Mannheimer v. Keehn

30 Misc. 2d 584, 41 N.Y.S.2d 542, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1479
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 30 Misc. 2d 584 (Mannheimer v. Keehn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mannheimer v. Keehn, 30 Misc. 2d 584, 41 N.Y.S.2d 542, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1479 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1943).

Opinion

John Van Voorhis, J.

Plaintiff, as a stockholder of Lisk Manufacturing Company, Limited, brings this action to set aside a voting trust agreement dated March 1, 1936, to recover in the corporation’s behalf funds expended in obtaining and carrying out the voting trust agreement, to compel the defendant Clarence C. Keehn, president of said corporation, to transfer to it 575 shares of stock of said corporation and to account for all dividends and profits received by him on said stock, and to compel the removal of the individual defendants as voting trustees on account of alleged failure to perform their duties as fiduciaries.

These questions will be considered separately.

1. The Validity of the March 1,1936 Voting Trust Agreement: Plaintiff, Ike Mannheimer, is not a party to the agreement, but it is assumed that he has standing in court to sue to set it aside since the management of the corporation and nondepositing stockholders are necessarily affected by the existence of a voting trust. (Hafer v. New York L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 19 Abb. N. C. 454; Matter of Glen Salt Co., 17 App. Div. 234, 244.) Neither are the depositing stockholders parties to the action. Defendants contend that no decision affecting the validity of the voting trust can be made unless they are before the court. Ordinarily no contract could be set aside unless all parties to it were in the action, but that can hardly apply in case of a voting trust agreement since it determines the power of the trustees to vote. It seems that the trustees’ power to vote such stock can be challenged without bringing in the beneficial owners, by the same token whereby one assuming to vote under a proxy could be restrained from doing so if the proxy were invalid without bringing in the maker. (Brown v. Pacific Mail S. S. Co., 4 Fed. Cas. 420, No. 2,025 ; 5 Fletcher’s Cyclopedia Corporations, § 2072.) In Matter of Morse (Bank of America) (247 N. Y. 290), the depositing stockholders were not made [586]*586parties, although some but not all intervened. The absence of the others did not keep the court from holding the agreement therein to be invalid. In this case it is unnecessary to decide the point, since the agreement is upheld, but the decision is not laid upon the ground that voting trust certificate holders have not been joined as parties to the action.

The contention may be dismissed at the outset that the provisions of this agreement are so broad as to render the instrument void in its entirety. The alleged objectionable part states that the voting trustees shall possess and be entitled to exercise all rights, of every name and nature, including the right to vote, in respect of any and all shares of stock of the company deposited pursuant to the agreement, at any and all meetings of the stockholders of the company, upon any and all propositions which may come up at any such meeting or meetings. It is contended that rights of stockholders other than the right to vote are vested in the voting trustees, which is claimed to be illegal. The only rights which the stockholders undertake to surrender (except with regard to stock dividends, which raise no problem) are such as may be exercised “at any and all meetings of the stockholders of the company, upon any and all propositions which may come up at any such meeting or meetings.” That refers only to the right to vote and to such incidental rights as may be exercised in the conduct of stockholders’ meetings. This statement disposes of most of the charges of illegality made by plaintiff in regard to the coverage of the voting trust agreement. No decision is required at this time whether power is granted to vote upon propositions other than the election of directors, such as the dissolution of the corporation, which is mentioned by plaintiff. The implied limitation withholding from voting trustees power to vote for dissolution contained in the agreement in Matter of Bacon (Susquehanna Silk Mills) (287 N. Y. 1) is not present here. Such power probably would not be conferred by general words even in the absence of such a limitation, but that cannot be decided unless an attempt is made by the voting trustees to exercise the power. The Court of Appeals assumed that power to vote for dissolution could be granted, saying (p. 6): “ The power to destroy stock would not, however, be implied merely from a power to vote the stock. Only by the use of clear language can such an extraordinary power be conferred.” A voting trust agreement capable of a construction which will make it valid will not be adjudged illegal. (Manson v. Curtis, 223 N. Y. 313, 324.) Even if this agreement were held to confer some powers forbidden by law that would not invalidate it [587]*587entirely. Only the powers prohibited would be deemed to be withheld. Such an infirmity would not go to the heart of the voting trust, as was the case in Matter of Morse (supra).

This agreement is also claimed to be illegal in that it does not have a specifically designated purpose. This objection reverts to the older case law that voting power can be transferred irrevocably to carry out a particular policy previously arrived at but not to enable voting trustees to exercise their discretion in formulating corporate policy to be pursued. (White v. Thomas Inflatable Tire Co., 52 N. J. Eq. 178.) In Cone v. Russell (48 N. J. Eq. 208, 215) Vice-Chancellor Pitney denounced certain types of agreement, stating: “ This conclusion does not reach so far as to necessarily forbid all pooling or combining of stock where the object is to carry out a particular policy with a view to promote the best interests of all the stockholders; the propriety of the object validates the means and must affirmatively appear.” (See Kreissl v. Distilling Co. of America, 61 N. J. Eq. 5, 13.) The latitude inherent in the application of such a rule has tended to be exercised so as to broaden the scope of the particular policy conditioning the validity of the voting trust. In an article in Columbia Law Review (vol. 18, pp. 123, 136 [1918]) I. Maurice Wormser stated: “ The correct rule to adopt is to uphold the legality of the voting trust or pooling agreement, provided the propriety of reasonableness of its object affirmatively appear, and provided that the arrangement itself is honest and equitable.” But he expressly excepted New York and other States where the subject is controlled by statute. In New York “ No voting trust not within the terms of the statute [Stock Corporation Law, § 50] is legal and any such trust, so long as its purpose is legitimate, coming within its terms is legal. The test of validity is the rule of the statute. When the field was entered by the Legislature it was fully occupied and no place was left for other voting trusts.” (Matter of Morse, 247 N. Y. 290, 298, supra.) Our statute does not provide that the object or reasonableness of the voting trust shall affirmatively appear, that voting trustees cannot use their discretion in formulating policy, or that the propriety of the particular object to be accomplished alone validates the means adopted for carrying it into effect. All of these fertile grounds for litigation are eliminated. In Matter of Bacon (Susquehanna Silk Mills) (supra, p. 8) although the voting trust agreement by itself was considered too narrow to confer power to vote for a dissolution of the corporation, the court ruled, in view of a meeting of voting trust certificate holders called to instruct the voting [588]*588trustees in regard to a proposition for dissolution, that, ‘ ‘

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Bluebook (online)
30 Misc. 2d 584, 41 N.Y.S.2d 542, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mannheimer-v-keehn-nysupct-1943.