Rowland v. Rowland

633 P.2d 599, 102 Idaho 534, 1981 Ida. LEXIS 377
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 1981
Docket13180
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 633 P.2d 599 (Rowland v. Rowland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowland v. Rowland, 633 P.2d 599, 102 Idaho 534, 1981 Ida. LEXIS 377 (Idaho 1981).

Opinion

McFADDEN, Justice.

This appeal involves a suit between shareholders of Rowland’s Inc., with the plaintiff’s, minority shareholders, seeking dissolution of the corporation, the appointment of a receiver to liquidate the corporation, and a distribution of the net assets of the corporation to the shareholders in proportion to their respective stock interests. The district court ruled that the plaintiffs had failed to establish sufficient facts at trial which would warrant an order of dissolution of Rowland’s Inc., and accordingly entered judgment in favor of defendants. On appeal we affirm.

Rowland’s Inc. is a close corporation, organized in 1962 by Verley C. Rowland (V. C. Rowland) and Thomas B. Rowland (Ben Rowland), brothers, and Margaret Rowland, their sister. Plaintiffs below were V. C. Rowland and his son Thomas E. Rowland (Tom Rowland). Defendants below were Ben Rowland, his son Robert N. Rowland (Bob Rowland) and Margaret Rowland. Also named as defendants were Sally Celia Rowland (wife of Bob Rowland), Opal Rowland (wife of Ben Rowland), and the corporation, Rowland’s Inc. Plaintiff V. C. Rowland died prior to the trial of the instant action and the personal representative of his estate, Roberta Ruth Rowland, was substituted as a party to the action. At the time of the trial Ben Rowland was seriously ill, and pending this appeal, he likewise has died.

The record discloses the following facts pertinent to this appeal.

Rowland’s Inc. is engaged primarily in the dairy business, with its principal place of business located in Power County, Idaho. The initial stock interest in the corporation consisted of 70,000 shares to V. C. Rowland, 70,000 shares to Ben Rowland, and 35,000 shares to Margaret Rowland. Tom Rowland has become owner of a portion of the shares originally owned by V. C. Rowland, and Bob Rowland has become the owner of a portion of the shares originally owned by Ben Rowland and Margaret Rowland. The articles of incorporation provided that there would be nine members on the board of directors.

At the annual meeting of shareholders held on April 5, 1972, a new board of directors was elected, the annual hoard of directors meeting was set for April 12,1972, and an amendment to Article VII, § 2 of the corporate by-laws was proposed at the meeting. Originally, Article VII, § 2 of the by-laws read:

“The presence in person of seven (7) directors shall be required to constitute a quorum at any meeting of the Board of Directors; the affirmative vote of three-fourths (%) or seventy-five percent (75%) of the directors shall be required for the passage of any action or any issue at a meeting of the Board of Directors.”

The proposed amendment read:

“The presence in person of five (5) directors shall be required to constitute a quorum of any meeting of the Board of Directors. The acts of the majority of the directors shall be the acts of the directors.”

Strenuous objection was made by counsel representing V. C. and Tom Rowland as to *537 the appropriateness of the proposed amendment in the absence of notice that it would be considered at the annual meeting of the shareholders. But upon vote, the proposed amendment was passed by sixty percent of the allotted shares of stock in the corporation. V. C. and Tom Rowland abstained from voting their shares of stock. The meeting then continued with V. C. and Tom Rowland participating with the other shareholders in the remaining items of business coming before the meeting.

At the board of directors’ meeting on April 12, 1972, eight members of the board appeared, the only absent member being Tom Rowland. At the meeting V. C. Rowland and Tom Rowland were displaced as officers of the corporation, with the following officers being elected: Ben Rowland, chairman of the board and president; Bob Rowland, vice-president; Margaret Rowland, treasurer; Tina McGee, treasurer. The minutes of the meeting indicate that the following resolution was accepted by the board: “report of the book value of shares divided into net worth would equal $1.93 or $1,934 per share.”

From 1972 through 1973, the management of Rowland’s Inc., without approval of the board of directors acting as a body, purchased Eastern Idaho Dairy, entered into borrowing arrangements with First Security Bank of Idaho and Idaho First National Bank, procured loans from Ben Rowland and Margaret Rowland secured by promissory notes, entered into a contract with the union representing the corporation’s employees, increased salaries of the officers of the corporation, established a corporate retirement plan, purchased several items of new equipment, and entered into a packaging contract with Meadowgold, Inc. Each and every one of these transactions were the result of management meetings.

Subsequently, V. C. Rowland and Tom Rowland made repeated attempts to force a sale of the corporate assets at a price described by them as the “fair market value,” with the net proceeds to be distributed to the shareholders in proportion to their respective stock interests in the corporation. In response, the other shareholders offered to purchase V. C. Rowland’s and Tom Rowland’s stock interests in the corporation according to the stock’s book value. The offers were declined; V. C. Rowland and Tom Rowland choosing instead to seek dissolution of the corporation by court order, appointment of a receiver to liquidate the corporation, and a distribution of the net proceeds to the shareholders proportional to their respective stock interests.

In seeking dissolution of Rowland’s Inc., V. C. Rowland and Tom Rowland in their complaint asserted that the defendant shareholders have conspired to exclude them from the management and operation of the corporation, and to that end have harassed and oppressed them in derogation of their rights as shareholders in the corporation. Specifically, the complaint alleged that: (1) the amendment to the corporate by-laws passed at the annual meeting of the shareholders of April 5, 1972, was invalid due to illegal corporate procedure, and therefore the subsequent election of officers made pursuant to the amended by-law at the board of directors’ meeting of April 12, 1972, was likewise invalid; (2) numerous transactions were without corporate purpose since they were not authorized by formal action of the board of directors; (3) since 1971 the plaintiffs have neither been advised of nor allowed to participate in management meetings or decisions; (4) the corporation has been operated unprofitably since 1971, resulting in the inability of the corporation to pay any dividends; (5) the book value of the stock of the corporation does not reflect the fair market value of the corporation; and (6) the corporation has attempted to unduly compromise its indebtedness to V. C. Rowland by seeking to renegotiate the terms of a note held by the plaintiff. The defendants denied each and every one of these allegations.

A trial to the court was held in the above matter commencing on February 22, 1978. Following the conclusion of the trial, the district court in its findings of fact and conclusions of law concluded that the busi *538 ness of Rowland’s Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
633 P.2d 599, 102 Idaho 534, 1981 Ida. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowland-v-rowland-idaho-1981.