Mathes v. Cheff

190 A.2d 524
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 23, 1963
StatusPublished

This text of 190 A.2d 524 (Mathes v. Cheff) 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
Mathes v. Cheff, 190 A.2d 524 (Del. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

190 A.2d 524 (1963)

Anne J. MATHES and Harry Lewis, Plaintiffs,
v.
P. T. CHEFF et al., Defendants.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

April 23, 1963.

William E. Taylor, Jr., Wilmington and Sidney L. Garwin and Samuel M. Koenigsberg, Newark, for plaintiffs.

David F. Anderson, of Berl, Potter & Anderson, Wilmington, for the individual defendants other than John D. Ames.

Irving Morris, Wilmington, for defendant Holland Furnace Company.

MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.

The complaint in this action, which was filed derivatively in February 1958 by two stockholders of Holland Furnace Company, charges that during September and October 1957 said corporation was improperly caused by its directors to purchase 181,400 of its own shares of capital stock "* * * in order to perpetuate the control of the corporation by the individual defendants at a time when said funds could have been used for other business purposes to benefit Holland * * *" It is also charged in the complaint that the principal purchase complained of, namely the acquisition of 155,000 of Holland shares from the named defendant Motor Products Corporation, "* * * was not made in order to further any business purpose or interest of Holland * * *" but "* * * in order to benefit the individual defendants * * *" See Bennett v. Propp (Del.Sup.Ct.) 187 *525 A.2d 405. In other words, while a number of reasons are advanced by the individual defendants to justify the purchase of its own stock by Holland, namely, overcapitalization, employee unrest arising out of the prospect of a change in management, the need to acquire stock for a contemplated stock option plan, and finally the elimination of an alleged threat to Holland's very existence because of the acquisition by Motor Products Corporation of a substantial number of shares of Holland stock, plaintiffs contend that corporate funds were in fact used by the individual defendants for the purpose of keeping incumbents in office although non-corporate funds were available for such purpose. Because of the excessive amounts paid for the stock so acquired plaintiffs claim that Holland was damaged in an amount in excess of $900,000.

To begin with, it is readily apparent that the purchase by Holland of its own shares in the summer and fall of 1957 was not in itself a novel corporate practice on Holland's part. Furthermore, purchases by a corporation of its own stock are expressly authorized by Title 8 Del.C. § 160. As far back as July 28, 1953, the board of directors of Holland had adopted a resolution authorizing the purchase by the corporate president of Holland stock in a total amount not to exceed $200,000. The market price of the stock was relatively low at the time and it evidently appeared to the directors that an opportunity was then ripe for the purchase of such stock not only for the purpose of reducing the company's dividend requirements but so as to have stock available for "* * * proper corporate purposes * * *" Another factor entering into the decision to make such purchases was that the corporation had adequate working capital and funds covering all contingencies. Over the course of the following year some 12,800 of its shares were purchased by Holland but thereafter such purchases were carried on in a sporadic manner until the late summer of 1957, after it had become apparent that substantial purchases of Holland stock were being made on the New York Stock Exchange by a person or persons not associated with Holland's management. The complaint goes on to charge that on learning at the end of August 1957 that Motor Products Corporation, by then the holder of 100,000 shares of Holland or over 11% of its issued stock, intended to take an active part in the affairs of Holland and that a proxy fight might be in the offing, a policy of again purchasing its own shares was adopted by Holland, 1900 shares having been purchased between August 23 and August 29. Such course of action culminated on October 24, 1957, upon consummation of the transaction which plaintiffs principally attack, namely the purchase by Holland Furnace Company of 155,000 shares of its own stock from Motor Products Corporation. It is alleged that this latter purchase was made at a price of $14.40 per share, whereas during the week ending October 25, 1957 Holland stock had sold on the market at prices ranging between $10.375 and $11.50 per share. It is further alleged that shortly after such purchase Holland stock was traded on the open market at prices of $10 or less and that the basic transaction complained of was accordingly consummated at great financial loss to Holland and at a corresponding financial gain to Motor Products. The relief prayed for is rescission of the purchase from Motor Products and an accounting by the individual defendants and Motor Products "* * * for their profits and for Holland's damages resulting from the acts and transactions herein alleged * * *"

The case having gone to trial in the absence of Motor Products Corporation, a corporation of the State of New York, the preliminary relief now sought after trial is a judgment against the individual director defendants holding them jointly and severally liable for the damages allegedly caused to their corporation as a result of the transactions complained of.

Holland Furnace Company, a pioneer manufacturer of hot air furnaces and air *526 conditioning equipment, maintains its main plants and principal office in Holland, Michigan, its home since its founding in the early part of the present century. From this central point it sells its products direct to consumers through some four hundred branch offices and numerous smaller offices situated in forty-three states. The employees of the branch offices not only install Holland's products in the customer's house but also provide maintenance service. In other words, the organization purports to operate a large, integrated business in which there are no intermediate dealers. Notwithstanding Holland's growth over the years, in the period immediately preceding the transactions complained of, its sales and earnings had decreased and its marketing methods had been made the subject of serious charges levelled against it by the Federal Trade Commission.

The defendant P. T. Cheff, who has been executive head of Holland since 1933, is the husband of the defendant Katherine Cheff, whose father was not only one of the founders of the company but the inventor of the basic Holland furnace. Mrs. Cheff is a lady of substantial means and in giving her testimony by deposition she evinced a strong resolve that her interest and that of members of her family in Holland Furnace Company should be maintained to the fullest extent possible. The defendant Landwehr, who is also the child of a founder of Holland and a nephew of Mrs. Cheff's, retired as a corporate executive in 1951 but thereafter remained on the board of directors. The defendant Trenkamp is counsel for Holland but was not at the time of the matters complained of on a fixed retainer. Fees received by him from the company over recent years range from $19,700 in 1953 to $68,750 in 1957, the average amount received by him over the years being in the neighborhood of $50,000 per annum. Over the same period Mr. Cheff was paid a president's salary of $77,400 a year plus a special annual allowance of $5,000. Neither Mrs. Cheff nor Mr. Landwehr at the time of the transactions complained of were paid any salaries or fees by the corporation other than the amounts paid each director for scheduled board meetings.

All of the above named directors were also stockholders of Holland, Mr. Cheff owning 6,000 shares and Mrs.

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Related

Koleski v. Park
525 A.2d 405 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1987)
Mathes v. Cheff
190 A.2d 524 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
190 A.2d 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathes-v-cheff-delch-1963.