Johnson v. Tago, Inc.

188 Cal. App. 3d 507, 233 Cal. Rptr. 503, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2399
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1986
DocketA028469
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 188 Cal. App. 3d 507 (Johnson v. Tago, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Tago, Inc., 188 Cal. App. 3d 507, 233 Cal. Rptr. 503, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2399 (Cal. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Opinion

POCHÉ, J.

The issue presented is whether Corporations Code section 600 authorizes the award of expenses and attorneys’ fees to shareholders who are in the process of waging a corporate proxy fight. We hold that it does not.

Background and Procedural Sequence

Tago, Inc. is in the business of developing and marketing pharmaceutical products. Founded by Helga and Robert Johnson as a partnership in 1971, it was incorporated two years later in accordance with the laws of California. Tago’s shares are publicly traded. Prior to June 1984 Helga Johnson was one of Tago’s five directors, as well as its president and technical director. Robert Johnson was chief executive officer and also a director. Together the Johnsons owned approximately 41 percent of Tago’s outstanding stock.

The following events occurred in 1984:

On June 28th Tago’s board of directors convened a special board meeting. Presented with a demand that they resign their positions as officers, the Johnsons refused. The three other members of the board, Charles Antell, Harvey Orzech, and Thomas C. Thompson, outvoted the Johnsons *511 and adopted a resolution removing the Johnsons as officers of Tago. The Johnsons were directed to vacate their offices and cease involvement in company operations. The Johnsons refused to do so without a court order.

The next day the Johnsons commenced action No. 286845 by filing a complaint against Tago, Antell, Orzech, and Thompson (hereinafter collectively referred to as defendants). The Johnsons alleged that, despite their repeated requests, the other directors had refused to hold an annual shareholders’ meeting. The Johnsons sought damages and injunctive relief restraining defendants from “conducting any business,” “terminating” them, or “employing Thomas C. Thompson as Chief Executive Officer” until a shareholders’ meeting was conducted. The Johnsons also sought attorneys’ fees on the theory that if they “are successful in this action a substantial benefit will result to defendant corporation.” On the Johnsons’ application the trial court that same day made an order to show cause and temporary restraining order (TRO) directing that, pending a hearing scheduled for July 19th, “the business of the corporation will be conducted as it is presently being conducted with no major changes.”

At another meeting held on July 2d, Tago’s board of directors appointed new officers, including an acting chief executive officer (not Thompson); renewed the directives of the June 28th meeting; and scheduled a shareholders’ meeting for September 6th. The following day Tago initiated action No. 286930 for injunctive relief restraining the Johnsons from (among other things) “in any way exercising any purported powers as an officer ... or from participating by any means in the management and operation of the corporation, except as directors.” Tago too secured a TRO granting this relief and an order to show cause, likewise to be heard on July 19th.

By the time the July 19th hearing on the TROs was called, the trial court had received a mass of declarations and points and authorities detailing the bitterness and internal operating difficulties generated by this controversy. During the course of arguments at the hearing, the court was advised of problems attending an impending proxy fight for control of the board of directors and the corporation. At the conclusion of the hearing the court announced that a preliminary injunction would issue granting certain of the relief sought by both sides. As requested by the Johnsons, a shareholders’ meeting was ordered held on September 6th. Defendants prevailed in having the Johnsons enjoined from “involving themselves in any way in the conduct of the ordinary business affairs of the corporation.”

At the same time the court made certain determinations which, with some nonsubstantive editing by this court, were announced as follows: “All of the fees, costs, and expenses of proxy solicitation on either side shall be *512 paid by the corporation. [$] There shall be allowed a sum not to exceed $25,000 as a retainer by the corporation to its counsel, ...[$] In light of the fact that the Johnsons are 41 percent shareholders of the corporation, there shall be paid by the corporation to counsel for the Johnsons as a retainer . . . not more than 41 percent of $25,000.”

Claiming that the substance of these determinations went beyond the issues and relief framed by the pleadings, Tago requested that the preliminary injunction be modified to delete them. On August 3d the trial court conducted a hearing on this request, but the court declined to modify the provisions of its ruling in any significant particular.

The trial court’s determinations were embodied in two written orders. The first, an “Order Setting Shareholders’ Meeting,” is not the subject of any dispute. The second order was a preliminary injunction filed on August 17th. The pertinent provisions of the injunction direct that Tago “shall issue to the Johnsons’ lawyers a check for forty-one percent. . . of $25,000 as a retainer for their attorneys’ fees” and “shall pay all proxy solicitation expenses incurred by TAGO, Inc., its Board, or the Johnsons.” 1

This timely appeal by Tago followed. 2

*513 Review

Tago employs a broad array of arguments in support of its general contention that no authority, statutory or otherwise, resided in the trial court to order Tago to pay plaintiffs’ proxy expenses and attorneys’ fees. This contention will be sustained without it being necessary to consider all of Tago’s arguments. Before examining the respective propriety of the proxy expenses and the attorneys’ fees provisions, we address an argument which challenges both provisions.

Tago claims that both payment directives are defective because they were not among the forms of relief sought by the Johnsons but were instead awarded by the trial court on its own initiative. This is only partially correct. The Johnsons did not in action No. 286845 seek recovery of expenses attending a proxy fight, but they did in their complaint pray for attorneys’ fees on the assumption that their eventual success would result in “a substantial benefit” to Tago. This deficiency is not an impediment to the trial court’s power to award relief otherwise deemed appropriate.

“The subject matter of an action and the issues involved are determinable from the facts alleged rather than from the title of the pleading or the character of damage recovery suggested in connection with the prayer for relief. [Citations.] In defining the relief which may be awarded to plaintiff . . ., section 580 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that ‘the court may grant him any relief consistent with the case made by the complaint and embraced within the issues.’ Moreover, the matter of pleading becomes unimportant when a case is fairly tried upon the merits and under circumstances which indicate that nothing in the pleadings misled the unsuccessful litigant to his injury.” (Buxbom v. Smith (1944) 23 Cal.2d 535, 542-543 [145 P.2d 305]; see Collison v. Thomas

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Bluebook (online)
188 Cal. App. 3d 507, 233 Cal. Rptr. 503, 1986 Cal. App. LEXIS 2399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-tago-inc-calctapp-1986.