John Weigel v. Howard Shapiro, Jacqueline Shapiro, J. W. O'COnnOr and Weigel Broadcasting Company

608 F.2d 268, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 10883
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 29, 1979
Docket78-2628
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 608 F.2d 268 (John Weigel v. Howard Shapiro, Jacqueline Shapiro, J. W. O'COnnOr and Weigel Broadcasting Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Weigel v. Howard Shapiro, Jacqueline Shapiro, J. W. O'COnnOr and Weigel Broadcasting Company, 608 F.2d 268, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 10883 (7th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

CUMMINGS, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff, a Wisconsin citizen, brought this diversity action derivatively for and on behalf of defendant Weigel Broadcasting Company, an Illinois corporation. The three individual defendants are also citizens of Illinois. Weigel Broadcasting operates television station WCIU in Chicago. Its capital stock consists of 4,588 shares of preferred stock with a par value of $100 and 181,669 shares of common stock with a par value of $1. The verified complaint states that the Corporation has approximately 300 shareholders, but that during the relevant period there was no public market for either the common or preferred stock, and splinter blocks were sold only at low prices reflecting their illiquidity.

The complaint alleges that plaintiff has owned 16,150 shares or 9 percent of the common stock of Weigel Broadcasting since 1966. It states further that on June 6, 1976, defendant J. W. O’Connor was a director of the Corporation and chairman of its board. O’Connor then owned 66,931 shares, or 37 percent of its common stock, and 298 shares, or 6V2 percent of its preferred stock, and his son Kerby O’Connor owned 1,000 shares of the common. At the same time, defendant Howard Shapiro was president and a director of the Corporation, owning 54,391 shares, or 30 percent of the common stock.

The complaint states in general terms that the opportunity of publicly-held American corporations to acquire blocks of their outstanding shares at favorable prices “is a valuable corporate opportunity to be pursued for the benefit of the corporation and its non-selling shareholders” (Par. 6). It alleges that on June 7, 1976, the Corpora *270 tion had the opportunity to purchase both lots of O’Connor common stock at $9 per share and J. W. O’Connor’s preferred stock at $35 per share “on terms requiring a downpayment of only 29% of the total purchase price, the balance to be paid in five annual installments with interest not to exceed 8% per annum” (Par. 9). These terms were those granted on June 7 by O’Connor to Shapiro in an option for the purchase of the O’Connor shares. The complaint alleges that on January 17, 1977, Shapiro assigned this option to his wife, defendant Jacqueline Shapiro, who exercised it on February 3, 1977. Plaintiff also charged on information and belief that Howard Shapiro acquired additional common and preferred shares of stock at the above prices on June 28, 1977. According to the complaint, the Corporation had ample funds during this period to purchase the O’Connor and other stock and its fair market value was substantially in excess of the price requested by the O’Connors.

On December 8, 1977, plaintiff requested the corporate directors to sue the Shapiros and J. W. O’Connor so that the Corporation might recover the shares obtained by the Shapiros. The Board of Directors refused plaintiff’s demand on January 27, 1978, and plaintiff filed this lawsuit a few days thereafter.

In April 1978, plaintiff moved to disqualify three lawyers and their firm 1 as attorneys for Mr. and Mrs. Shapiro. Shortly thereafter, defendants sought to depose plaintiff and his associate, Davide Tomei. On April 24, Judge Decker denied a motion by plaintiff to stay discovery pending a decision on the disqualification motion and directed discovery to proceed. Nevertheless, when plaintiff and Mr. Tomei appeared for their depositions, they refused to answer any questions “until present counsel for the Shapiros withdrew from these proceedings or are disqualified by order of the Court.”

In October 1978, Judge Decker dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim and simultaneously denied “without prejudice as moot” plaintiff’s April 1978 motion to disqualify counsel. In his accompanying opinion, Judge Decker held that Illinois followed the common law rule that a corporate officer or director is free to deal in the corporation’s stock as though he were a stranger to the corporation unless the corporation has a specific interest in acquiring the stock. Consequently, plaintiff filed an amended complaint a month thereafter. This pleading contained the following paragraphs relied upon by plaintiff to cure the defect Judge Decker found in the original complaint:

“5. Some time prior to March 15,1968 defendants Shapiro and O’Connor, and members of their respective families, each acquired 63,646 shares of common stock, and 90 shares of preferred stock of the Corporation. As a result of the acquisition of said shares, Shapiro and O’Connor became the controlling stockholders of the Corporation, were elected to the Board of Directors thereof, and became fiduciaries for the benefit of the Corporation and its minority shareholders.
“6. On March 15, 1968 Sharpiro and O’Connor entered into a certain first refusal agreement respecting the shares of the Corporation which they, and the members of their respective families, owned as set forth in paragraph 5 above, or might thereafter acquire. The purpose and intended effect of said agreement was to prevent either Shapiro or O’Connor from willing his shares to the Corporation or to any third party, but to insure that if either sold his shares the other would be the purchaser. Thereafter, and continuously to and through February 1977, Shapiro and O’Connor continued to be directors and the controlling shareholders of the corporation.
“7. By virtue of the aforesaid first refusal agreement, and by virtue of their *271 continuous control and domination of the Corporation, Shapiro and O’Connor knowingly and intentionally prevented the Corporation from adopting, pursuing, or effecting any corporate policy under which the Corporation might or would reacquire any of its outstanding shares. After March 15,1968, Shapiro and O’Con-nor engaged in the practice of acquiring additional shares of the Corporation from time to time. Because of the aforesaid first refusal agreement and the control and domination of the Corporation by Shapiro and O’Connor, the Corporation was denied the opportunity to compete for and acquire any of these additional shares.
******
“21. Acquisition by the Corporation of all of the O’Connor shares purchased by defendant Shapiro, and all of the units purchased from minority shareholders as alleged in paragraph 19 above would have been reasonably incident to the present or prospective operations of the Corporation. Purchase of said shares was the highest and best use of the Corporation’s excess cash; based on its earnings per share anticipated and realized, the Corporation would have recovered its entire purchase price of $9 per share in the first three fiscal years after said purchases, but would have had the privilege in the case of the O’Connor shares of paying 71% of the purchase price in installments over a four year period at a sub-market interest rate. The investment return to the Corporation on the purchase of the O’Connor and tender offer stock, based on earnings per share then anticipated and actually realized, would have been 25% in 1976, 33% in 1977, and 42% in 1978. By contrast, the annual return which the Corporation actually realized on its excess cash was only 8% in 1976, 5% in 1977, and 5% in 1978.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
608 F.2d 268, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 10883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-weigel-v-howard-shapiro-jacqueline-shapiro-j-w-oconnor-and-ca7-1979.