Port Chilkoot Co. v. Heinmiller

12 Alaska 200
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedDecember 31, 1948
DocketNo. 5966-A
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Alaska 200 (Port Chilkoot Co. v. Heinmiller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Port Chilkoot Co. v. Heinmiller, 12 Alaska 200 (D. Alaska 1948).

Opinion

FOLTA, District Judge.

This is a suit to enjoin the defendants, five of whom are acting or assuming to act as directors, from committing certain acts alleged to be fraudulent and in breach of trust. The complaint alleges a conspiracy entered into in the initial stages of the organization of plaintiff to so manipulate its affairs as to bring about a default in the performance of its operating agreement with the Veterans Alaska Cooperative [204]*204Company, and eventual transfer or reversion of title to the five defendants first named for their benefit, in fraud of the stockholders.

Defendants, appearing specially, challenge under Sec. 54-6-3, Alaska Compiled Laws Annotated 1949, the authority of counsel to appear for plaintiff, on the ground that Kenneth P. Gregg had no authority to employ them because his election at the directors’ meeting of May 9, 1947, as Secretary-Treasurer and his employment as General Manager which was authorized at the same meeting, were of no effect because the meeting itself was invalid for failure to give notice thereof to two directors; but that, if not, nevertheless the counsel have no authority to appear for plaintiff since the termination of their employment by the Board of Directors on September 25, 1948, sixteen days after this action was commenced. These and other contentions stem from a factional dispute between Edwards, Merrick and Gregg on the one hand, and the defendants Heinmiller, Homer, Cordes, Gregg, Jr., and Trelford on the other, all of whom constituted the original board of directors. The three first named were also elected respectively President, General Counsel, and Secretary-Treasurer.

A brief review of the events leading up to this controversy will facilitate an understanding of the questions involved.

In March 4, 1946, the defendants Heinmiller, Homer, Cordes, Trelford and Gregg, Jr., entered into a joint adventure in Washington, D. C, for the purchase of Chilkoot Barracks at Haines, Alaska, which had been declared surplus by the Federal Government, with the view of establishing ■ various projects for veterans thereon. Their agreement contemplated the organization of a corporation to take title, and accordingly Veterans Alaska Cooperative Company, ;hereinafter known as Vacco was organized, with the joint -adventurers as directors and officers. Later, to facilitate the ,-financing and operation of the properties acquired from the , Government in pursuance of the agreement referred to, the [205]*205plaintiff corporation was organized with the defendants named as five of its eight directors. A lease was entered into between Vacco and plaintiff for the operation of the property. As might have been expected, their affairs became interwoven because both were subject to the control of a common directorate of whom the five defendants named constituted a majority. There was marked dissension between the minority and majority directors over various matters, and it is upon these that the conspiracy charge is now predicated.

Defendants Cordes and Trelford left Washington in the fall of 1946 to settle at Port Chilkoot, leaving their proxies with the defendant Gregg, Jr. Plaintiff corporation was organized May 8, 1947, at Washington, and the first directors’ meeting was held the following day. Edwards was elected President, Merrick as General Counsel, and Kenneth P. Gregg as Secretary-Treasurer and his employment as General Manager was authorized. Defendant Cordes was appointed Deputy Manager of the properties under the direction of Gregg. On May 3, 1947, the defendants Cordes and Trelford executed and delivered their proxies to Merrick,' in consequence of which they were not notified of the first directors’ meeting at Washington on May 9, 1947.

Defendants contend that this omission not only invalidated the meeting but whatever action was taken there, and in particular the appointment.of Gregg as Secretary-Treasurer and the authorization for his employment as General Manager, from which it is argued that the employment by him of counsel in this case is likewise invalid. The defendants further contend that the by-laws, Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 2, upon which plaintiff relies, were never adopted at the organization meeting in Washington on May 8, 1947, or subsequently, and that for that reason also the acts of the directors and officers were without authority. In this connection, how-' ever, it should be noted that no one objected to or attacked the action taken, and the officers of the plaintiff corporation [206]*206were recognized by all as such until the majority directors, at a meeting held in Alaska on October 3, 1947, purported to remove the officers named and elect their successors from among themselves.'

The defendants Heinmiller, Homer and Gregg, Jr. followed the defendants Cordes and Trelford to Alaska until by the late summer of 1947 all the majority directors had established themselves on the leased property while the minority, consisting of Edwards, Merrick and Gregg, remained in Washington. Relations between them had not only not improved but, if anything, had become more strained. Whether this had anything to do with the continued maintenance of the principal office at Washington, or whether it had been contemplated that the project should be managed locally under the general supervision of the officers in Washington for a time, does not appear. But in view of the differences which developed, it is not surprising that no move was made to change the status quo until the majority directors on September 23, 1947, twelve days after the arrival of the defendant Heinmiller at Port Chilkoot, suspended all local operations pending a meeting of the directors at Port Chilkoot on October 3rd. The business to be transacted, however, was not stated in the notice as required by the by-laws, and the meeting was held without the presence of the minority directors in Washington. They were removed as officers, and the defendant Heinmiller was elected President-Manager, and the defendant Cordes as Vice President-Treasurer. There was another meeting of the majority directors on March 31, 1948, for the purpose of ratifying their action taken at the meeting of October 3rd, and a stockholders’ meeting on May 5, 1948, at Port Chilkoot for the same purpose and the additional purpose of electing a new board of directors, which on September 25, 1948, passed a resolution terminating the employment and authority of counsel for the plaintiff.

Plaintiff contends that these meetings were held to accomplish the object of the conspiracy referred to, and that the-[207]*207directors’ meeting of October 3rd was invalid for the reason that there was a failure to state in the notice the business proposed to be transacted and that in the meantime, before the action there taken could be ratified at the directors’ meeting of March 31, 1948, and stockholders’ meeting of May 5, 1948, the majority directors had been removed and could not thereafter lawfully call either of the subsequent meetings or transact any business as officers or directors.

In the meantime on October 20, 1947, the minority directors called a special stockholders’ meeting at Washington for November 20th for the purpose, among others, of inquiring into the actions of the majority directors and, if the evidence warranted, removing them and electing their successors, and at the adjourned meeting of November 23, 1947, formal charges were preferred against the majority directors and they were removed. The institution of this proceeding was also authorized at that meeting.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Alaska 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/port-chilkoot-co-v-heinmiller-akd-1948.