Orfa Corp. of America v. Cappello (In Re Orfa Corp. of America)

115 B.R. 799, 1990 WL 83581
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 20, 1990
Docket19-11630
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 115 B.R. 799 (Orfa Corp. of America v. Cappello (In Re Orfa Corp. of America)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orfa Corp. of America v. Cappello (In Re Orfa Corp. of America), 115 B.R. 799, 1990 WL 83581 (Pa. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

A. INTRODUCTION

Before us is a motion asking us to reconsider our Order of April 3, 1990, which denied a motion to dismiss this bankruptcy case premised on the theory that the corporate resolution of the Debtor authorizing the filing was promulgated by an improperly-constituted Board of Directors of the Debtor corporation at a meeting at which no quorum of even the improperly-constituted Board was present.

We affirm our holding that the Board which authorized the filing was indeed the properly-constituted Board of Directors of the Debtor. The issue of whether a quorum of the Debtor’s Board was present at the meeting at which the filing was autho *801 rized is more problematical. We believe that a quorum was present, because it appears that a Director who appears at a Board meeting, even for a short duration and under protest that the Board was improperly constituted (which protest we find lacks merit), should be counted as present at the meeting for the purpose of making a quorum. However, it appears that, even if a quorum were not present, the Board’s actions could have been, and allegedly were, ratified at a meeting held shortly after the hearing, at which a quorum clearly was present. Therefore, in an abundance of caution, we will exercise our discretion to reopen the record on the underlying motion to dismiss this case and allow testimony of this alleged ratification and any rebuttal evidence pertinent thereto to be presented.

B. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Movants in the motion to dismiss and the instant motion for reconsideration are an eight-body group who allege that they were duly elected as members of the Debtor’s Board of Directors on December 11, 1989, effective ten days after the dispatch of an Information Statement of January 29, 1990 (“the Info Statement”), prepared by the Debtor pursuant to Section 14(f) of the Securities Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78n(f) (“the SEC Act”). The Mov-ants claim that the four votes of the six contemporary members of the incumbent Board (“the old Board”) at the meeting of March 15,1990, in support of the resolution to authorize the bankruptcy filing, were legally insufficient to authorize the filing.

Immediately after two days of testimony on March 29,1990, and April 2, 1990, on the motion to dismiss the case, counsel for both the Movants and the Debtor pressed us for a decision on the motion, since uncertainty as to how or whether this case would proceed would exist during any period that we held the matter under advisement. Although expressing doubt that either party or the court had sufficiently researched the pertinent legal authorities, we ruled from the bench, at the end of the proceedings on April 2, 1990, that the bankruptcy filing was valid. We followed our bench ruling with a brief Order and Memorandum of April 3, 1990.

On April 12, 1990, the Movants filed what they termed a Motion “to Alter and Amend Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, to Open Order and for Reconsideration.” No Bankruptcy Rule (“B.Rule”) or Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (“F.R.Civ. P.”) was expressly cited as authority for this filing in either the body of the motion itself or even in the Movants’ lengthy opening Brief filed in support of this motion. The Debtor, in a Response of April 20, 1990, supported the court’s findings and argued that the instant motion improperly invoked F.R.Civ.P. 52(b) to urge this court to change its result on the basis of the record presented, as opposed to, as the Debtor alleged that F.R.Civ.P. 52 was confined, simply asking this court to make additional findings.

This motion was listed for a hearing on May 9, 1990. At that time, we granted the Movants’ request that we entertain briefing on this motion, which the Movants indicated that they, for their part, had nearly completed drafting. We therefore entered an Order of May 10, 1990, indicating that we would consider this motion as timely filed pursuant to B.Rule 9023, which incorporates F.R.Civ.P. 59, and directing that the Movants and the Debtor file their Briefs addressing this motion on or before May 15,1990, and May 23,1990, respectively-

We ultimately received a 59-page Brief from the Movants on May 15, 1990; a 29-page Brief from the Debtor, filed belatedly on May 25, 1990, by permission of the court; correspondence of May 29,1990, and May 30, 1990, from both parties, mostly addressing the issue of whether this court could appropriately consider the purported ratification of the March 15, 1990, motion authorizing this bankruptcy filing at an April 6, 1990 meeting; and a five-page Reply Brief of the Movants, filed June 1, 1990, by permission of the court, contending that we could not consider the occurrences at the April 6, 1990, meeting at this juncture.

In order to better understand the context of this motion and the underlying substan *802 tive facts, it is helpful to review our Order and Memorandum of April 3, 1990. Although this document is published, the publication is presently only at 1990 WEST-LAW 39728. We will therefore attach a copy of this document as Appendix “A” to this Opinion. We acknowledge that this submission is not of the quality we would normally demand in a published product. However, we would also comment that, despite our fear that we might have overlooked significant relevant issues, authorities, and arguments in the April 3, 1990, decision due to the expedited decision-making process, which partially explains our willingness to allow the briefing on the motion as requested by the Movants, and despite the copious submissions of the parties in reference to this motion, there is an apparent paucity of relevant authorities. As a result, we find that our analysis of the pertinent issues and arguments on April 3, 1989, was not seriously deficient. We are therefore unwilling to alter very much of our Order and Memorandum, even at this presumably enlightened juncture.

The centerpiece of the Movants’ submissions is the contention that no quorum was present at the March 15, 1990, meeting where the bankruptcy filing was authorized. This represents some movement from the Movants’ submissions and arguments prior to and at the hearing, of which the main thrust was the contention that the actions of the old Board on March 15, 1990, were invalid because they were not those of the whole Board, which they argued included them. The Movants’ apparent perception of the relative weakness of their argument that they were duly-elected to the Debtor’s Board is, we believe, accurate. This argument, in the light of further, we might say exhaustive, consideration, rather apparently cannot succeed.

C. WE REAFFIRM OUR CONCLUSION THAT THE MOVANTS NEVER BECAME DIRECTORS OF THE DEBTOR.

The Movants present the following arguments, to which we will respond seri-atim, in support of their continuing contention that they are indeed members of the Debtor’s Board of Directors.

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Bluebook (online)
115 B.R. 799, 1990 WL 83581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orfa-corp-of-america-v-cappello-in-re-orfa-corp-of-america-paeb-1990.