Panitz v. F. Perlman & Co., Inc.

173 S.W.3d 421, 2004 Tenn. App. LEXIS 652
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 4, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 S.W.3d 421 (Panitz v. F. Perlman & Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Panitz v. F. Perlman & Co., Inc., 173 S.W.3d 421, 2004 Tenn. App. LEXIS 652 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

W. FRANK CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which DAVID R. FARMER, J. and HOLLY M. KIRBY, J., joined.

Shareholders seek to inspect certain records of corporation of which they are shareholders, as well as records of two other corporations (“the subsidiaries”): a second corporation which is the wholly-owned subsidiary of the corporation in which Plaintiffs hold shares, and another that is the wholly owned-subsidiary of the second corporation. Defendants maintain that plaintiffs do not have any right to inspect the records of corporations in which they are not shareholders, but agreed to allow inspection of limited records of two subsidiaries as a courtesy, contingent upon plaintiffs signing a confidentiality agreement. Plaintiffs maintain that they have an unqualified right to inspect records of all three corporations under T.C.A. 48-26-102. The trial court found that the confidentiality agreement was reasonable and entered an order requiring defendants to produce certain records, dating back to 1991, for inspection and copying. It further held that, in light of defendants’ agreement to allow limited inspection of records of subsidiaries, it need not rule on issue of whether plaintiffs were entitled to inspect records of subsidiaries. We affirm as modified herein.

I. BACKGROUND

Appellants, Monte Panitz and Barry Panitz, are shareholders of F. Perlman & Company (“Perlman and Co.”). Perlman & Co. is the sole owner of Southern Steel Supply Company, Inc. (“Southern Steel”), and Southern Steel is the sole owner of American Metal Sales, Inc. (“American Metal”). Appellants are not shareholders of Southern Steel or American Metal.

On May 20, 2002, John Andre Chiapella, attorney for the Panitzes, demanded, by letter, “to inspect the records of the corporation and its subsidiaries .... to ascertain whether any breach of fiduciary duty has occurred with regard to the directors or officers of the corporation or its subsidiaries.” On June 13, Chiapella followed up with a more specific letter, demanding to inspect, “to the extent not previously inspected on July 5, 2002,” the following:

1. Charter and any amendments thereto from inception of said corporations to present;
*423 2. Bylaws and any amendments thereto from inception of said corporations to present;
3. Any and all minutes from inception of said corporations to present; and
4. Total compensation paid to each and every officer for the last ten (10) years from each of the foregoing corporations.

Chiapella concluded his June 13 letter by stating the Plaintiffs’ purposes in requesting the records:

The purposes for which the inspection of records are hereby demanded are to aid the shareholders in their determination of whether the business of each corporation is being properly conducted and whether there has been any breach of fiduciary duty by any director or officer of the corporations.
We are in the process of hiring a forensic auditor to assist us in inspecting] the financial records of the corporations. Once accomplished, we will make demand with respect to the appropriate financial records.

In a letter to Chiapella dated July 3, 2002, Leo Bearman, Jr., attorney for Perl-man & Co. agreed to allow, “as a courtesy to you,” the inspection of certain of the records requested by the Panitzes, while maintaining that the Panitzes, not being shareholders of Southern Steel or American Metal, were not entitled to the information sought. Specifically, Perlman & Co.’s counsel offered to make available the following records for inspection:

1. A list of the officers and members of the Board of Directors of F. Perlman & Company, Inc. dating back to October 14,1996 (enclosed).
2. A list of the officers and board of Directors of Southern Steel Supply Company, Inc. dating back to June, 1994 (enclosed).
3. A list of the officers and directors of American Metal Sales, Inc. dating back to June, 1994 (enclosed).
4. A. To the extent they are readily available, copies of the minutes of Southern Steel Supply Company, Inc. and American Metal Sales, Inc. from 1991, to the present. You may review these in my office at your convenience. We have already supplied copies of the minutes of F. Perlman & Company, Inc.
B. A list of the total compensation by way of salaries and bonuses paid to Frank Perlman, Joe Williams, Neil Cohen, Michael Wexler, Gary McKib-ben, Alan Perlman, Barry Panitz, and Monte Panitz from 1997 to date.
C. The information listed in paragraphs 4.A. and 4.B. will be supplied to you after you and your clients execute a Confidentiality Agreement, a copy of which I enclose. We feel that individual compensation, as well as the content of all corporate minutes are indeed confidential, non-public, proprietary matters and, therefore, believe that this is a reasonable request.

The confidentiality agreement referenced by Bearman in item 4 C. of his July 3, 2002 letter reads as follows:

You have demanded inspection of records of F. Perlman & Company, Inc. (“F. Perlman”) on behalf of your clients, Monte Panitz, Barry Panitz and the Estate of Izzy Panitz. The purpose which you have stated for demanding the inspection of records is to aid your clients as shareholders of F. Perlman in a determination of whether the business of F. Perlman and its subsidiaries is being properly conducted and whether there has been a breach of fiduciary duty by any director or officer of F. Perlman or its subsidiaries. The records which you have requested include non-public infor *424 mation. F. Perlman is willing to provide such non-public information if it receives appropriate assurances of confidentiality and that the information will only be used by either you or your clients for the stated purposes.
Accordingly, the terms and conditions of this Confidentiality Agreement (the “Agreement”) are as follows:
1. Provision of Confidential Information. Pursuant to your letters of May 20, 2002 and June 13, 2002, you have requested information concerning F. Perlman and its subsidiaries that F. Perlman considers non-public, proprietary, or confidential in nature. All such information, whether having been previously provided, presently provided, or provided in the future is hereby collectively referred to as “Confidential Information”. F. Perlman is willing to disclose and provide such Confidential Information to you upon the terms and conditions set forth in this letter.
2. Acknowledgment of Confidentiality. You and your clients recognize and acknowledge the non-public and proprietary nature of the Confidential Information, and that damage could result to F.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.W.3d 421, 2004 Tenn. App. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panitz-v-f-perlman-co-inc-tennctapp-2004.