Lemenestrel v. Warden

964 A.2d 902, 2008 Pa. Super. 295, 2008 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4377
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 31, 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 964 A.2d 902 (Lemenestrel v. Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lemenestrel v. Warden, 964 A.2d 902, 2008 Pa. Super. 295, 2008 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4377 (Pa. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION BY

BENDER, J.:

¶ 1 Charles LeMenestrel and Genevieve LeMenestrel-Manas (collectively, the “LeMenestrels”), minority shareholders and siblings, and Superior Group, Inc. (the “Company”), who are the plaintiffs in this case, appeal from the November 9, 2007 order that sustained the preliminary objections of the defendant directors, William G. Warden, III (“Warden III”), William G. Warden, IV (“Warden IV”), Walter E. Bachman, III (“Bachman” or “Bachman III”), Louis T. Cullen (“Cullen”), Raymond B. Langton (“Langton”), and the Company, and dismissed with prejudice the shareholders’ derivative suit filed by the plaintiffs. The Honorable Charles B. Burr, II, who presided over this case, determined that the special litigation committee (the “Committee”) formed by the Company’s board of directors in response to a demand letter from the LeMenestrels (the “Demand Letter”) was disinterested, independent, impartial and adequately informed in reaching its good faith conclusion that it was not in the best interests of the Company to proceed with the LeMen-estrels’ shareholders’ derivative suit. In reaching his decision, Judge Burr made extensive findings of fact and relied largely on guidelines for judicial review of the right of a corporation to terminate shareholder derivative litigation as set forth in The American Law Institute’s Principles of Corporate Governance: Analysis and, Recommendations (“ALI Principles”), particularly sections 7.07-7.10 and 7.13, as adopted by our Supreme Court in Cuker v. Mikalauskas, 547 Pa. 600, 692 A.2d 1042 (1997). Essentially, in accordance with our standard of review, we conclude that Judge Burr thoroughly examined the circumstances of this case, his extensive findings of fact are supported by the record, and he did not err or abuse his discretion in determining that the Committee’s decision to seek dismissal of the derivative suit was entitled to protection under the business judgment rule. Accordingly, we affirm.

¶ 2 The following is a factual overview of some of the circumstances underlying the LeMenestrels’ numerous allegations of wrongdoing primarily on the part of the Wardens, several of which are based on events that occurred back into the early [905]*9051990’s and even 1980’s.1 The Company is a private corporation owned by the descendants of Clarence A. Warden, Sr., who co-founded the Company’s predecessor corporation, Superior Tube Company, with S. Landis Gabel in 1934. Superior Tube Company primarily manufactured and sold metal tubing for industrial use.

¶3 Since the early 1990’s, when the Company bought-out the Gabel family’s interest in the Company for approximately $200 million, the Company has been owned and controlled, individually and beneficially, by the four families that descended from Clarence A. Warden, Sr., including the LeMenestrel family, the Warden family, the Stone family, and the Davis family. The latter two families are not involved in this litigation. In addition to individually held shares, the family members are beneficiaries of the Clarence A. Warden Residuary Trust (the “Trust”), which was created by the will of founder Clarence A. Warden Sr., and which, following the buyout of the Gabel family ownership interest, holds approximately 57 percent, or 109,960 of the 192,396 outstanding shares of stock in the Company. In all, each family branch owns, individually and beneficially, an approximately 25 percent interest in the Company (following re-acquisition of the Kellys’ shares, described below).

¶4 Certain members of the Warden family have been most involved in the management and operations of the Company. One of the defendants in this case, Warden III, the grandson of Clarence A. Warden, Sr., commenced his employment with Superior Tube Company in 1957 where he remained an officer until 1998. Warden III also became a member of the Company’s board of directors in 1974 and was chairman of the board from 1995 to 2007. His son, Warden IV, was first employed with one of the Company’s subsidiaries, LFC Financial Corporation (“LFC”), prior to commencing employment with the Company in 1995. Warden IV has been a member of the Company’s board since 1995 and he became chief executive officer of the Company in 1999. Warden IV also succeeded his father as chairman of the board in 2007.

¶ 5 Indeed, as noted above, in the early 1990’s, it was Warden III who negotiated the buyout of the Gabel family’s shares in the Company at $1,725 per share, for a total cost to the Company of approximately $200 million, which transaction involved the largest single outlay of cash by the Company up to that point. Additionally, with regard to the Trust, since 1987 when he obtained Orphans’ Court approval, Warden III has been one of two trustees (the other is Wachovia Bank, N.A.) with the power to elect directors of the Company. Following the Gabel family buyout, the Trust became the controlling shareholder of the Company. Thus, one of the LeMenestrels’ allegations is that the Gabel buyout promoted by Warden III, which increased the ownership interest of the Trust of which Warden III was a trustee, essentially gave Warden III control of the Company, thereby allowing him to employ his sons and pay significant “bonuses” to Warden IV, including lucrative long term incentive payments. See LeMenestrels’ brief at 6-7.

[906]*906¶ 6 Additionally, Paul E. Kelly, Sr. (“Kelly Sr.”) was a long-term key executive at the Company, commencing his employment with Superior Tube Company in 1936 as a bookkeeper and eventually becoming its chief executive officer and serving as chairman on its board of directors. Kelly Sr. was, indisputably, largely responsible for the Company’s acquisitions and growth into the early 1990’s. Indeed, beginning in 1955, the Company acquired a number of corporations in other areas of business, including LFC in 1977 and Oxford First Corporation (“Oxford”) in 1988. In 1976, Kelly Sr.’s son, Paul Kelly, Jr. (“Kelly Jr.”), also joined the Company, becoming its president in 1983 and serving on its board of directors.

¶ 7 However, as Judge Burr described, following “a protracted period of cooling of business relations with the Wardens commencing in approximately 1991,” Kelly Sr. and Kelly Jr. both left the Company in 1995. See Order Sustaining the Defendants’ Preliminary Objections in the Nature of a Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ Shareholders’ Derivative Suit and Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law (hereinafter “Order”), 11/9/07, at 3. As Judge Burr explained, the Kellys thereafter sued Warden III, Warden IV, the Company, and the Trust in 1996, “contending that large and undisclosed company business losses recorded at the end of fiscal year 1994 had caused the value of their four and per cent stock ownership therein to decline.” Id. at 3-4 (footnoted omitted). Consequently, “[t]he Kellys’ shares in [the Company] were bought back by the [Company for $23,087,000.00 in October of 1999, and the Kelly litigation was eventually settled.” Id. at 4. Louis J. Sinatra, Esq., who represents the LeMenestrels in the instant case, was counsel for the Kellys in them litigation. Id.

¶ 8 The events culminating in submission of the LeMenestrels’ Demand Letter on the board began with a May 5, 2004 notice of the annual shareholders’ meeting, which listed several items of business for consideration, including approval of a Long-Term Incentive Plan (“LTIP”); approval of certain parachute payments to Company executives including Warden IV, Peter G. Gould (Company president), and John M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
964 A.2d 902, 2008 Pa. Super. 295, 2008 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemenestrel-v-warden-pasuperct-2008.