LA. WEEKLY PUB. CO., INC. v. First Nat. Bank of Commerce

483 So. 2d 929
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 24, 1986
Docket85-C-1915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 483 So. 2d 929 (LA. WEEKLY PUB. CO., INC. v. First Nat. Bank of Commerce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LA. WEEKLY PUB. CO., INC. v. First Nat. Bank of Commerce, 483 So. 2d 929 (La. 1986).

Opinion

483 So.2d 929 (1986)

The LOUISIANA WEEKLY PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC., and Constant C. Dejoie, Jr., Individually and as President, Publisher and Stockholder
v.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE and Henry B. Dejoie, Individually and as a Stockholder, and Renette D. Hall, Individually and as a Purported Representative of Stockholder, Louise Wilcox, and Louise Wilcox.
Vivian Dejoie ROUSSELL, Constant C. Dejoie, Jr. and Michael Dejoie, As Stockholders of the Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company, Inc., and the Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company, Inc.
v.
Henry B. DEJOIE, Secretary of the Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company, Inc., and the Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company, Inc.
Vivian Dejoie ROUSSELL, and Constant C. Dejoie, Jr. As Shareholders of the Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company, Inc., and the Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company, Inc.
v.
Henry B. DEJOIE, Secretary of the Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company, Inc., and the Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company, Inc.

No. 85-C-1915.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

February 24, 1986.

*930 Ralph S. Hubbard, III, Yvonne Chalker, New Orleans, for applicants.

Ernest L. Jones, James A. Gray, Jefferson, Bryan & Gray, Roy C. Cheatwood, Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, New Orleans, for respondents.

WATSON, Justice.

Does a corporate stock transfer restriction, which specifically limits sales and mortis causa donations, apply to an inter vivos donation? The trial court concluded that the intent of the incorporators was to preserve the status of a closed corporation, and therefore the restriction prohibited any stock transfer unless the stock was first offered to the corporation and other shareholders. The Court of Appeal affirmed. The Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company, Inc., et al v. First National Bank of Commerce, et al, 475 So.2d 1126 (La.App. 4th Cir., 1985). A writ was granted to review the judgment. 477 So.2d 1116 (La., 1985).

FACTS

The Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company, Inc., which was incorporated in 1926 by Constant C. Dejoie, Sr., Henry L. Wilcox, and Orlando C.W. Taylor, is governed solely by the articles of incorporation.[1] The corporation does not have by-laws.

The capital stock is now represented by two hundred and fifty shares. There were five stockholders:[2] Henry B. Dejoie, the corporate secretary, with ninety-two shares; his brother, Constant C. Dejoie, Jr., the corporate president and publisher, with ninety-one shares; their sister, Vivian Dejoie Roussell, the second vice-president, with sixty shares; Louise Wilcox, Henry Wilcox's widow, with five shares; and Lawrence Webb with two shares.[3]

*931 Although it is not endorsed on the stock certificates, the articles of incorporation place a transfer restriction on sale of the corporate stock. Article IV provides:

"The subscription for, and the ownership of all stock in this corporation are made and taken upon the condition that any holder of stock desiring to sell the same, shall first offer his stock to the corporation, and the corporation shall have thirty days in which to exercise its option to purchase the same, at the then book value thereof. On its refusal to purchase, the stockholders shall have ten days to exercise their option to purchase such stock at said price, after the expiration of such time the stockholder shall be free to make any other sale of his stock. In the event of the death of a stockholder, all stock held by the deceased shall go to his legal heirs."

In March of 1980, Vivian D. Roussell offered to sell her sixty shares of stock to her brother, Henry B. Dejoie. Vivian decided not to proceed with the sale and Henry unsuccessfully sued for specific performance.

In November of 1982, Vivian sold her sixty shares to another brother, Constant C. Dejoie, Jr., for $25,000, without first offering them to the corporation. Constant took six of the shares and gave one share each to six individuals,[4] leaving him with one hundred and forty-five shares. He called two stockholders' meetings,[5] to elect the six new stockholders as corporate officers and directors. Before the donation, Constant and Vivian owned one hundred and fifty-one shares, or sixty percent of the stock, but controlled only two of the five seats on the board.

Subsequently, Henry convened two meetings of the other board members: he was elected the new corporate president and his daughter, Renette Dejoie Hall,[6] was elected the new corporate treasurer.

Henry sued to challenge Vivian's stock sale, Constant's donations, and Constant's actions at his two meetings. The trial court ruled that the actions taken at the meetings called by both Constant Dejoie and Henry Dejoie were invalid for lack of proper notice. In addition, the trial court annulled Vivian's stock sale to Constant for lack of compliance with Article IV of the articles of incorporation and held that those sixty shares were treasury stock.

On November 18, 1984, following the trial court judgment, Henry sent notice of a December shareholders' meeting to all stockholders. Vivian was not included. Two days later, Constant and Vivian rescinded the invalidated sale and Vivian gave Constant a proxy for her sixty shares. At the December meeting, Henry refused to recognize Vivian as owner of the shares and Constant as holding their proxy.

Constant, Vivian, and the corporation contested the validity of the December shareholders' meeting and the lack of notice to Vivian, and filed suit for an injunction. The suit was converted into an action in quo warranto. Shortly after this suit was filed, Henry, claiming to be acting on behalf of the corporation, tendered a $25,000 check to Vivian for her sixty shares of stock. Vivian refused to sell, and Henry filed the money in the court registry. Two months later, Constant donated one of his ninety-one shares of stock to his son, Michael C. Dejoie. Henry refused to recognize the donation and record Michael as a shareholder.

On April 12, 1985, the trial court ruled against Vivian and Constant, and upheld the validity of the December shareholders' meeting. Citing its earlier judgment, it held that Vivian's refusal of the corporation's *932 $25,000 offer caused her sixty shares to become treasury stock.

Constant, Vivian, and the corporation filed suit for a writ of mandamus ordering Henry, the corporate secretary, to amend the corporate records to recognize Vivian and Michael as shareholders. The trial court held that Henry was right in refusing to alter the corporate records because Vivian's stock became treasury stock when she refused the corporation's offer to purchase her shares, and Constant's donation to Michael was invalid. Recognizing that the corporate charter did not specifically restrict transfer of stock by donation, the trial court held it was the incorporators' intent to preserve the posture of the company as a closely-held corporation. The trial court prohibited the transfer of the corporation's stock by "sale, donation, or otherwise" absent compliance with Article IV of the articles of incorporation.

The Court of Appeal consolidated appeals from the three lower court judgments, reversed the trial court's decisions relating to Vivian's shares, but affirmed as to the share donated to Michael C. Dejoie. The Court of Appeal concluded that Vivian did not offer to sell her stock to the corporation.

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483 So. 2d 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-weekly-pub-co-inc-v-first-nat-bank-of-commerce-la-1986.