Katz Corp. v. T. H. Canty & Co.

362 A.2d 975, 168 Conn. 201, 1975 Conn. LEXIS 940
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 25, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 362 A.2d 975 (Katz Corp. v. T. H. Canty & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Katz Corp. v. T. H. Canty & Co., 362 A.2d 975, 168 Conn. 201, 1975 Conn. LEXIS 940 (Colo. 1975).

Opinion

Bogdanski, J.

This stockholder’s derivative action was brought on behalf of the defendant T. H. Canty and Company, Inc., a Connecticut corporation, by the Katz Corporation, a Delaware corporation and minority stockholder of the defendant corporation. The plaintiff sought relief against the defendants Michael Steinberg, John Keogh, Jr., and Frank N. Robinson, all officers and directors of the defendant corporation, alleging that they had breached their fiduciary duty to the corporation by usurping a corporate opportunity and benefiting personally thereby. The trial court found the issues for the defendants and the plaintiff has appealed to this court.

[203]*203Error is claimed in the refusal to find material facts claimed to be admitted or undisputed; in finding material facts without evidence; in the conclusions reached; and in the overruling of the plaintiff’s claims of law. The trial judge noted in the file that although several of the plaintiff’s requested draft findings “may be said to be admitted or. undisputed facts, ... to include them in the finding would add nothing of value and protract a finding already lengthy which is deemed to recite the essential subordinate facts of the case.” We agree that no additions to the finding will benefit the plaintiff in presenting the questions of law which it wishes to have reviewed by this court. State v. Carnegie, 158 Conn. 264, 266, 259 A.2d 628, cert. denied, 396 U.S. 992, 90 S. Ct. 488, 24 L. Ed. 2d 455. Of the remaining assignments of error directed at sixteen findings of facts, six have been expressly abandoned, and ten are supported by the evidence printed in the appendix to the defendants’ brief.

T. H. Canty and Company, Inc., was formed by merger in 1940 for the principal purpose of conducting a real estate and insurance business. Five thousand shares of no par value stock were authorized and eventually issued. Some time after the merger there was a “loose informal understanding” among some of the directors that if a director learned that any stockholders wished to sell their stock, he would allow the corporation to purchase it instead of purchasing it for himself. Subsequently, many additional directors were elected who were not informed of that informal understanding. Over a thirty-year period, T. H. Canty and Company, Inc., purchased an average of fifty shares per year of its own stock, although there were several years when no pur[204]*204chases were made and some occasions when it refused to buy its own stock. The various stock purchases by the company averaged $115 per share.

In August of 1971, Robert A. Katz, who had served as a director of T. H. Canty and Company, Inc., for seven years, announced that he would not be a candidate for reelection to the board. At that time Katz had access to all information concerning the corporate affairs and he knew the values of all the properties owned by the corporation. The individual defendants, among others, were subsequently elected or reelected to serve as officers and directors on August 17, 1971. Katz then made a contingent offer on behalf of the plaintiff, Katz Corporation, to purchase at least fifty-one percent of the outstanding stock of T. H. Canty and Company, Inc., at $250 per share. The executive committee rejected that offer because it was considered too low. Katz then made an offer of $275 per share which was also rejected. In the fall of 1971, the directors learned that others were considering making offers for the corporation’s stock and it was decided to seek the services of an outsider to make a valuation of the assets and net worth of the company. The outside valuation was deemed unnecessary, however, when the defendant Robinson and another director jointly valued the stock t_d. be worth $380 per share. That figure was later reduced to $360 per share, representing the liquidation value of the corporation not including liquidation expenses.

In October of 1971, the directors decided that any offers for the purchase of company stock should be made by October 29 when the directors would consider them. It was understood that there was no obligation on the part of the corporation or share[205]*205holders to accept or reject any such offers. Katz Corporation then increased its offer to $300 per share. During discussions between Katz and the defendant Keogh, Katz indicated that if the plaintiff were to gain control of T. H. Canty and Company, Inc., the present officers and directors would not be retained; the insurance business would be made a subsidiary of the plaintiff corporation; and the real estate holdings of T. H. Canty and Company, Inc., would be liquidated in order to get the insurance business “for nothing.”

At a stockholder’s meeting on November 1, 1971, the stockholders were informed that the stock was initially valued at $380 per share and subsequently reduced to $360 per share before liquidation expenses. The stockholders were further advised that Katz Corporation had made an offer of $300 per share. At that meeting, the shareholders were asked to vote on three options: 2011 shares were voted to sell stock, 1817 were voted to retain stock and continue the company, 259 were voted to liquidate the company and 576 were undecided. By letter dated November 5, 1971, Katz Corporation continued its offer of $300 per share contingent, however, upon acquiring sixty-seven percent of the stock.1

In the latter part of November, the defendants learned that a substantial amount of the company’s stock had been turned over to a local bank pursuant to the plaintiff’s tender offer. They believed that a takeover was inevitable unless they could buy [206]*206enough stock to take control themselves. They proceeded to borrow $580,000 for this purpose and, on November 24, 1971, they started to acquire stock at $310 per share. On November 25, Thanksgiving Day, the plaintiff sent telegrams to all stockholders increasing its offer to $325 per share, still conditioned upon obtaining at least sixty-seven percent of the stock. The next day, the individual defendants acquired additional stock at $325 per share and voluntarily paid $325 per share to all stockholders who had sold stock to them on November 24 for $310 per share. At the time the defendants solicited stockholders for the sale of their stock, they disclosed that liquidating dividends might be received in excess of the $325 per share being offered. The plaintiff’s offers did not make such disclosures. The individual defendants acquired 1849 shares of stock at $325 per share which, when combined with stock owned by them or their families, totaled 3313 shares or slightly less than two-thirds of the outstanding stock of T. H. Canty and Company, Inc. The trial court found that T. H. Canty and Company, Inc., did not have sufficient cash or liquid assets to enable it to purchase the 1849 shares of stock acquired by the individual defendants. At a meeting of the shareholders in December, 1971, it was voted almost unanimously to liquidate the corporation.

The complaint alleged in substance that the defendants knew, on the basis of inside information, that the stock of T. H. Canty and Company, Inc., had considerably more value than the $325 offered by them to individual stockholders; that they knew of the “prior course of conduct of buying stock for the corporation”; that by purchasing stock for themselves they usurped a corporate opportunity and [207]

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Bluebook (online)
362 A.2d 975, 168 Conn. 201, 1975 Conn. LEXIS 940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katz-corp-v-t-h-canty-co-conn-1975.