Parkoff v. General Telephone & Electronics Corp.

425 N.E.2d 820, 53 N.Y.2d 412, 442 N.Y.S.2d 432, 1981 N.Y. LEXIS 2578
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 18, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 425 N.E.2d 820 (Parkoff v. General Telephone & Electronics Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parkoff v. General Telephone & Electronics Corp., 425 N.E.2d 820, 53 N.Y.2d 412, 442 N.Y.S.2d 432, 1981 N.Y. LEXIS 2578 (N.Y. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Jones, J.

The rejection on the merits of a stockholders’ derivative action brought by one shareholder on behalf of the corporation against designated directors and officers for corporate waste and breach of fiduciary duty operates as a res judicata bar to a similar action instituted by another shareholder where the first action was not collusive or fraudulent, the second shareholder was not excluded from [416]*416participation in the first action, and both actions arose out of the same underlying transaction or series of connected transactions.

Plaintiff, a stockholder of General Telephone & Electronics Corp. (GTE), instituted this derivative action on behalf of the corporation against individuals who were corporate officers or directors or both during the period when certain alleged waste of corporate assets and breach of fiduciary duty took place. After plaintiff served an interrogatory for document discovery but before service of an answer to the complaint, the corporation and the individual defendants Knowles and Page moved for dismissal or in the alternative for summary judgment on a variety of grounds. Special Term denied the motions with leave, to renew after discovery. The Appellate Division reversed and granted summary judgment to the moving defendants1 dismissing the complaint on the ground that, in the absence of evidence of fraud or bad faith (of which the court found none), the business judgment rule barred inquiry into the determination by a special litigation committee, appointed by the board to inquire into certain derivative actions, that it would not be in the corporation’s interest for plaintiff’s action to proceed. The Appellate Division also rejected plaintiff’s claim that the adequacy and appropriateness of the committee’s investigative procedures and methodologies (a subject open to judicial review in the application of the business judgment rule in a situation such as that here presented) had been found to be defective in an action by another stockholder (Cramer v General Tel. & Electronics Corp., 582 F2d 259) and impliedly determined that no such infirmity had been demonstrated in this case.

We conclude that plaintiff’s complaint was properly dismissed, but not on the ground that he had failed to make an adequate showing of bad faith or fraud or of infirmity in the investigative procedures of the special litigation committee. Dismissal on the latter ground was premature. The amended complaint was served on March 2, 1977; plaintiff’s interrogatory for documentary disclosure was [417]*417served on April 22,1977. Then on May 24,1977 defendants, before making any response to the interrogátory, served their notice of motion to dismiss under CPLR 3211 (subd [a], pars 3, 5, 7) or alternatively for summary judgment under CPLR 3212 (subd [b]) thereby forestalling further efforts at disclosure (CPLR 3214, subd [b]). As we indicated in Auerbach v Bennett (47 NY2d 619), the business judgment rule does not foreclose judicial inquiry in cases such as this into the disinterested independence and good faith of the members of the special litigation committee and the adequacy and appropriateness of that committee’s investigative procedures and methodologies. In Auerbach no affidavit had been submitted in opposition to the motion for summary judgment and no application had been made at nisi prius for postponement of the summary judgment motion pending the conduct of disclosure procedures; the application, first made on appeal, was not timely. By significant contrast, in the present case, as indicated, an application for specified documentary discovery was outstanding and unanswered when the motion for summary judgment was made; additionally that motion was explicitly opposed on the ground that disclosure procedures had not been completed. Nor can that opposition be dismissed in this case, as it might in many cases, because the essential facts anticipated to be discovered were not identified with particularity (cf. CPLR 3212, subd [f]). Inasmuch as almost all possible evidentiary data with respect to the areas of permissible inquiry were within the exclusive possession of defendants and, by reason of their nature, could be described with any degree of specificity only by resort to imaginative speculation, it would be unreasonable to hold plaintiff in cases such as this to the customary requirement that he show that facts essential to the defeat of the motion may exist although they cannot be stated.2 “The business judgment doctrine should not be [418]*418interpreted to stifle legitimate scrutiny by stockholders of decisions of management which, concededly, require investigation by outside directors and present ostensible situations of conflict of interest. Nor should the report of the outside directors be immune from scrutiny by an interpretation of the doctrine which compels the acceptance of the findings of the report on their face. In particular, summary judgment which ends a derivative action at the threshold, before the plaintiff has been afforded the opportunity of pretrial discovery and examination before trial, should not be the means of foreclosing a nonfrivolous action”. (Auerbach v Bennett, 64 AD2d 98, 107-108, mod 47 NY2d 619.) In the circumstances of this case it was premature to have granted summary judgment to defendants for insufficiency of plaintiff’s evidentiary showing under the principles of Auerbach.

Plaintiff’s claims should nonetheless have been dismissed under the doctrine of res judicata.

Amplification of this conclusion must be preceded by an examination of the facts surrounding this litigation. The relevant events have been set out in detail in our opinion in Auerbach v Bennett (47 NY2d 619, supra), disposing of another action also brought by a disgruntled stockholder of GTE. Summarized briefly they are as follows: In March, 1976 an audit committee, appointed by the corporation’s board of directors to determine whether the corporation had engaged in what was being disclosed as a common practice among similar multinational companies of making questionable payments to foreign officials, reported evidence that such payments had been made in substantial sums by GTE. The committee’s report was filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and in a proxy statement was disclosed to corporate shareholders, three of whom (Auerbach, Limmer and Cramer) promptly instituted derivative actions against the corporate directors.3 In April, 1976 the [419]*419board of directors created a special litigation committee consisting of three directors, who had joined the board subsequent to the challenged payments, to determine on behalf of the corporation what position the corporation should take with respect to the pending and similar shareholder derivative actions. After an investigation of more than six months, in November, 1976 the committee reported to the board that it Had found no breach of duty by the directors named as defendants in the pending actions, that there was no merit to the claims, and that it would not be in the best interests of the corporation for the actions to proceed.4 The corporation’s general counsel was accordingly directed by the special litigation committee to take the position in the Auerbach, Limmer and Cramer

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Bluebook (online)
425 N.E.2d 820, 53 N.Y.2d 412, 442 N.Y.S.2d 432, 1981 N.Y. LEXIS 2578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkoff-v-general-telephone-electronics-corp-ny-1981.