Holmes v. Republic Steel Corp.

84 N.E.2d 508, 84 Ohio App. 442, 53 Ohio Law. Abs. 192
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1948
DocketNos. 20640 and 20641
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 84 N.E.2d 508 (Holmes v. Republic Steel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. Republic Steel Corp., 84 N.E.2d 508, 84 Ohio App. 442, 53 Ohio Law. Abs. 192 (Ohio Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

*194 OPINION

By HURD, PJ.

This is a derivative action in equity for cancellation, accounting and equitable relief, commenced in the court of common pleas of Cuyahoga County by Hannah S. Holmes who was then the owner of 12 shares of the common capital stock of the Republic Steel Corporation, against said corporation, and Tom M. Girdler, chairman of the board of directors and chief executive officer. While the suit was pending in the common pleas court the plaintiff died and the action was revived in the name of Godfrey Holmes, her administrator, as substitute plaintiff. For purposes of convenience we shall hereafter refer to the individual defendant as “Girdler” and the corporate defendant as “Republic.”

The issues as presented to this court for decision arise by reason of two separate appeals on questions of law and fact as follows:

Appeal No. 20640 is by defendant Girdler and is from the judgment of the common pleas court which held invalid and without corporate authority a payment of $51,000.00 to him by Republic in addition to his salary of $175,000.00 for the year 1940.

Appeal No. 20641 is by the plaintiff and is from that part of the judgment of the trial court which held valid a pension plan set up April 15, 1937 by Republic for 80 corporate officers and their employees including the individual defendant Girdler.

In the original action the plaintiff also attacked the legality of the fixed salaries paid by Republic to Girdler, alleging that the same were “excessive, unreasonable and unconscionable.” The trial court found for the defendants on this issue and from that portion of the court’s judgment no appeal has been filed.

These appeals are submitted de novo upon the pleadings as amended and upon the testimony taken and evidence presented before a master commissioner appointed by this court for that purpose upon application duly made and allowed.

The record before us is voluminous and presents a wealth of factual data contained in three large volumes of testimony and documentary evidence in the form of numerous exhibits. Many witnesses testified for defendants before the *195 master commissioner who were not called to testify in the trial below, so that by reason of the additional evidence presented in this court we have before us a much more extensive record than that produced in the original trial of the case in the common pleas court.

There are two principal questions for our determination:

1. Whether or not the additional compensation paid by Republic to Girdler at first in the form of an annuity, later reduced to cash, in the sum of $51,000.00 was unlawful as an ultra vires act. (No. 20640)

2. Whether or not a contract between Republic and Girdler executed in the year 1937 in pursuance of a general pension plan adopted by the company was a valid exercise of corporate powers. (20641)

As hereinbefore indicated, the trial court decided the first question in favor of plaintiff and rendered judgment against defendant Girdler for the benefit of Republic in the sum of $69,225.86 (which included interest) and costs, as having been paid “illegally and without authority.”

The common pleas court decided the second question in favor of defendant Girdler, finding “the pension plan entered into is a valid, binding and enforeible contract.”

In arriving at its conclusions on the second question, the court of common pleas held the pension plan valid including the contract with defendant Girdler on three grounds, namely:

(1) That the plan was expressly approved by the requisite vote of the stockholders at a meeting at which approximately 5500 shares were represented in person and 3,000,000 shares were represented by proxy and that thereafter, the board of directors by appropriate action authorized the execution of the necessary documents to carry into effect the plan approved by the stockholders and that all of the proceedings in respect thereof were in accordance with the applicable statutes of New Jersey, the domiciliary state of defendant Republic.

(2) That the plan was lawfully adopted under the implied powers of the corporation, even if it were not expressly authorized by the statutory law of New Jersey.

(3) That the doctrine of estoppel applied in that plaintiff’s decedent had executed a proxy covéring her shares which by her authority was voted in favor of the plan.

We have examined the record, considered the arguments and briefs of counsel and have unanimously concluded that the contract between Republic and Girdler, executed in the year 1937, in pursuance of a general pension plan adopted by the company, was a valid exercise of corporate powers and that therefore the decree should be for defendants as in com *196 mon pleas court on appeal No. 20641 on the three grounds aforestated, and upon authority of the statutes and cases cited and quoted in the opinion of Orr, J on this phase of the case, as follows:

Title 14:9-1 General Corporation Law of New Jersey; Watson v. Watson Mfg Co. 30 N. J. Equity 588; Gurney v. Atlantic & Great Western Ry Co. 58 N. Y. 358.

Title 14:7-1 New Jersey Corporate Act; Heinz v National Bank of Commerce 237 Fed. 942; Gilbert v. N & W Ry Co. 171 S. E. 814; Mabley & Carew Co. v. Borden, 129 Oh St 335.

This leaves for our further consideration only the first principal question above set forth, namely the matter of the additional compensation paid to Girdler by Republic during 1940.

There are certain facts concerning which there appears to be no dispute and which may be detailed briefly as follows:

A company known as Republic Iron & Steel Company was organized in 1899 under the laws of New Jersey. Thereafter, on April 8, 1930, a merger was effected which included Central Alloy Steel Corporation, Interstate Iron & Steel Company; Donner Steel Company Inc; and The Bourne-Fuller Company, with the corporate name of Republic Steel Corporation. Thereafter Republic acquired a number of other companies so that it now ranks as the third largest steel company in the world.

Plaintiff’s Exhibit 17 which is the annual report of Republic for the fiscal year ending December 31, 1940, shows that the business of Republic ranges from the mining of iron ore, coal and other raw materials to the manufacture, sale and distribution of a widely diversified line of finished and semi-finished iron and steel products and byproducts.

The same annual report also shows that in 1940 the corporation had a gross income in excess of three hundred million dollars, a gross profit in excess of sixty-two million dollars, a consolidated net income after all charges in excess of twenty-one million dollars, and a payroll in excess of ninety-seven million dollars and that in the same year it paid taxes in excess of sixteen million dollars and paid dividends on its three classes of stock aggregating in excess of six million eight hundred dollars. It had assets of a value in excess of four hundred million dollars and employees numbering in excess of sixty thousand persons who were employed in thirty-five different states.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.E.2d 508, 84 Ohio App. 442, 53 Ohio Law. Abs. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-republic-steel-corp-ohioctapp-1948.