruits of control that it provided.

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Hall v. Staha
858 S.W.2d 672 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1993)

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858 S.W.2d 672, 314 Ark. 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-staha-ark-1993.