Neuberger v. Barrett

180 Misc. 222, 39 N.Y.S.2d 575, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2353
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 180 Misc. 222 (Neuberger v. Barrett) 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
Neuberger v. Barrett, 180 Misc. 222, 39 N.Y.S.2d 575, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2353 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

Rosenman, J.

This is an application for an allowance of counsel and accountants’ fees and expenses, made by all the plaintiffs and by the intervener-plaintiff in this derivative stockholders’ action. There is also an application for counsel fees incurred by the individual defendants, who are directors and officers of the corporation involved in the defense of the action.

The case was settled on the eve of trial with the approval of the court after a hearing attended by the attorneys for all the parties, and after another hearing held before the court on due notice to all the stockholders of the corporation at which an opportunity was afforded for any stockholder to be heard. The settlement involved a financial benefit to the corporation consisting of a present amount of $653,744.72 plus an indeterminable amount of saving for the future.

The law has always been clear that when plaintiffs, in a derivative suit such as this, create a fund for the benefit of a corporation they are entitled to their expenses and reasonable attorneys’ and accountants’ fees payable out of such fund. Section 61-a of the General Corporation Law, in this respect, is declaratory of the holdings of the earlier cases. The plaintiffs’ attorneys and accountants have, by their efforts and by court approval of the settlement, succeeded in effecting a sizable return to the corporate treasury, for which they should be compensated. A stockholders’ suit of this kind requires many months of concentrated and skilled work of preparation, exam[224]*224ination, discovery, presentation, and legal and factual research. Consideration must also be given to the fact that the fees here, as in most of these cases, were contingent on some recovery by settlement or otherwise. The attorneys and accountants always took the risk that their time and efforts might go for naught.

Host of the work is generally done before trial, so, even though there was no trial here, I have concluded that $200,000 or about thirty per cent of the fund should be set aside for distribution among those attorneys and accountants who contributed to its creation, plus the sum of $568.35, which is a total of the disbursements incurred in the process.

To divide this sum among the various applicants representing the plaintiffs by trying to appraise not only the amount of work of each, but the effect of their respective efforts on the successful conclusion, is a difficult task. After considering the various affidavits I have decided to divide the allowance of $200,000 as follows:

1. The attorneys and counsel for the named plaintiffs, other than the plaintiff Norman and plaintiff-intervener Horowitz, are allowed sixty-three per cent of the total allowance of fees, plus their disbursements of .$524.69.

2. The accountants (Reis & Co), retained by the said attorneys, are allowed ten per cent of such total allowance.

3. The attorney and counsel for the plaintiff Norman are allowed twenty-five per cent of such total allowance to cover their own services and those of the accountants and statisticians retained by them.

4. The attorney for the plaintiff-intervener Bertha Horowitz is allowed two per cent of such total allowance, plus his disbursements of $43.66.

With respect to the request for fees, made by the attorney and counsel for Taylor, section 61-a confines the award, whether by success in the suit or settlement of the suit, to party plaintiffs or party defendants and no others. Their client never became a party to the suit, despite his intimate connection with the progress of it. Intervention was permitted only for the purpose of appealing from the judgment entered on the settlement. This appeal was subsequently discontinued. Under the circumstances I do not think an allowance is authorized.

So far as I have been able to discover, this is the first time an application has been made by defendant directors and officers, after the termination of a derivative action by settlement, for an allowance of counsel fees.

[225]*225The question as to. whether the attorneys and the counsel for the individual defendants are entitled to be paid by the corporation for the legal services rendered by them to the directors and officers and for the expenses incurred during the litigation depends upon the proper interpretation of section 61-a of the General Corporation Law, adopted in 1941 (eh. 350).

The defendants make the point that there were findings by the court (1) that the adoption of the incentive plans “was valid,” and (2) that “ the defendants have been exonerated of wrongdoing as to most of the plaintiffs’ causes of action,” since the court found that the administration of all the incentive plans except one was proper. They also urge that the power to make an award under section 61-a of the General Corporation Law should be exercised here, since “ the defendants, by making the settlement herein, have substantially contributed to the corporate welfare.”

As to the first claim: No such finding was made by this court in its memorandum upon the settlement of this action. There was no necessity therefor, because the incentive plans, as such, were never attacked. The items attacked were the administration of such plans, the computations made and the action taken by the chief executives under the plans (Paragraphs “ Fourteenth, ” “ Fifteenth, ” “ Sixteenth, ” “ Seventeenth ” of the original complaint; Paragraphs “ Fourteenth,” “ Fifteenth,” “ Eighteenth ” of the consolidated and amended complaint; Paragraphs “ Nineteenth,” “ Twenty-third,” “ Twynty-fourth, ’ ’ “• Twenty-fifth ” of the second consolidated and amended complaint; Paragraphs “10,” “13,” “15,” “ 16,” “ 22 ” of the third consolidated and amended complaint). This was pointed out in the court’s memorandum of June 25 as follows: “No contention is made by plaintiffs that the corporation did not have the power to promulgate and adopt the various employee incentive plans * * *. The complaint with respect to the 1935 plan is that it was not properly administered * * *. The [1937] plan provided annuities to the top executives which the complaint alleges were not warranted * * *. The plaintiffs claim [under the 1838 plan] that the sales prices were too low, ” et cetera (N. Y. L. J., June 26,1942, at p. 2684).

As to the second claim: No finding was made by the court that defendants were either guilty or guiltless of any of the charges of mismanagement and waste as set out in the complaint. Upon the proposed settlement this court’s function was to ascertain whether the purchase by the defendants of their peace under [226]*226the terms thereof was fair to all parties, including the corporation as a major concern. In approving such settlement of the suit this court made no determination of fact or law with respect to the acts of the defendants — one way or the other. It merely weighed the claims of plaintiffs and defendants, discussed the merits of their respective contentions and the possibility of proof in relation thereto, and determined that the offer of settlement under all the circumstances was fair and reasonable — entitled to judicial sanction. There was no finding by the court of legal liability or of absence of legal liability on the part of any defendant. By the settlement, defendant executives gave up certain rights and privileges obtained by them previously under the 1937 retirement plan.

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Bluebook (online)
180 Misc. 222, 39 N.Y.S.2d 575, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neuberger-v-barrett-nysupct-1942.