Levine v. Randolph Corp.

188 A.2d 59, 150 Conn. 232, 98 A.L.R. 2d 349, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 194
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 15, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 188 A.2d 59 (Levine v. Randolph Corp.) 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
Levine v. Randolph Corp., 188 A.2d 59, 150 Conn. 232, 98 A.L.R. 2d 349, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 194 (Colo. 1963).

Opinion

King, J.

The Randolph Corporation, a defendant and the only corporate party to this action, was organized in 1931 to deal in real estate in Hartford. It has issued, in total, ten shares of capital stock, each having a par value of $100. Its original board of directors consisted of Maurice W. Shulman, Samuel B. Wilkes and Beatrice Shulman. The defendants indicate in their brief that both Wilkes and Beatrice Shulman had at some time been replaced. All of the shares are presently held by six brothers and sisters of the Shulman family; they constitute two opposing factions and are the individual plaintiffs and defendants in this case. The plaintiffs Lisbeth S. Levine and Beatrice Shulman own one share of stock each, and the third plaintiff, Albert H. Shulman, owns two shares. The defendants Joseph L. Shulman and Sophie S. Walsh own one share of stock each, and the defendant Maurice W. Shulman owns two shares. In addition, the defendants Maurice and Joseph Shulman jointly own one share of stock. Certificate No. 21, which gives rise to much of the present controversy, is dated June I, 1937, and reads on its face as follows: “Beatrice [235]*235Shnlman is the owner of 2 parts of this certificate, Sophie Shnlman is the owner of 2 parts of this certificate, Lisbeth Kamerman is the owner of 2 parts of this certificate, Albert Shnlman is the owner of 4 parts of this certificate, making a total of one shares [sic] of the capital stock of The Bandolph Corporation.” All parties treat certificate No. 21 as evidencing one share only. While the names of two of the named female owners of certificate No. 21 do not correspond to the names of any of the owners of the other shares, it is apparent that these two owners are now Sophie S. Walsh and Lisbeth S. Levine. The plaintiffs’ faction, therefore, owns four whole shares and eight-tenths of certificate No. 21, and the defendants’ faction owns five whole shares and two-tenths of certificate No. 21.

On July 20, 1961, the three individual defendants, purporting to act as the board of directors of the corporation, voted to issue additional shares of stock, each shareholder to be given the right to subscribe at $100 per share for ten shares of the additional stock for every share of stock owned by him. The offer, which was to expire on August 3, 1961, also provided that <£[o]wners of a fractional interest in a jointly owned share of . . . outstanding capital stock shall have the right to subscribe at the subscription price of one hundred dollars per share for additional shares of capital stock at the rate of one additional share for each one-tenth interest which such owner has in each such share of capital stock.” The value of each present share of the corporation is greatly in excess of $100 a share. No dividends have ever been paid by the corporation, nor have there been any sales of its stock. If the proposed plan were carried out according to its [236]*236stated terms and all rights to subscribe were fully-utilized, the plaintiffs’ faction would hold fifty-two shares and the defendants’ faction fifty-seven shares, and the share represented by certificate No. 21 would remain as at present.

On receipt of the notice of the proposed stock issue, the plaintiffs brought this suit against the corporation, originally the only defendant, alleging, in substance, that the three persons who later became the individual defendants had wrongfully assumed control of the corporation and had illegally elected themselves as the sole officers and members of the board of directors; that the proposed offer of additional stock would be of no benefit or value to the corporation and was intended for the personal gain of those three persons; and that authorization of the offer had not been voted by duly elected directors. A temporary and permanent injunction restraining the corporation and its directors and officers from proceeding with the stock offer was asked. After a hearing, a temporary injunction was granted on August 7, 1961, forbidding the issuance of the additional stock.

At some undisclosed time, the owners of certificate No. 21 had executed the following agreement and filed a copy of it with the corporation: “We hereby appoint Beatrice Shulman to hold Randolph Corporation stock certificate No. 21 for one (1) share which is owned jointly by . . . [the four named owners]. All rights which accrue to this certificate are to be exercised independently by each person above mentioned in the proportion he or she owns therein as though added to any other stock owned solely in his or her name.” The defendant Sophie S. Walsh, under date of August 7, 1961, gave notice to the corporation that she was the [237]*237owner of a one-fifth interest in certificate No. 21, that her coowners had no authority to vote her interest and that she reserved to herself the exclusive voting rights with respect to it. On August 10,1961, the plaintiffs gave written notice to the corporation that in all future shareholders’ meetings certificate No. 21 would be voted in accordance with General Statutes § 33-311 and that all previous instructions were revoked.

At a meeting on August 18, 1961, the stockholders were declared to have voted, five to four, to ratify and approve the action of the board of directors with respect to the issue of additional stock and, by a similar vote, to have elected the individual defendants as directors. On each question, the plaintiffs voted their fractional interests in certificate No. 21 in the negative, and the defendant Sophie S. Walsh, by proxy, voted her fractional interest in that certificate in the affirmative. The individual defendants, acting as the board of directors, had declared that certificate No. 21 “was ineligible to be voted” at the meeting because the holders of the certificate were not unanimous. In fact, no vote on that share was counted.

Thereafter, in this suit, the individual defendants were added as parties defendant and the complaint was amended and supplemented to include allegations that certificate No. 21 was disenfranchised in violation of § 33-311 of the General Statutes and that the individual defendants were not legally elected or chosen as directors. Additional relief was sought in the form of a judgment determining the validity of the election or appointment of the individual defendants as directors and officers, both prior to and on August 18, 1961. Injunctive relief was also sought to restrain the individual [238]*238defendants from acting as directors and officers.

The court below concluded that the voting of certificate No. 21 at the August 18 meeting was governed by § 33-311a (f) of the General Statutes,1 that a majority of the holders in interest in that certificate did vote in the negative at the meeting, and that consequently the vote should have been, in each instance, five to five. The court further concluded that the proposed stock issue was therefore not legally ratified by the stockholders and that the individual defendants were not legally elected as directors. The court also concluded that there was not sufficient evidence for it to determine who were the legal officers and directors, if indeed there were any; that the proposed stock issue was not designed to serve any corporate need but was merely a device for “freezing” or “squeezing” out the plaintiffs; and that under the circumstances injunctive relief was proper. From the judgment rendered for the plaintiffs, the defendants took this appeal.

Certificate No. 21 was jointly held by, and in the names of, the four owners.

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Bluebook (online)
188 A.2d 59, 150 Conn. 232, 98 A.L.R. 2d 349, 1963 Conn. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levine-v-randolph-corp-conn-1963.