Solimine v. Hollander

16 A.2d 203, 128 N.J. Eq. 228, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 12
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 8, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 16 A.2d 203 (Solimine v. Hollander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Solimine v. Hollander, 16 A.2d 203, 128 N.J. Eq. 228, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 12 (N.J. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

The complainant, Joseph Solimine, as the owner and holder of 100 shares of the common capital stock of the defendant A. Hollander Son, Inc., a Delaware corporation (hereinafter termed "American company") brought this accounting suit for the benefit of said company against nine individuals, eight of whom are now directors of the company and one of whom (Herman A. Fenning) was until September, 1938, a director of said company. Drawn into the litigation by several of the charges made in the original bill and certain charges subsequently made in complainant's amended bill of complaint and in the supplemental complaint filed by an intervening stockholder is the Canadian company known as A. Hollander Son, Ltd. That company will hereinafter be referred to either as "Limited" or the "Canadian company."

The total stock issued by the American company and outstanding at the time the bill was filed in this cause amounted to 209,700 shares of common stock held by 1,064 stockholders. *Page 231 Complainant's 100 shares had been purchased by him at $8-1/8 per share about eleven months before the filing of his bill and his holding constitutes less than one-twentieth of one per cent. of the outstanding stock.

The individual defendants filed their answers denying the wrongdoing alleged against them in complainant's bill, denying further that the corporate defendant had suffered any losses in consequence of any of their acts and alleging affirmatively that the action was not brought in good faith or under the honest belief that the wrongs complained of had in fact been committed. The answers further asserted that the action had been brought for the sole purpose of vexing and harassing the defendant company and its officers and directors. The answers further set up that the defendants had, as directors of said company, always acted with fidelity to their positions of trust. The answer of the American company presented a neutral attitude with respect to the controversy. That answer invited inquiry into the matters of complaint and called upon the complainant to establish the truth of his bill, so that the company itself could have and enjoy for itself and its stockholders the benefits and fruits of such accounting and other relief as the complainant for himself and all other stockholders could rightfully and equitably establish.

After the defendants had answered the bill of complaint, a stockholder owning 100 shares petitioned the court for leave to intervene as a co-complainant and to file supplemental, additional or other pleadings and for an examination of the company's books, records and accounts. Such leave was granted, after which the intervening stockholder filed a supplemental complaint charging the commission of additional wrongs by the directors and officers of the American company. The supplemental complaint contained charges that A. Hollander Son, Ltd., the Canadian company, with knowledge of the wrongdoing alleged against the individual directors of the American company, had accepted and retained the benefits of that wrongdoing, such benefits consisting of the use of "secret processes, recipes, formulae, information and working methods" which, it is charged, were and are the exclusive property of the American company. *Page 232

The supplemental complaint also made other specific charges of wrongdoing and alleged that as a result of the conduct of the defendants, Limited made, received and retained profits which should be decreed to be the property of the American company. Limited was thereupon added as a party defendant and voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of this court by filing an answer denying the allegations of the intervenor's supplemental complaint.

Pursuant to Chancery rule 32, the intervenor applied for an order to compel the American company to furnish him a list of the names and addresses of the stockholders. This application was resisted under the claim that misuse might be made of the list.

Research has disclosed no reported opinion dealing with this rule, although rule 32 has been included within the rules of this court since 1892. It is essential that a complainant in a stockholder's suit comply with its requirements.

The rule apparently was adopted as a result of the case ofEllerman v. Chicago Junction Railways, c., Co., 49 N.J. Eq. 217; 23 Atl. Rep. 287, decided in 1891, and its companion case,Willoughby v. Chicago Junction Railways, c., Co., 50 N.J. Eq. 656; 25 Atl. Rep. 277, decided in 1892. In the latter case the court, in discussing the res judicata effect of a decision in one stockholder's suit upon the rights of other stockholders similarly situated, said (at p. 661):

"The practice has long been recognized of permitting suit to be brought by a few as the representatives of a numerous class, on behalf of themselves and all others of the class, when there is a common interest or a common right which the suit seeks to protect, and against a few as representating a numerous class subject to a common liability which the suit seeks to enforce.Story Eq. Pl. § 97.

"`In most, if not in all, cases of this sort, the decree obtained upon such a bill will ordinarily be held binding upon all other persons standing in the same predicament, the court taking care that sufficient persons are before it, honestly, fairly and fully to ascertain and try the general right in contest.' Story Eq. Pl. § 120." *Page 233

In the later decision in Goodbody v. Delaney, 80 N.J. Eq. 417, it was pointed out that the only recourse which a stockholder had when another stockholder had already instituted a representative action in behalf of the corporation was to unite under the invitation of the complainant in aiding the prosecution of the first suit. Rule 32 is the means established for the accomplishment of this purpose.

The practice adopted by the court in the stockholders' derivative suit of Wallen v. Duro-Test Corp. (Chancery Docket 124/54) was followed and an order was entered directing the American company forthwith to furnish and deliver to a designated special master of this court a list containing the names and addresses of the company's stockholders and the master was directed to mail to each stockholder a notice of the pendency, nature and object of the suit in broadest details and of the time and place designated for the final hearing thereof.

Although the notice was sent to 1,064 stockholders, only two, Morton Rosenberg and Joseph Polish, sought and were by order permitted to intervene and file additional pleadings. Rosenberg was the holder of 500 shares purchased by him in December of 1938 and Polish owned 200 shares, 100 of which he bought in April of 1937 and the other 100 in January of 1939. No such pleadings were ever filed by the intervenors, Rosenberg and Polish, although they appeared by counsel at the final hearing and aided complainant in the presentation of his proofs. The stock owned by complainant and the intervenors aggregated 900 shares, or less than one-half of one per cent. of the total outstanding stock. The final hearing occupied sixteen consecutive days. The record, including depositions taken by defendants both in Canada and in New York, covers about 1,600 pages of testimony and more than 2,500 pages of exhibits.

Before presenting the facts upon which the parties have been in contest, it is necessary to dispose of a preliminary question that has arisen with respect to the defendant Albert J. Feldman.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 A.2d 203, 128 N.J. Eq. 228, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solimine-v-hollander-njch-1940.