Hubco, Inc. v. Rappaport

628 F. Supp. 345, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14250
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedNovember 1, 1985
DocketCiv. A. 84-4413
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 628 F. Supp. 345 (Hubco, Inc. v. Rappaport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hubco, Inc. v. Rappaport, 628 F. Supp. 345, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14250 (D.N.J. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

SAROKIN, District Judge.

Outsider challenges to corporate management characteristically take on the dimensions of warfare. Battles are waged by proxy, in the courts and in the press. Military and Arthurian metaphors are applied to the various actors and their maneuvers. The costs, both public and private, are tremendous.

This case is no exception. It has already generated three lawsuits, only one of which is presently before this court, two applications for emergency relief before this court alone, at least one emergency shareholders’ meeting, two proxy fights, and, evidently, some press attention. The case involves a struggle between incumbent management of a publicly-held corporation, a bank holding company, and an insurgent group. The court in such cases must be wary not to upset the delicate balances of the marketplace, and at the same time, protect the shareholders and the public.

Before the court at this time is the defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to Count 1 of the complaint, the only count remaining after a stipulation by the parties dismissing all other counts without prejudice. Because the court finds that plaintiffs’ claims for relief in Count 1 are either without legal or factual basis, or have been mooted by developments subsequent to the filing of the complaint, the court will grant defendants’ motion.

I. Background

The plaintiffs are Hudson United Bank, a New Jersey bank, HUBCO, Inc., the bank’s holding company, and James C. McClave, chairman of HUBCO’s Board of Directors and the beneficial owner of 18,815 shares of HUBCO stock. At the outset of this litigation, the incumbent Board owned approximately 14 percent of HUBCO stock, considering each director’s individual holdings.

Defendants Laurence J. Rappaport and Lawrence B. Seidman are attorneys and real estate entrepreneurs as well as substantial HUBCO shareholders. Defendant L. Enterprises is a New Jersey general partnership, of which Rappaport and Seidman are the only partners, which is engaged in the business of real estate development. Defendant Hudson Financial Associates (HFA) is a New Jersey limited partnership formed for the purpose of acquiring HUBCO stock. Since it commenced business on October 22, 1984, HFA has acquired 9.64 percent 1 of the issued and outstanding shares of HUBCO, apparently the largest block of HUBCO stock *348 owned by any single entity, apart from the incumbent Board.

Rappaport and Seidman commenced their acquisition of HUBCO stock in the spring of 1984. They began soliciting members of HFA in August, 1984. After two preliminary meetings with HUBCO management in February and June of 1984, Rappaport and Seidman attempted, in September, 1984, to gain a position on HUBCO’s Board of Directors and to gain access to the HUB-CO shareholder list.

In response to these developments, plaintiffs commenced this action on October 24, 1984, seeking an order: (1) requiring defendants to divest themselves of all HUB-CO shares beneficially owned by them; (2) enjoining defendants from acquiring or attempting to acquire any HUBCO stock or soliciting any proxies pending compliance with certain banking and securities regulations, from using their interests in HUBCO shares to affect the management of HUB-CO, and from taking “any other steps in furtherance of defendants’ unlawful scheme,” Complaint, 11 B(v); and finally, (3) declaring that HUBCO is entitled to refuse to transfer on its books any shares purchased by defendants, and to refuse to recognize votes with respect to shares owned by defendants. Plaintiffs alleged, in what defendants have emphasized is an unverified complaint, that “Defendants intend to use their position [of control] to force the Bank to make loans to defendants ... on preferential terms and conditions not available to any other borrower at the Bank,” Complaint, ¶ 12, in order to “fuel the leveraged real estate ventures which Rappaport and Seidman have promoted, or in which they are involved.” Id., 1114. In their Complaint, plaintiffs charged that defendants have filed a false and misleading Schedule 13D with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the American Stock Exchange by not revealing the true nature of their enterprise and their intention to acquire control, as well as their improper motivation for acquiring control, U1116, 28-32, 37-42; that defendants violated section 14(a) of the Securities and Exchange Act by, in effect, soliciting proxies without complying with that section’s requirements, 11II17, 44-50; that defendants and ten “John Doe” defendants from whom Rappaport and Seidman solicited support, became a “bank holding company” by acquiring more than a ten percent beneficial interest in HUBCO, and that they violated banking laws by failing to obtain the prior approval of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Systems, 1111 58-71; that defendants violated the Federal Reserve Act because they had the power to vote more than ten percent of the voting securities of HUBCO and they solicited loans from the Hudson United Bank “on terms not substantially the same as those prevailing at the same time at the Bank for comparable transactions with other persons,” 111175, 72-77; and that defendants violated the Federal Deposit Insurance Act and New Jersey banking law by engaging in unsound business practices while participating in the affairs of the Bank, 111178-84.

Defendants strenuously deny plaintiffs’ allegations of improper motivation or improper solicitation of loans. On November 7, 1984, defendants instituted an action themselves in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Hudson County, to compel release of the shareholders list to them. On November 21, 1984, on the eve of the Thanksgiving weekend, in a move approved by HUBCO’s Board of Directors at an October 16, 1984, meeting, HUBCO mailed out notices of a special shareholders’ meeting scheduled for December 11, 1984. The meeting was called to consider and vote upon a series of proposed “anti-takeover” amendments to HUBCO’s certificate of incorporation. HUBCO did not begin to release the shareholders list to defendants until December 3, 1984, the day an evidentiary hearing was scheduled in the state court on the question of the list’s release.

On December 3, 1984, defendants filed an answer and counterclaim in this action, alleging that plaintiffs themselves had violated section 14(a) of the Exchange Act by mailing false and misleading communications to their shareholders in connection *349 with the special meeting. At the same time, they sought a stay of the December 11 meeting on the ground that the plaintiffs’ resistance to turning over the shareholders list and the short notice upon which the meeting was called left them with insufficient time to prepare competing proxy materials.

On December 7, 1984, the court granted defendants’ application for a stay. In addition to finding that the various equitable requisites for preliminary relief were satisfied, the court found that

defendants are likely to succeed in establishing that plaintiffs have violated their duty to shareholders by scheduling a meeting with insufficient notice to provide defendants with adequate time to present their opposing views to other shareholders.

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Bluebook (online)
628 F. Supp. 345, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubco-inc-v-rappaport-njd-1985.