Minter v. Directors of Concrete Products, Inc. (In Re Concrete Products, Inc.)

110 B.R. 997, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 2208
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedJanuary 27, 1989
Docket15-40453
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 110 B.R. 997 (Minter v. Directors of Concrete Products, Inc. (In Re Concrete Products, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minter v. Directors of Concrete Products, Inc. (In Re Concrete Products, Inc.), 110 B.R. 997, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 2208 (Ga. 1989).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON APPLICATION FOR INTERLOCUTORY INJUNCTION

LAMAR W. DAVIS, Jr., Chief Judge.

Debtor’s Chapter 11 case was filed on October 3, 1988. In the ensuing weeks, a series of events have transpired which demonstrate a fundamental dispute among certain shareholders and existing management of the company. The dispute resulted in a series of meetings of the shareholders culminating with the attempted ouster of the Debtor’s president B.E. Bledsoe by the board and the subsequent filing of this adversary proceeding to enjoin the board from doing so. Based on the evidence obtained in a lengthy hearing over two days I make the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1) Bledsoe filed this adversary proceeding seeking a temporary and permanent injunction against the board prohibiting his dismissal. Alternatively he seeks the appointment of a Chapter 11 trustee to run the business.

2) Bledsoe is a graduate engineer with 30 years experience in the concrete business. In 1979 he was hired as president of Concrete Products, Inc., the Debtor (hereinafter CPI). Based on his recommendations to the then board of directors CPI restructured itself and became very profitable in the early 1980’s. CPI manufactures two basic products: cement wood fiber roof decking and precast concrete roof decking. It has few competitors in the manufacture of these somewhat unique, specialized building products. However, competitive pressures forced CPI to sell its product, at *998 times, for an inadequate price to remain profitable. In the later 1980’s profits vanished. In the first six months of 1988 CPI lost one million dollars. As a result, Bled-soe formulated and presented a business plan to the board to reverse the decline in the business (Exhibit P-5). The board approved the plan and in the final six months of 1988 the company showed a profit of $200,000.00 subject to a possible write-off of $150,000.00 in dated or obsolete inventory.

3) The chairman of the board of directors was Carley Zell. Carley Zell is a long time, highly successful businessman in the Brunswick area, having been involved in the independent insurance business, real estate development business, exterminating business and private water systems. He owned a substantial portion of CPI stock prior to the filing of this case. Over the years Bledsoe ran CPI, he and Carley Zell worked closely and harmoniously together. Bledsoe participated in the management of other companies owned by Carley Zell as well.

4) In 1985 the board of CPI under Carley Zell's leadership decided to enter a joint venture to be known as the Brunswick Free Trade Zone (hereinafter BFTZ). CPI owned 55% of the stock of BFTZ and Burch Williams owned 45% (Exhibit P-4). Bled-soe was elected to serve as president of BFTZ.

5) BFTZ, while it had great potential, became a serious drain on the resources of CPI. CPI was obligated on $1.5 million in debt of the BFTZ and had to fund 55% of the BFTZ monthly expenses of approximately $40,000.00.

6) Part of the business plan adopted in mid-1988 was to sell the 55% interest CPI held in the BFTZ, to relieve it of the monthly cash outlay and the longterm debt. Bledsoe sought purchasers of CPI’s interest and ultimately reached an agreement in principal to sell the 55% to Burch Williams, owner of the remaining 45%.

7) At a shareholders meeting in November 1988 Harold Zell, Carley Zell’s son, supported a slate of directors in opposition to the slate supported by Bledsoe. The make-up of the new board reflected a 3-2 split of Bledsoe-supported directors and Zell supported ones. On November 17, 1988, the new board by a 3-2 vote approved Burch Williams’ offer to pay $400,000.00 for the 55% interest held by CPI, part in cash and part secured by an assignment of the BFTZ stock.

After the board approved the sale terms, Bledsoe worked toward consummating the contract which was ultimately executed on January 4, 1989 (Exhibit P-6). The terms of the final contract differed from that previously considered by the board, on advice of his counsel. The most significant change was that the unpaid balance of the purchase price of the BFTZ stock would be secured by an m-rerecorded deed to secure debt covering BFTZ’s property rather than by the stock assignment.

8) In the meantime, on November 29, 1988, at the urging of his son, Carley Zell had requested a second special meeting of the shareholders for December 12, 1988 (Exhibit P-12). Both Carley Zell and Bled-soe solicited proxies for that meeting. The proxy solicitation mailed by Zell included as purposes of the meeting the election of a new board and “to discuss various financial actions of the President.” It contained attachments regarding a “Consulting Fee to President Bledsoe” excerpts of the bylaws governing the setting of compensation of officer/directors and a copy of a Georgia statute governing the actions of “Interested directors and officers.” The clear implication of the solicitation was that Bledsoe was guilty of mismanagement or self-dealing. The evidence at trial, however, is to the contrary. The meeting was ultimately held on January 10, 1989 after litigation in the Superior Court of Glynn County. 1 At *999 that meeting Harold Zell held proxies sufficient to elect a new board of directors and he did so. Bledsoe was one of the board members replaced. Harold Zell became chairman of the board.

9) The new board met January 16, 1989 and elected new officers for CPI, not including Bledsoe. However, no affirmative vote to fire Bledsoe was taken and although the board appointed Howard Zell president and George Ruehling executive vice president, Bledsoe’s employment contract designated him as chief executive officer (Exhibit P-1), and it was not terminated.

10) Neither Harold Zell nor George Ruehling have any experience with the business operated by CPI. While both of them have extensive business experience, it is not as specialized as Bledsoe’s. For a company which is involved in such a unique, specialized business as CPI, specialized leadership is essential.

11) Neither Zell nor Ruehling have any significant knowledge of

a) the manufacturing process employed by CPI;
b) the supply sources of CPI;
c) the capabilities of remaining employees of CPI;
d) the market areas served by CPI;
e) the quality of competition against which CPI operates;
f) the relative profitability of products manufactured by CPI;
g) the production capability of the plant;
h) the breakeven point of the company;
i) the customer base of the company, or the history of business relationships with repeat customers.

12) Bledsoe is intimately familiar with all of the above and has earned the respect and loyalty of the staff and employees of CPI. He has been a key developer of the business strategy being pursued to turn CPI into a profitable entity again. He has ongoing relationships with many repeat customers of CPI.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re SS Body Armor I, Inc.
527 B.R. 597 (D. Delaware, 2015)
Matter of Concrete Products, Inc.
208 B.R. 1015 (S.D. Georgia, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 B.R. 997, 1989 Bankr. LEXIS 2208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minter-v-directors-of-concrete-products-inc-in-re-concrete-products-gasb-1989.