S.H. & Helen R. Scheuer Family Foundation, Inc. v. 61 Associates

179 A.D.2d 65
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 26, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 179 A.D.2d 65 (S.H. & Helen R. Scheuer Family Foundation, Inc. v. 61 Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.H. & Helen R. Scheuer Family Foundation, Inc. v. 61 Associates, 179 A.D.2d 65 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Ellerin, J.

Resolution of this appeal is dependent upon whether or not the "business judgment rule” is applicable to the complained-of acts by the defendant corporate directors.

Plaintiff, Steven H. Scheuer, is one of five children of Simon H. and Helen R. Scheuer. From 1984 until September 1989, he served as one of 12 directors and members of the S.H. and Helen R. Scheuer Family Foundation (Foundation), a charitable not-for-profit corporation. The Foundation, which in 1989 made charitable donations of approximately $9,000,000, is funded largely by revenues from trusts created under the will of Helen R. Scheuer, including the Helen R. Scheuer Charitable Lead Trust. The Foundation is presently governed by a board of 11 directors, who are also the Foundation’s only members and who include the eight individual defendants. The within derivative action seeks, inter alia, to remove the director defendants as directors, members and officers of the Foundation and to enjoin them permanently from exercising any power for, or on behalf of, the Foundation. At the time the action was brought, plaintiff was still both a member and director of the Foundation but, in September 1989, shortly after commencing the action, plaintiff was removed from the Foundation.

In June 1990, plaintiff served the amended complaint which is at issue on this appeal. The gravamen of the complaint is that the director defendants, along with defendants 61 Associates and 61 Associates Corp. (referred to collectively as 61 Associates), which serve as investment advisor and asset manager of the Foundation and of which, it is alleged, the individual defendants are either owners, partners, or agents, have imprudently and negligently invested the Foundation’s assets, thereby causing it substantial losses, have engaged in self-[69]*69dealing while acting in their directorial capacity, and have improperly withheld information from the other directors and engaged in bribery and coercion in order to cover up such wrongdoing.

Upon defendants’ motion to dismiss for failure to state a cause of action, the IAS court held that the defendant directors were entitled to the protection of the business judgment rule. Applying this rule to the within allegations, the court upheld only the fourth cause of action, which alleged that the defendants had improperly charged the Foundation $581,200 for office space, and the fifth cause of action, which alleged that the defendants improperly caused the Foundation to make a loan to a partnership in which two of the director defendants are general partners. However, the court found that the business judgment rule required dismissal of the first, second, third, sixth and seventh causes of action. Plaintiff now appeals that finding as to the first, second, third and sixth causes of action. Because we find that the business judgment rule should not have been applied here to the transactions covered by such causes of action, we reverse.

The business judgment rule "bars judicial inquiry into actions of corporate directors taken in good faith and in the exercise of honest judgment in the lawful and legitimate furtherance of corporate purposes.” (Auerbach v Bennett, 47 NY2d 619, 629.) Clearly, such a rule is necessary in order to avoid judicial second-guessing of corporate decision making (supra, at 630-631). Just as clearly, however, the rule will govern only where such decision making, although perhaps misguided, has been honest and disinterested, and the doctrine will not be enforced when the good faith or oppressive conduct of the officers and directors is in issue (Koral v Savory, Inc., 276 NY 215). Thus, the rule does not foreclose the courts from making an initial inquiry as to the status of those members of the board who are charged with misfeasance. As the Court of Appeals has held, "the rule shields the deliberations and conclusions of the chosen representatives of the board only if they possess a disinterested independence and do not stand in a dual relation which prevents an unprejudicial exercise of judgment.” (Auerbach v Bennett, supra, at 631; see also, Parkoff v General Tel. & Elecs. Corp., 53 NY2d 412, 417-418.)

At this stage of the proceedings, if plaintiff has made a prima facie showing of a lack of such disinterested independence or such dual relation, the complaint may not be dismissed for failure to state a cause of action solely upon [70]*70application of the business judgment rule. Thus, here, we must first ascertain whether plaintiffs pleading contains sufficient allegations to demonstrate that defendants, who constitute a sizeable majority of the board of directors, failed to possess the independence and disinterested status which is a prerequisite to insulation from liability by virtue of the business judgment rule. Contrary to the IAS, we conclude that the allegations that each of the individual defendants participated in or had a significant interest in 61 Associates as well as the Foundation are sufficient to plead precisely the type of dual interest and potential for self-interest which would create an exception to the shield provided by the business judgment rule and render open to judicial scrutiny allegations of improprieties by the board in its relationship to 61 Associates and the latter’s relationship with Southdown, Inc. Those allegations of improprieties must therefore be examined to see if, without application of the business judgment rule, they would otherwise state causes of action.

The standard of care to which directors and officers of a not-for-profit corporation must subscribe is set forth in Not-For-Profit Corporation Law § 717 (a), which requires that they "discharge the duties of their respective positions in good faith and with that degree of diligence, care and skill which ordinarily prudent men [sic] would exercise under similar circumstances in like positions.” Moreover, it is well established that, as fiduciaries, board members bear a duty of loyalty to the corporation and "may not profit improperly at the expense of their corporation” (Turner v American Metal Co., 268 App Div 239, 273, appeal dismissed 295 NY 822; see also, Geddes v Anaconda Min. Co., 254 US 590, 599).

The first cause of action alleges that the defendant directors breached their duty of loyalty to the Foundation by engaging in an illegal coverup scheme designed to forestall investigation of an improper relationship between the Foundation and 61 Associates. As a preliminary matter, we note that this cause of action is not, as argued by defendants, barred by the doctrine of res judicata. The decision of the IAS court dismissing the first complaint, which was not appealed, made clear that the seventh, eighth, and ninth causes of action in that complaint, which contained certain allegations now contained in the first cause of action of the amended complaint, were dismissed as cumulative, or duplicative, and not on the merits. Thus, res judicata does not bar their assertion in the amended complaint (see Furia v Furia, 116 AD2d 694).

[71]*71Plaintiff alleges in this first cause of action that the defendant directors conspired to deter plaintiff, as well as two of plaintiff’s brothers, from investigating the services provided to the Foundation by 61 Associates.

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Bluebook (online)
179 A.D.2d 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sh-helen-r-scheuer-family-foundation-inc-v-61-associates-nyappdiv-1992.