Lewis v. Hat Corporation of America
This text of 150 A.2d 750 (Lewis v. Hat Corporation of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Harry LEWIS, David H. Harmon, Louis Dubow, George J. Campo, Jr., Seymour Bayewitch, Beatrice Korman, Arthur Kalman, Morris Brockman, and Louis Kaye, Co-Partners doing business under the name of Joint Operating Company, Plaintiffs,
v.
HAT CORPORATION OF AMERICA, Bernard L. Salesky, Joseph M. Salesky, David Salesky, Charles Salesky, Charles R. Stevenson, Earl K. Mueller, George B. Moran, Tillman Cahn, Frank H. James, John Cavanagh, J. Garvan Cavanagh, Harold J. Mahnken, Henry Reeve and Salesky Brothers, Inc., Defendants.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle County.
*751 Irving Morris of Cohen & Morris, Wilmington, and Milton Paulson, New York City, for plaintiffs.
William S. Potter of Berl, Potter & Anderson, Wilmington, and Paul D. Miller, of Mudge Stern, Baldwin & Todd, New York City, for defendant, Hat Corporation of America.
S. Samuel Arsht, of Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell, Wilmington, and Abraham L. Freedman, of Wolf, Block, Schorr & Solis-Cohen, Philadelphia, Pa., for defendants, Bernard L. Salesky, Joseph M. Salesky and David Salesky.
MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.
Plaintiffs as partners are the owners of twenty shares of Hat Corporation of America's 4½% cumulative preferred voting stock and bring this action for the benefit of such corporation, naming the directors of Hat Corporation and Salesky Brothers, Inc.[1] as the real defendants.
The verified complaint alleges that in April 1955 Salesky Brothers, Inc. directly and indirectly acquired sufficient voting stock of Hat Corporation to cause to be elected to its board a majority of Salesky nominees or designees. It is further charged that thereafter, in July 1956, Hat Corporation was caused to purchase the operating assets and business of Salesky Brothers, Inc. and its affiliates at an agreed price of $1,875,373.52, a transaction which was consummated in September 1956.
It is contended that the price paid for such assets was excessive and exorbitant bearing no proper relationship to their fair and reasonable value, being more than $400,000 in excess of the value of such assets as carried on the books of the selling corporation and more than thirteen times the average earnings attributable to said assets over a period of three years prior to said sale; that such acquisition benefited the Saleskys rather than Hat Corporation; that the corporation had established an enviable reputation as a leading manufacturer of quality hats, and that the acquisition by it of the Saleskys' business, which was essentially in the low price hat field, had not *752 only injured Hat Corporation's established reputation and good will but had served the improper purpose of enabling the Saleskys to discharge bank loans of approximately $1,900,000.
The complaint goes on to allege that under the terms of the agreement Hat Corporation was caused to agree to ship finished hats and make collections for the account of Salesky Brothers, Inc., and that the Saleskys upon acquiring domination and control of the corporation had caused the corporation to pay excessive and exorbitant salaries and other benefits to themselves in addition to continuing the salaries and other benefits paid to officers and executives whose duties had been assumed by the Saleskys or their nominees.
The complaint further charges that the individual defendants have caused the facilities of the corporation to be used for the benefit of Salesky Brothers, Inc. and its affiliates without consideration, and concludes with a prayer that defendants other than Hat Corporation be required to account for their profits and for the damages sustained by such corporation as a result of the matters complained of.
Defendants have moved for summary judgment on three grounds, (1) that the transactions complained of were approved and ratified by the stockholders of Hat Corporation, (2) that plaintiffs have not complied with Rule 23(c) of this Court, Del. C.Ann., and (3) that plaintiffs as beneficial owners of preferred rather than common stock can point to no injury suffered by them as a result of the acts complained of and accordingly lack the capacity to maintain this derivative action.
The complaint centers on the alleged impropriety of the acquisition of the properties of Champ Hats by Hat Corporation and ignores the fact that this basic transaction was fully disclosed to the stockholders and ratified by them. In a proxy statement of August 2, 1956 sent out prior to the special meeeting which approved the purchase here attacked stockholders were informed that the transaction in question had been negotiated by a committee of directors not allied to the Salesky group notwithstanding the fact that such group as of June 15, 1956 owned or controlled 42.7% of the common stock of Hat Corporation. An earlier proxy statement of January 27, 1956 sent out prior to the annual meeting of stockholders disclosed substantially the same Salesky stock interest as of January 1956, an interest which had been acquired in April 1955 and had led to the election of three Salesky directors on June 23, 1955. The stockholders were also informed in the August 2, 1956 proxy statement that the Salesky directors did not act for Hat Corporation in the negotiations leading up to the purchase under attack or take part in meetings of directors when the transaction was considered and later approved,[2] and it was recommended that the stockholders ratify the decision of the board in contracting to acquire an established business in the low price hat field in order to complement the corporation's traditional line of medium and high priced hats. The approximate price agreed on was disclosed together with the information that it was based among other things on a study of the earnings of the Champ companies and the book value of the properties to be acquired. Furnished with such information the stockholders overwhelmingly approved[3] the purchase.
To ignore the facts above outlined and merely to charge as plaintiffs do that the bargain complained of (which was made at a time when the Hat Corporation was just emerging from the effects of a crippling *753 strike at its Norwalk, Connecticut plant) was unconscionable and so void is to beg the question. Defendants having submitted the records concerning the transaction under attack and moved for summary judgment, it became incumbent on plaintiffs to offer proof which would either establish that the purchase was constructively fraudulent or otherwise invalid thereby carrying the required burden in a situation in which the proxy information was explicit and in which a majority of the stock, excluding the Salesky controlled shares, approved the transaction (Compare Schiff v. R.K.O. Pictures, Del.Ch., 104 A.2d 267 and Allaun v. Consolidated Oil Co., 16 Del.Ch. 318, 147 A. 257), or in the alternative filed affidavits raising genuine issues of fact as to the legality of the purchase. Plaintiffs have done neither.
It is clearly established in Delaware that stockholder ratification of corporate action which is not per se void renders such action immune from minority stockholder attack, Fidanque v. American Maracaibo Co., 33 Del.Ch. 262, 92 A.2d 311, and there is nothing in the record before me to indicate that plaintiffs' grievance is anything more than disagreement with a business decision duly ratified by the stockholders.
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150 A.2d 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-hat-corporation-of-america-delch-1959.