Nadler v. Bethlehem Steel Corporation

154 A.2d 146
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 16, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 154 A.2d 146 (Nadler v. Bethlehem Steel Corporation) 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
Nadler v. Bethlehem Steel Corporation, 154 A.2d 146 (Del. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

154 A.2d 146 (1959)

Louis S. NADLER, Sophie G. Nadler, Harry Krieger, Pearl S. Krieger, Rose S. Golomb, Molly Golomb and Eva Myra Epstein, Plaintiffs,
v.
BETHLEHEM STEEL CORPORATION, Donald T. Aikenhead, James P. Bender, Norborne Berkeley, Frank R. Brugler, Stewart J. Cort, Harry C. Crawford, Eugene G. Grace, Keenan L. Griffith, Arthur B. Homer, Jesse V. Honeycutt, Paul S. Killian, Joseph M. Larkin, Robert E. McMath, Arthur F. Peterson, Daniel D. Strohmeier, Russell K. Branscom, Bernard D. Broeker, Paul B. Entrekin, Francis M. Huffman, William H. Johnstone, Ivor D. Sims, Edmund F. Martin and Talbot Shelton, Defendants.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

August 26, 1959.
On Reargument September 16, 1959.

William E. Taylor, Jr., Wilmington, and Nathan B. Kogan, New York City, for plaintiffs.

Robert H. Richards, Jr. (of Richards, Layton & Finger), Wilmington and Albert R. Connelly (of Cravath, Swaine & Moore), New York City, for defendants.

Joseph T. Walsh (of Logan, Marvel, Boggs & Theisen), Wilmington, and Mortimer A. Shapiro, New York City, for objectants, Henry Schwartz and Dorothy Schwartz.

*147 Abraham Hoffman, Wilmington, and Abraham I. Markowitz, New York City, for objectant, Jerome G. Rose.

Irving Morris (of Cohen & Morris), Wilmington, and Martin Horwitz, New York City, for objectants, Shirley Krieger and Benjamin Richland.

Irwin M. Taylor (of Kaufman, Taylor & Kimmel), New York City, for objectant, Irving Miller.

MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.

The complaint[1] in this case, as amended on September 27, 1957, charged the individual defendants with breaches of fiduciary duty as directors and officers of the corporate defendant or of its subsidiaries in allegedly causing excessive corporate salaries and other forms of compensation to be paid to themselves and other employees of Bethlehem during the years 1954 through 1956. While plaintiffs' attack is directed against a number of compensatory devices, including pension and stock option plans, used to compensate Bethlehem's executives, plaintiffs' primary complaint is against a long standing corporate charter provision[2] designed to provide for the payment of incentive cash compensation to Bethlehem's key employees, charging that such provision has been improperly used by interested directors in certain years so as to cause the payment of increased compensation payments notwithstanding reduced earnings. It is contended that such so-called incentive payments have not in fact been based on results accomplished, bear no necessary relationship to net earnings, but rather depend on interested directors' own discretion as to the payment of dividends. This Article Tenth of Bethlehem's certificate of incorporation provides for the creation of a cash fund for incentive payments by the setting aside of 4½%[3] of each cash dividend paid on Bethlehem's common stock for such purpose. The complaint prays for an accounting from the individual defendants of amounts of allegedly excessive moneys received and disbursed by them as a result of the methods of compensation attacked by plaintiffs, the enjoining of the granting and exercise of stock options, and the granting of damages.

On October 2, 1957, plaintiffs' motion for a restraining order enjoining defendants from proceeding to carry out a stock option plan approved by the stockholders on September 17, 1957 was denied. Thereafter, the case, insofar as the record discloses, became inactive except for the pre-trial taking of the testimony of Bethlehem's president, Arthur B. Homer, until the filing on June 4, 1959 of an updated second amended complaint, an answer thereto, a petition for approval of a proposed settlement of the case, together with the continued deposition of Arthur B. Homer which was completed on May 29, 1959. On June 9, 1959, the directors, having been apprised of discussions aimed at reaching a settlement with plaintiffs on the basis of the terms of a proposed amendment of Article Tenth, resolved that it was advisable to amend such article of Bethlehem's corporate charter so as to eliminate the concept of incentive compensation based on a percentage of cash dividends and to substitute therefor a dividend unit plan "* * * In order to provide an incentive to increased efficient and profitable management * * *" The board further resolved to call a special meeting of stockholders for July 28, 1959 *148 for the purpose inter alia of taking such action as they might deem advisable "* * upon and with respect to the proposed amendment of Article Tenth * * *"

Thereafter, the stockholders were given notice of the proposed meeting and were furnished with a copy of a proposed corporate amendment providing for a substitute plan of incentive compensation based on a granting of dividend units, the notice further providing:

"In September, 1957, an action was commenced in the Court of Chancery, New Castle County, Delaware, by holders of record of 540 shares of the Common Stock of the Corporation. The amended complaint in the action alleges that the incentive payments provided for in Article Tenth of the Amended Certificate of Incorporation of the Corporation and other compensation paid have been excessive and seeks, in the right of the Corporation, an accounting by the individual defendants, directors of the Corporation, `for the moneys paid to them or for their account as executives and directors of the Corporation and damages and also seeks to enjoin the granting of options under the Stock Option Plan of the Corporation and to enjoin the exercise of any options granted under such Plan. The defendants have filed an answer which denies the allegations of wrongdoing set forth in the amended complaint.
"The proposal to amend Article Tenth, as described in this Proxy Statement, has been developed in discussions with the plaintiffs in the above-mentioned action. After consideration of the proposed changes, such plaintiffs have made an application requesting the Court in such action, after notice to the stockholders of the Corporation and hearing in open court, to approve the settlement of the action and to dismiss the amended complaint on the basis of the terms of the proposed amendment. A copy of the notice of such hearing, which is to be held on July 13, 1959, is being sent to all holders of record of stock of the Corporation at 3:30 P.M. Eastern Daylight Saving Time, on June 19, 1959. It is expected that, if the Court after such hearing shall enter an order dismissing the amended complaint, such order will be made contingent upon the adoption of the proposed amendment of Article Tenth by the stockholders of the Corporation. If the Court shall not have entered its order on the above-mentioned motion by July 28, 1959, the time fixed for the Special Meeting of the Stockholders to take action upon the proposed amendment, such Meeting will be adjourned from time to time until such order shall be entered. If the Court shall determine that such order should not be entered, any action to be taken with respect to the amendment of Article Tenth will be the subject of a further notice to the stockholders of the Corporation."

As matters now stand, the July 28 special meeting of stockholders stands adjourned insofar as action to amend Article Tenth of Bethlehem's charter is concerned, the adjourned date for stockholder action, if any, now being fixed for August 27, and this is the opinion of the Court on the fairness and desirability of the settlement proposed by the original litigants.

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Related

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203 A.2d 463 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1964)
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Bluebook (online)
154 A.2d 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nadler-v-bethlehem-steel-corporation-delch-1959.