McNair v. Capital Electric Power Association

324 So. 2d 234
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1975
Docket48359
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 324 So. 2d 234 (McNair v. Capital Electric Power Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNair v. Capital Electric Power Association, 324 So. 2d 234 (Mich. 1975).

Opinion

324 So.2d 234 (1975)

Alden McNAIR et al., Complainants-Appellants,
v.
CAPITAL ELECTRIC POWER ASSOCIATION et al., Defendants-Appellees,
Charles R. Riddell and W.E. Harreld, Jr., Intervenor-Defendants-Appellees.

No. 48359.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

December 22, 1975.

*236 John K. Keyes, Collins, Daniel, Coker, Horton, Bell & Dukes, Thomas H. Suttle, Jr., Jackson, for complainants-appellants.

Case, Montgomery & Smith-Vaniz, Canton, Watkins & Eager, Jackson, Robert L. Goza, Canton, for defendants-appellees.

Before PATTERSON, INZER and SUGG, JJ.

PATTERSON, Justice:

This appeal arises from the Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County. The court at the conclusion of a fifteen-day trial excluded the evidence of the appellants and dismissed their bill of complaint. The suit, a derivative action for the benefit of the complainants, other member-owners and the Association, alleged a cause of action by member-owners of Capital Electric Power Association against its directors for constructive fraud.

The original bill of complaint was filed on December 8, 1972; a demurrer was interposed; the bill was amended; a preliminary injunction was denied; a motion to strike the amendment was filed; Mississippi Power & Light Company was brought in as a defendant; additional demurrers were filed; Mississippi Power & Light Company was dismissed; the Association was made a defendant instead of a complainant; and thereafter a second amended and supplemental bill of complaint was filed. The complainants (now appellants) are some of the member-owners of the Association. The defendants (now appellees) are the directors of the Association, the Association, and Charles R. Riddell and W.E. Harreld, Jr., intervening member-owner defendants, favoring a vote by the membership.

The bill of complaint sought:

1. A temporary injunction restraining each of the defendants from performing any act toward consummating a sale of the *237 Association to Mississippi Power & Light Company under a proposed "purchase agreement."

2. An adjudication that the special meeting of the membership of the Association on December 21, 1972, was void, that no voting thereat, whether in person or by proxy, was legally effective and that the signing of the "purchase agreement" by the Association was invalid.

3. An adjudication that the directors/defendants by their conduct as fiduciaries to the member-owners of the Association abdicated their duties as directors and that their offices be declared vacant and they be enjoined from acting in the capacity of directors.

4. The appointment of a commissioner to manage the Association under the court's direction until a new board of directors could be installed.

5. In due course the dismissal of the commissioner and the placement of the affairs of the Association in the hands of the new board of directors to be managed in accord with law.

6. A report by the complainants of their costs and expenses incurred by this suit and that the Association be directed to reimburse the complainants for the same.

7. The retention of jurisdiction by the court during the course of litigation until all matters involved were finally determined by an adjudication upon the merits.

The foregoing prayers of the bill of complaint were put in issue by the defendants' answers.

The record consists of 24 volumes containing 4,752 pages of pleadings and testimony. However, the record has been reduced to 254 pages by abridgment for appeal. The ultimate question, as we view it, is whether the chancellor correctly decided the factual issues.

The appellants have filed fifteen assignments of error. For brevity we will combine similar assignments and discuss the arguments presented by the appellants with the appropriate evidence for each rather than engage in a prolonged statement of facts. However, an introductory statement of the case is necessary for its understanding.

Capital Electric Power Association was a nonprofit cooperative membership corporation engaged in the transmission, distribution and sale of electricity to its member-owners at cost. It furnished these services to members in Hinds, Warren, Claiborne, Copiah, Rankin, Madison and Leake Counties pursuant to the Electric Power Association enactments, Mississippi Code Annotated section 77-5-201 et seq. (1972).

By statute the Association was owned and operated by its members-consumers. They elected directors for a three-year term in accord with Mississippi Code Annotated section 77-5-221 (1972) and those elected comprised the board of directors. The board supervised the operation and management of the Association. The area served was having rapid growth in residential, business and industrial customers. The Association held an exclusive "Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity" in the service area of its member-owners under the Public Utility Act of 1956. It was one of the fastest growing electric power associations in the state with expected expansion from its 16,000 members at the time of the suit to 40,000 or 45,000 members within the decade. The annual revenues were expected to increase within the period from $4,000,000 to about $20,000,000.

The appellants charged the board of directors with secret negotiations with Mississippi Power & Light Company (MP&L) to sell the Association. They alleged nothing was known of the bargaining until November 27, 1972. On November 28, 1972, *238 information concerning the proposed sale was mailed to the member-owners. The contents of the mail packets were:

1. A bound pamphlet containing (a) a printed letter from T.L. James, president of the Association, to each member advising of a proposal by MP&L to purchase the electric system and other properties of the Association for $10,500,000, (b) notice from H.W. Wolcott, secretary of the Association, that the directors had called a special meeting of the members at Clinton, Mississippi, on December 21, 1972, to consider action upon the proposal, advising that the member need not attend in person, but could vote by proxy through the mail, and (c) a copy of the proposed "purchase agreement;"

2. A pamphlet entitled "Explanation of Purchase Agreement;"

3. A "proxy" form empowering, upon completion, the board of directors or any one of them to cast the member's vote either "for" or "against" the sale;

4. An addressed and stamped envelope in which to return the proxy.

This material was received by members of the Association on November 29 or 30, 1972.

Thereafter, the appellants were elected as a "steering committee" by a number of the member-owners called "Group of Concerned CEPA Members" to seek, on behalf of all members with similar views, redress of the wrongs they maintained were being inflicted upon them and the Association.

The complainants maintained the actions and inactions of the directors in connection with the proposed sale of the Association to MP&L, in cumulative effect, constituted a fraud upon their rights as member-owners of the Association.

The trial court was of the opinion the board of directors was not guilty of either actual or constructive fraud, the submission of the purchase offer by MP&L to the vote of the membership was not unreasonable, the meeting of December 21, 1972, was not improper, and, for whatever reason, more than three-fourths of the members voted, the result being in excess of 50% of the votes cast to consummate the sale.

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