Reddy v. MBKS COMPANY LIMITED

945 A.2d 1080, 2008 Del. LEXIS 88, 2008 WL 564996
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 3, 2008
Docket300, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 945 A.2d 1080 (Reddy v. MBKS COMPANY LIMITED) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reddy v. MBKS COMPANY LIMITED, 945 A.2d 1080, 2008 Del. LEXIS 88, 2008 WL 564996 (Del. 2008).

Opinion

JACOBS, Justice:

Jagan M. Reddy (“Reddy”), the defendant below, appeals from an order of the Court of Chancery granting summary judgment in favor of the plaintiffs below, MBKS Company Limited, a British Virgin Islands corporation (“BVI”), and its subsidiaries, MBKS Inc. and MBKS II Inc., both Delaware corporations (the “MBKS companies”). 1 The legal issue presented on this appeal is whether the Court of Chancery correctly determined that certain actions by Reddy constituted a cancellation of shares of the MBKS companies. The Court of Chancery held that they did, and that because the charters of those companies had not been amended to authorize that alteration of their capital structure, Reddy’s actions were legally ineffective. As a consequence, the Court of Chancery determined that BVI remained the 100% owner of both MBKS companies. We hold that the Court of Chancery properly granted summary judgment to the plaintiffs, and affirm.

FACTS 2

In late 1995, BVI formed two Delaware subsidiary corporations, the MBKS companies, as vehicles to acquire two apartment complexes in Colorado. At that time, BVI *1082 owned ten (10) shares in each MBKS company and was the 100% record owner of both. In turn, the 100% record stockholder of BVI was Sultan Khalid Bin Mahfouz (“Bin Mahfouz”). Reddy was a personal employee of Bin Mahfouz’s cousin, Sami Baarma (“Baarma”). 3

At the core of this dispute are certain oral agreements that Reddy and Baarma made before Baarma died on March 12, 2005. The Court of Chancery assumed (and no one here disputes) that those oral agreements were, in fact, made. Reddy and Baarma conducted their business substantially on the basis of oral agreements and mutual trust, as evidenced by a nearly complete lack of formal documentation of various transactions involving the MBKS companies.

A. The 1996 “Share Purchase Agreement” As Later Modiñed

In 1996, Reddy and Baarma agreed that, in exchange for making a capital contribution, Reddy would receive an equity interest in both MBKS companies. Reddy’s contribution was intended to finance the acquisition of a third apartment building in Colorado. The record contains two sets of resolutions of the MBKS companies that reflect this “share purchase agreement.” The original resolutions — signed by Baar-ma and Reddy but undated — authorize the sale to Reddy of 8.4 shares of each MBKS company at a price of $200,000 per share. A second set of resolutions, produced by Reddy, consisted of copies of the original resolutions that were dated May 20, 1996 and contained two modifications that Red-dy had handwritten and initialed. Specifically, the number of shares of each MBKS company to be issued to Reddy was increased from 3.4 to 10 shares, and the per share consideration was decreased from $200,000 to $68,000 per share. Although Baarma did not sign or initial those changes, Reddy asserts that Baarma consented to the modifications, but provides no explanation for why those changes were made. In any event, under both the original and the modified resolutions, the total consideration Reddy would pay for his stock in each MBKS company was $680,000. The only substantive difference between the two sets of resolutions is the increase in the number of shares Reddy would receive in exchange for that total consideration.

Those resolutions, as drafted, were not implemented. That is, Reddy did not pay any cash consideration to the MBKS companies for the shares because (he claims) at some point in 1997, it became apparent that additional capital infusions were not needed. As a result (Reddy further claims), he and Baarma orally modified the (previously modified) resolutions, with the result that Reddy would receive 10 shares in each MBKS company, but would pay the cash consideration not to the MBKS companies, but instead to certain persons to be named by Baarma. Those persons would include Baarma’s mistresses and household staff. According to Reddy, the payments would be made on Baarma’s • death and were structured in this manner in order to circumvent the estate administration process.

Baarma died in March 2005. But, Red-dy paid no monies to Baarma’s designees, despite his earlier agreement to do so. The reason, Reddy claims, is that it was “impossible” to make payments to Baar-ma’s designees, so instead he made the payments to the MBKS companies, in *1083 2006. Although Reddy made payments totaling $1,860,000 to the MBKS companies, he did that only after this lawsuit had been brought against him in the Court of Chancery by BVI and the MBKS companies.

B. The 1996 “Distribution Agreement”

In order for this narrative to be complete, another agreement, also entered into in 1996, is critical. Reddy claims that, in addition to the 1996 “share purchase agreement” described above, he and Baar-ma entered into a separate oral agreement (the “distribution agreement”). This separate agreement was that if a United States citizen ever became a record shareholder of BVI, then BVI would distribute proportionately all its shares in the two MBKS companies to its (BVI’s) stockholders. Reddy claims that this “distribution agreement” was entered into for tax reasons. The “distribution agreement” was never reduced to writing and it was never disclosed to anyone else, including Bin Mahfouz, who was one of BVI’s two directors. Not until October 2005 did Reddy inform Bin Mahfouz that this agreement existed. The significance of the timing of that nondisclosure will soon appear.

According to Reddy, the 1996 “distribution agreement” remained dormant until it sprang to life in 2005, when Reddy first became a BVI record shareholder. 4 After Baarma’s death in March 2005, Reddy began negotiating with Bin Mahfouz (who knew nothing of the 1996 “distribution agreement”), seeking Bin Mahfouz’s formal recognition of Reddy’s stock ownership interest in BVI. Reddy’s claimed equity interest in BVI was premised on certain investments he made in 1996 in connection with BVI’s initial purchase (through the MBKS companies) of the Colorado properties. The result of these negotiations was reduced to written resolutions signed by Reddy and Bin Mahfouz (who were BVI’s only directors) on April 7, 2005. Those resolutions recognized Reddy as the owner of a 25% interest in BVI, retroactive to October 21, 1994. Reddy’s 25% ownership in BVI is not contested in this litigation. What is contested is Reddy’s claim that he also owns a 62.5% stock interest in the MBKS companies, by virtue of the 1996 “share purchase agreement” as modified, and the 1996 “distribution agreement.”

C. The August 2005 Resolutions Implementing The Share Purchase and The Distribution Agreements

On August 23, 2005, Reddy, acting as the sole director of the MBKS companies, unilaterally adopted resolutions that (he claims) implemented his 1996 agreements with Baarma. Those August 2005 resolutions — which contain various “whereas” clauses that purport to explain Reddy’s actions and to state his version of the undocumented agreements with Baarma— recite that:

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945 A.2d 1080, 2008 Del. LEXIS 88, 2008 WL 564996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reddy-v-mbks-company-limited-del-2008.