Ketchum v. Green

415 F. Supp. 1367
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 14, 1976
DocketCiv. A. 76-571
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 415 F. Supp. 1367 (Ketchum v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ketchum v. Green, 415 F. Supp. 1367 (W.D. Pa. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION

TEITELBAUM, District Judge.

This is an action for injunctive relief arising out of an internal struggle for control of Babb, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation engaged primarily in the insurance brokerage business in Pittsburgh, Cleveland and Philadelphia.

Such a contest is rarely an amiable affair —indeed, especially in the arena of the small, private corporation, a struggle for power is often intense and bitter, generated by a basic clash of strong personalities and conflicting business policy judgments. For the loser, the consequences can be both swift and severe, and it is therefore not surprising that the courts are frequently called upon to determine the legality of the mode of intra-corporate combat and the legitimacy of its outcome. But it is obviously not every corporate conflict that sparks a cognizable legal claim. Especially in the federal forum, where the prevailing principle of limited jurisdiction protects no less than the right and power of the state to adjudicate controversies governed by its laws, the Court must not permit empathy for the plight of the vanquished to impel an overreaching of subject matter jurisdiction in circumstances that do not clearly reveal a basis for a federal cause of action.

So it is with the difficult case sub judice, an action in equity founded for federal jurisdictional purposes upon an alleged violation of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5, promulgated thereunder. Plaintiffs Ketchum and Bigler are, respectively, the recently-ousted chairman of the board and the recently-ousted president of Babb, Inc. (Babb). Their combined service with Babb and its organizational predecessors totals some 55 years, and, since 1967, they (along with certain of the defendants herein) have actively managed the corporation. During the period of their stewardship, Babb has grown from 30 to 140 employees, and its annual revenues have increased from $600,-000 to more than $4,000,000.

Nonetheless, in late 1975, several of the individual defendants in this ease, all seven of whom were and are directors of the corporation, began discussing among themselves the possibility of either severing their associations with Babb or, alternatively, removing plaintiffs from top management positions at the time of the 1976 elections. Babb had not shown a profit for at least three preceding years, and, in view of the defendant-directors, this decline was the direct result of what they deemed to be plaintiffs’ “wasteful and counter-productive” diversion of corporate resources into “unrelated, losing venture,” and “repeated disregard” of the board of directors in the for-

*1369 mulation of important corporate decisions. early 1976, certain of the defendants, subsequently joined by the others, determined that they would oppose plaintiffs’ reelection as officers of the company.

On April 23, 1976, the date of the annual shareholders meeting and the critical juncture in the chain of events here in question,. the eleven individuals who had comprised the membership of Babb’s board of directors throughout the prior year — the two plaintiffs, seven defendants and two other persons not parties to this lawsuit — again were nominated by a committee of the board to serve as directors for the following year. By unanimous voice vote, the assembled shareholders reelected the same eleven individuals as directors. 1

Immediately following the shareholders meeting, the newly-reelected board met in accordance with corporate by-laws to elect officers for the upcoming year. The nominating committee proposed the election of a slate of officers including plaintiff Kete-hum as chairman and plaintiff Bigler as president. An opposing slate was nominated, including neither plaintiff, but naming defendant Waugh as chairman and defendant Livingston as president. In the ensuing ballot, Ketchum and Bigler were defeated by a vote of 7 to 4 (the seven defendants against the two plaintiffs and the two addi-directors). was man and Livingston was elected president.

Following the election of officers, a resolution to terminate Babb’s employment of plaintiffs Ketchum and Bigler — neither of whom had employment contracts with the company or its subsidiaries — was adopted by a similar 7 to 4 vote. Plaintiffs were discharged immediately, with one week’s salary.

Upon termination of their employment, plaintiffs were required by the terms of previously-executed stock retirement agreements to resell their shares of Babb stock to the company. 2 All shares of Babb stock are held by employees pursuant to such stock retirement agreements, and all such agreements provide for the compulsory sale to and repurchase by Babb of all outstanding shares held by a shareholder “on his termination of employment for any reason or on his death.” Babb has consistently enforced this stock retirement agreement — the provisions of which apparently were drafted at the instruction, and with the participation, of plaintiffs Ketchum and Bigler — against every employee terminated by the corporation. Accordingly, at the conclusion of the April 23 organization meeting, pursuant to the terms of the repurchase agreements executed by plaintiffs, Babb tendered checks and notes to Ketchum and Bigler in *1370 the contractually-obligated aggregate amount of $544,410, or $2.63 per share for 207,000 shares of company stock. 3

Plaintiffs returned the checks and notes to defendants and subsequently filed the instant action, alleging, inter alia, federal securities fraud. They request, inter alia, that the Court enjoin defendants Waugh and Livingston from occupying the offices to which they were elected on April 23, return plaintiffs to their former positions and restrain defendants (a majority of the board of directors) “from taking any other action to change or disturb the arrangements for the management and operation of defendant Babb, Inc. . . .”

We emphasize at the outset that what has been set forth above is no more than a factual skeleton constructed for dispositional purposes, and does not purport to be a complete summary of the facts which give rise to the instant litigation. The circumstances surrounding the termination of plaintiffs’ employment are both intricate and complex, and, in another forum, might well merit closer scrutiny. But such scrutiny is not automatically warranted here, where entitlement to any remedy is, initially, entirely dependent upon the Court’s acceptance of the proposition that plaintiffs have alleged a cause of action under the federal securities law embodied in Rule 10b-5. If that proposition is rejected, our inquiry is properly at an end, for, regardless of the legality vel non of defendants’ conduct in ousting and discharging plaintiffs under state corporation law, this Court would lack jurisdiction to determine plaintiffs’ pendent state claims. After a full hearing in this matter, and careful consideration of the various briefs and memoranda of the parties, I am persuaded that plaintiffs have failed to state a cognizable federal claim, and that the Court is therefore deprived of subject matter jurisdiction in this case.

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Related

In Re Epic Mortgage Insurance Litigation
701 F. Supp. 1192 (E.D. Virginia, 1988)
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681 F. Supp. 965 (D. Massachusetts, 1987)
Valente v. Pepsico, Inc.
454 F. Supp. 1228 (D. Delaware, 1978)
Ketchum v. Green
557 F.2d 1022 (Third Circuit, 1977)

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Bluebook (online)
415 F. Supp. 1367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ketchum-v-green-pawd-1976.