Investment Associates, Inc. v. Standard Power & Light Corp.

48 A.2d 501, 29 Del. Ch. 225, 1946 Del. Ch. LEXIS 66
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 16, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 48 A.2d 501 (Investment Associates, Inc. v. Standard Power & Light Corp.) 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.

Bluebook
Investment Associates, Inc. v. Standard Power & Light Corp., 48 A.2d 501, 29 Del. Ch. 225, 1946 Del. Ch. LEXIS 66 (Del. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

Seitz, Vice-Chancellor.

The ultimate object of this litigation is to determine whether the class B common stockholders of Standard Power and Light Corporation (hereinafter called Standard) elected the two directors they were entitled to elect at the annual stockholders’ meeting held May 7, 1946.

This petition under Section 31 of the General Corporation Law, Rev. Code 1935, § 2063, to review the May 7 election is confined to the election of the two directors which the class B common stockholders were entitled to elect under Standard’s certificate of incorporation. I might add that the class B directors constitute a minority of the entire board. The petition was filed by the registered holders of 12,000 shares of common series B, among whom are J. K. Newman, Jr., and Robert J. Levy, nominees for the class B directorates. The petitioners collectively will hereinafter be referred to as “opposition” and the defendants collectively will be referred to as “management”.

The pleadings reveal that the capital structure of Standard, a Delaware corporation, authorizes, inter alla, the issuance of 500,000 shares of common stock series B of which 110,000 were outstanding at the time of the meeting here involved.

It is not disputed that under Standard’s certificate of incorporation (hereinafter called certificate) the holders of the common series B, under terms here to be decided, had the right to elect two directors. The individual defendants, Chapman Reid and Louis A. Seagrave, were elected class B common directors at the annual election held in 1944, and held over in 1945 because it was concluded that no duly qualified successors were elected.

At the 1946 election here involved, the defendants Reid and Seagrave were the nominees of the management group, while the petitioners Newman and Levy were the nominees of the opposition group for the two positions.

[230]*230The pleadings reveal that the inspectors of election found that Reid and Seagrave each received 40,828 votes while Newman and Levy each received 42,519 votes of the common stock series B.

After receiving this report, the chairman of the meeting ruled that the election of successors to Réid and Seagrave, the then class B directors, had failed because no nominee had received “the vote of a majority in number of shares of Common Stock Series B issued and outstanding” as— in the chairman’s opinion—was required by the certificate. The opposition challenges the construction placed on the certificate by the chairman of the meeting, and this constitutes one of the three points for decision.

The second point of controversy centers around a proxy for 9,847 shares of class B common given by the registered owner Ladenburg, Thalmann & Co. These shares were voted for the opposition nominees and were counted by the inspectors. However, the management group contends that the proxy was solicited by the petitioner, Newman, in violation of certain designated rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission, and as a consequence, the petitioner, Newman, does not come into equity with clean hands.

The third point of controversy involves various rulings of the inspectors of election on several proxies. Some of these rulings are attacked by the management and some by the opposition. These proxies and the attacks thereon will be considered separately. At the hearing, both sides were permitted to question the validity of proxies which were not strictly within the scope of the pleadings. While this procedure was objected to, I felt that in a proceeding under Section 31 the formal pleadings should not, within reasonable limits, be permitted to defeat what I consider to be the real purpose of a Section 31 proceeding, namely, to ascertain within reasonable limits the expressed will of the stockholders.

[231]*231I turn now to the first point for decision. Does Article Fourth of the certificate require nominees for class B directors to receive the votes of a majority in number of the class B shares issued and outstanding before they are elected, or does it only require them to receive a majority in number of the votes cast in person or by proxy?

Preliminarily, it is conceded by both groups that under Article Eighth (11) of the certificate, a quorum was present at the 1946 meeting for the purpose of electing class B directors.

The parties part company, however, on the vote the directors are required to receive by Article Fourth in order to be elected. The opposition group contends that Article Fourth, although requiring a majority in number of the issued and outstanding shares to vote before class B directors can be elected (which is the same number required for quorum purposes) nevertheless, does not require that a majority must vote for particular nominees. They say, on the contrary, it incorporates the usual rule that a majority of the shares voting may elect the directors. The management insists that Article Fourth explicitly requires nominees for directors to receive the vote of a majority in number of all the shares issued and outstanding before they can be elected.

Article Fourth, in so far as pertinent, provides:

“The holders of the Common Stock shall have the right by the vote of a majority in number of shares of the Common Stock issued and outstanding to elect a majority in number of the full Board of Directors of the corporation, such majority to consist of the smallest number of directors sufficient to constitute a majority in number of such full Board of Directors, and the directors so elected shall be known as Class A directors.
“The holders of the Common Stock Series B shall have the right by the vote of a majority in number of shares of the Common Stock Series B issued and outstanding to elect a minority in number of the full Board of Directors of the corporation, such minority to consist of the largest number of directors which will constitute a minority [232]*232in number of such full Board of Directors, and the directors so elected shall be known as Class B directors.”

Because the language under consideration is also employed in Article Fourth of the certificate with respect to the directors to be elected by the common stockholders, it is apparent that my conclusion as to the meaning of the provision with respect to the series B common will necessarily have broader implications. I point this out because emphasis is placed on the fact that we are here concerned only with the class B directors.

To pin point the argument, I must decide what the following language means:

“The holders of the Common Stock Series B shall have the right by the vote of a majority in number of shares of the Common Stock Series B issued and outstanding to elect a minority in number of the full Board of Directors * *

The quoted language to my mind imposes a requirement that a majority in number of the issued and outstanding series B common stock must be voted before class B common directors can be elected. The import of this language, and my conclusion with respect thereto must be sharply, distinguished from the language of Article Eighth (11) of Standard’s certificate which requires the presence for quorum purposes of a majority in number of the shares of the class B comiñon before the stockholders are entitled to vote for the election of class B directors.

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Bluebook (online)
48 A.2d 501, 29 Del. Ch. 225, 1946 Del. Ch. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/investment-associates-inc-v-standard-power-light-corp-delch-1946.