Klein v. Fisher Foods, Inc.

216 N.E.2d 647, 6 Ohio Misc. 84, 35 Ohio Op. 2d 193, 1965 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 271
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJune 16, 1965
DocketNo. 810486
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 216 N.E.2d 647 (Klein v. Fisher Foods, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klein v. Fisher Foods, Inc., 216 N.E.2d 647, 6 Ohio Misc. 84, 35 Ohio Op. 2d 193, 1965 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 271 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

Thomas, J.

Owner of 250 shares of common stock of Fisher Foods, Inc., the plaintiff brings this derivative suit principally to enjoin defendant Fisher and the defendant Fazio-Costa Corporations, their directors and representatives from consummating and effectuating the merger of these companies.

Defendants admit that they “would not have commenced or prosecuted this action upon plaintiff’s demand as no wrongful act has been committed by any director or officer in connection with the subject transaction.”

If completed the merger would consolidate in surviving Fisher Foods the separate food retailing operations of Fisher, Fazio and Costa. As of February 4, 1965, Fisher operated 74 retail food stores in northern Ohio, 55 of which were in Cuyahoga County.

The Fazio corporations (Fazio, Inc., Foodlane, Inc., Ware[86]*86house Merchandising, Inc., J. & C. Super Markets, Inc., and Food Enterprises, Inc., are principally owned by Carl and John Fazio, their mother, Mrs. Josephine Fazio, and their brother-in-law, Joseph Fana. The first Fazio grocery store, still operated as the Fazio partnership, is at 2255 Lee Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Since 1949 the Fazio family grocery business has expanded into five retail food supermarkets, all in the Cleveland area. Prior to January 5, 1965, these self-service supermarkets and the partnership store operated as part of the Stop-N-Shop Super Markets Association, a buying and merchandising group of 16 independently-owned stores.

The Costa corporations (Costa’s Stop-N-Shop, Inc., and Costa’s Bakery, Inc.), are owned by Sam (51%) and Frank (49%) Costa. In North Royalton, Ohio, they operate a retail food self-service supermarket and a self-contained bakery adjacent to the supermarket.

On March 9, 1965, at a specially called meeting of shareholders of Fisher Foods, the merger, here sought to be enjoined, was approved by more than two-thirds of Fisher’s common shareholders and by more than two-thirds of Fisher’s preferred shareholders. The vote thus exceeded the two-thirds minimum required to approve a merger by Section 1701.79 (B), Revised Code.

However, in her petition, plaintiff generally contends that, in considering and approving said merger, the individual defendants did not act pursuant to the unprejudiced exercise of their independent judgment, but acted primarily in their own special interests, and that of the defendant Fazio-Costa Corporations, in violation of their fiduciary duties to defendant Fisher and the minority shareholdres of such corporation.

Before the several claims of plaintiff’s petition are examined major events leading up to the March 9th shareholders’ meeting will be summarized.

For several years Fisher’s management (Fisher-Conway-Salmon) had been attempting to sell their Fisher interests. Fisher sales and earnings were dropping, and in 1963 and 1964 Fisher Foods lost money. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., as Fisher’s investment banker, had contacted 12 different national food chains, searching for a buyer. Merrill Lynch is one of the nation’s largest stock brokerage firms. One of its specialties is food lines.

[87]*87In the fall of 1964, Seaway Foods, Inc., a wholesale grocery concern (which supplied Stop-N-Shop stores), Stop-N-Shop owners, Regó, Rini, Fazio and Costa and Julie Kravitz, executive director of the Stop-N-Shop association, offered to buy Fisher’s at $9.80 a share. They refused the Fisher selling price of $12 a share when an examination of Fisher’s records revealed an unrecorded employee retirement pension liability of over two million dollars. Had the Seaway offer to purchase been accepted by Fisher, Seaway would have purchased fifty percent of the management common stock and the other five members of the group, ten per cent each.

Merrill Lynch renewed negotiations with a selling price of $10 a share and on January 5, 1965, the Fazio-Costa-Seaway group purchased the Fisher common stock owned by the Fisher management (55%, or 320,053 of the 579,239 common shares issued and outstanding). Regó and Rini were no longer in the buying group.

On January 5, 1965, Fazio, Costa and Seaway entered an agreement. Under its terms the Fazio corporations purchased 246,058 common shares, the Costa corporations purchased 10,-000 shares, and Seaway purchased 63,995 shares.

In the agreement of January 5th the parties bound themselves to prepare an agreement of merger of the Fazio-Costa operations and Fisher Foods and to vote “all shares owned by them in Fisher and in the corporations which are parties to this agreement in favor of the Agreement of Merger.”

To finance the Fazio-Costa purchase of Fisher common stock, on January 4, 1965, Union Commerce Bank lent the Fazio-Costa corporations sums totaling $2,560,580, to be secured by the 256,058 shares purchased.

At a meeting of the Fisher Board of Directors held on January 5, 1965, each of the seven directors (representing Fisher-Conway-Salmon management) resigned, and in their places were elected Carl Fazio, Sam Costa, John Fazio, Julie Kravitz, Jack N. Falcon, Ralph Garson and Joe Fana. Jack N. Falcon, a certified public accountant has performed Fazio’s accounting services, and is now directing Fisher’s accounting services. Ralph Garson is an officer and director of Seaway Foods.

At a board meeting of January 13, 1965, the new directors approved the Agreement of Merger, as presented. The board [88]*88designated March 9, 1965, as the date for the shareholders’ meeting to vote on the merger agreement, on a proposal to fix the number of directors of Fisher Foods, Inc., at nine, and to elect directors to serve until the 1966 annual meeting of shareholders.

Neither with reference to a merger [Section 1701.79 (A), Bevised Code] nor to any other corporate transaction does Ohio law require a proxy statement to be submitted to the shareholders. Nevertheless under date of February 4, 1965, a twenty-two page proxy statement with attached copy of the Agreement of Merger was mailed to each Fisher shareholder. Several excerpts are here quoted. The first describes the rate of exchange,

“Upon approval of the merger by the shareholders of Fisher and upon the occurrence of other specified conditions Fisher will issue to the shareholders of the various Fazio corporations an aggregate of 614,000 shares and to the shareholders of the Costa corporations an aggregate of 91,600 shares of Fisher Common Stock * * * (One of the specified conditions is obtaining a ruling from Internal Bevenue Service, since applied for, to the effect that the proposed merger will not result in any gain or loss to the constituent corporations or to their shareholders under the Internal Bevenue Code).”

Later the proxy statement states that,

“All shares of Fisher Common Stock other than those owned by the Fazio and Costa corporations will upon occurrence of the merger remain outstanding and unchanged in the hands of the holders thereof * *

The proxy statement explains that by operation of law the merger will extinguish the 256,058 shares owned by the Fazio-Costa corporations at the effectiveness of the merger.

With reference to the Union Commerce Bank loan of $2,560,580 the proxy statement declares that Fisher will assume this indebtedness. It states:

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Bluebook (online)
216 N.E.2d 647, 6 Ohio Misc. 84, 35 Ohio Op. 2d 193, 1965 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-fisher-foods-inc-ohctcomplcuyaho-1965.