Lippman v. Kehoe Stenograph Co.

98 A. 943, 11 Del. Ch. 190, 1916 Del. Ch. LEXIS 17
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 4, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 98 A. 943 (Lippman v. Kehoe Stenograph Co.) 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.

Bluebook
Lippman v. Kehoe Stenograph Co., 98 A. 943, 11 Del. Ch. 190, 1916 Del. Ch. LEXIS 17 (Del. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

[193]*193The differences began after the first meeting of the incorporators. The company was incorporated under the general corporation law of this State, by the filing of a certificate of incorporation dated October 9, 1913, and the subsequent recording thereof on the same day. By this certificate there were three incorporators, R. Y. Slater, Abraham M. Ackerman and J. Merrick Horn, each of whom subscribed for three shares of stock. On October 9, 1913, a meeting of incorporators was held in Wilmington, Delaware. Horn had previously assigned his subscription to E. B. Waples.

At the hearing on the prior motion respecting the filing of the answer (ante p. 80; 95 Atl. 895), I expressed my reasons for affirming the validity of that meeting, and both sides of the case assume the validity thereof. It is not necessary, therefore, to refer again to the regularity of that meeting.

At the meeting of incorporators, subscriptions to the capital stock were received, R. Y. Slater for four shares and Ackerman and Horn each for three shares. Ah agent was selected to keep the Delaware office of the company and the books required by law. The directors were authorized to issue stock, and to purchase property and issue full paid stock in payment therefor: An election for directors was held and six persons were elected by ballot to hold office until their successors should be elected and qualified. The persons elected were R. Y. Slater, Abraham M. Ackerman, H. C. Dunlap, Ashby L. Biedler, W. J. Kehoe and E. B. Waples. No other business was then transacted. Of these six persons, Slater and Ackerman were two of the three incorporators, and Waples was the assignee of thé subscription of the third incorporator, Horn. The other three persons at that time had no legal connection with the company as stockholders, subscribers to stock, or otherwise.

By the Act under which the corporation was created the signers of the certificate of incorporation have the direction of the affairs of the corporation until the directors are elected {Section 8). There was no pretence of any meeting of the directors or other corporate action until October 29, 1913. There were then no by-laws, and the power to make them was given to the directors by the certificate of incorporation, as-[194]*194authorized by the Act (see Section 12). On October 29, 1913, R. Y. Slater and Ackerman went together to the office of the Delaware Registration and Incorporators’ Company in’ the City of Wilmington, that being the place in Delaware designated as the principal office of the Kehoe Stenograph Company,, to hold a meeting of the directors. Waples was absent, and had in fact had no notice of the proposed meeting. Miss Murphey, the representative of the registration company, advised the two men that they could not hold a meeting, and after a few minutes they both left the office and the City of Wilmington.

It will be necessary to examine first the corporate proceedings which the Dunlap faction claims show that the board which elected H. C. Dunlap president is the de jure board, and as an element therein to determine whether there was really á meeting of the board of directors, and a valid one, held on October 29, 1913, as claimed by the complainant.

The complainant relied on minutes produced by the other group of persons claiming to be the de jure board of directors by whom Strauss was elected president of the company, purporting to be minutes of Incorporators held October 29, 1913. These minutes stated that the first meeting of the directors of the company was held at the registered office of the company in Wilmington, on October 29, 1913, at six o’clock p. m., pursuant to a waiver of notice thereof, signed by all the driectors; but in fact the waiver was undated and was signed only by Waples, Dunlap, R. Y. Slater and Ackerman. It was also there stated that Slater, Ackerman and Waples were present as a majority of the board; that Kehoe had declined to be a director; and that the resignation of Biedler had been tendered and accepted. Furthermore, that Julius Strauss had been elected a director, and Strauss was then elected president and Ackerman secretary ■ and treasurer; that by-laws were adopted; and that an offer to sell to the company certain patents was accepted. These minutes were signed by R. Y. Slater, Ackerman and Waples. As a fact Waples was not present, and had in fact had no notice of the meeting.

In the preliminary opinion it was stated by me that [195]*195Waples had had notice of the meeting, but had after the meeting signed a waiver of notice of it. This was incorrect. Waples prior even to the organization of the company signed a paper which when signed was only a blank form of waiver, and when signed did not contain the name of the company, the dáte, purpose or any detail necessary to make it applicable to the meeting or even the corporation in question. It was his custom, as an officer of the company engaged in the business of acting as the representative of those desiring to become incorporated under the laws of Delaware to sign such blank form for use in his absence from the office of his company in case he-should be named as an incorporator or director of a corporation. Such an act is in legal effect no waiver, and has no legal effect as such, except against the company with respect to persons dealing with the corporation as such. In itself it was ineffective to validate the proceedings of that pretended meeting of October 29, 1913, certainly as against any other stockholder or director. If, therefore, as stated in my preliminary opinion, the signing subsequent to a meeting of a waiver of notice of the meeting was ineffective, upon the authority cited, and which point has not been controverted by the solicitor for the complainant so far as I have observed, then the signing before the incorporation of a blank form for waiver of notice was equally ineffective.

It was shown, moreover, that both R. Y. Slater and Ackerman were advised by Miss' Murphey, an employe of the chartering company, that they could not hold the meeting on ■October 29, 1913, and the reasons therefor, so that both acted with notice. Indeed, their conduct while at the office of the Delaware Registration and Incorporators’ Cdmpany indicated that there was no meeting held, nor did Slater or Ackerman then pretend that one was held. A few days later Slater and Ackerman together made up minutes of what might have happened, signed and affixed the initials of their names thereto, and it was forwarded to Waples, who also signed them and affixed his initials thereto. The signature of Waples was as ineffective as it was inexplicable, for the alleged minutes contained statements which Slater, Ackerman and Waples all [196]*196know to be false, and other statements as to which .Waples had no knowledge. It is quite clear that Slater .did not regard these minutes as valid proceedings unless and until they had been subsequently ratified at a valid meeting, for he so testified, and also testified without contradiction that Ackerman regarded a subsequent ratification as necessary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 A. 943, 11 Del. Ch. 190, 1916 Del. Ch. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lippman-v-kehoe-stenograph-co-delch-1916.