Stevens Ex Rel. Park View Corp. v. Richardson

755 P.2d 389, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 60
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1988
DocketS-1860
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 755 P.2d 389 (Stevens Ex Rel. Park View Corp. v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens Ex Rel. Park View Corp. v. Richardson, 755 P.2d 389, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 60 (Ala. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

MOORE, Justice.

A dissenting shareholder in a closely-held corporation brought this derivative suit to set aside a real estate commission the corporation paid to an officer-director-shareholder. The superior court granted summary judgment, holding that the commission was reasonable and fair to the corporation and therefore was not improper. We affirm the summary judgment on the alternative ground that the shareholders ratified the payment of the commission.

I.

In 1963, two married couples, Robert and Elizabeth Stevens and Morgan and Rose-Marie Richardson, incorporated the Park View Corporation for purposes of real estate investment in Alaska. Soon after incorporating, they sold stock to a third couple, Hector and Providence Guzman. Each of the six spouses individually owned one-sixth of the Park View stock. 1

During the next seventeen years, the corporation acquired a number of rental properties in Anchorage, including a 15-unit apartment house and two houses converted to commercial uses, all located on contiguous lots on West 9th Avenue, and two duplexes on West 14th Avenue.

Although the corporation invested exclusively in Anchorage property, only the Richardsons lived in Anchorage. The Guz-mans lived in Arizona and the Stevenses in Seattle. All of the property management duties fell upon the Richardsons, primarily upon Rose-Marie. The Richardsons dealt with tenants, collected and deposited rents, paid the bills, kept the corporate books and records, and attended to a broad range of maintenance tasks such as cleaning and painting apartments, landscaping, and arranging for major repairs. As compensation, the corporation provided them with an apartment and half of their telephone, utility, and car expenses.

*391 During the spring of 1980, the Richard-sons became interested in liquidating the corporation. They apparently believed that liquidation would be advantageous for tax reasons and were growing tired of the burden of property management. In addition, their relationship with Robert Stevens had deteriorated.

On January 10, 1981, the Richardsons sent the Guzmans and Stevenses notice of a special meeting of shareholders to take place via telephone conference call at a specified time on January 21. The notice indicated that the purpose of the meeting was to act on a proposal for corporate liquidation and to consider a request by the Richardsons that their compensation for management be increased to include a cash stipend of $500 per month.

When the Stevenses did not answer their telephone on January 21, despite having received the notice, the Richardsons and Guzmans conducted the meeting without them. The Richardsons and Guzmans voted unanimously to liquidate the corporation as soon as possible, and to that end, to sell all of the corporation's real estate. They agreed upon an asking price of $1,100,000 for the 9th Avenue properties and $125,000 for each of the 14th Avenue duplexes. They voted unanimously to increase the Richardsons’ management compensation by $500 per month, and informally agreed that Rose-Marie Richardson, a licensed real estate salesperson, should be compensated at the “going rate” for her efforts in connection with marketing and selling the 9th Avenue apartments. They did not adopt a formal resolution regarding a real estate commission, apparently because they did not want Robert Stevens to accuse them of acting behind his back.

Following the meeting, Rose-Marie undertook to sell the real estate. She drafted a prospectus, ran ads, posted signs, and showed the 9th Avenue apartments to at least twenty people and the 14th Avenue duplexes to approximately a hundred people. When the eventual buyers of the 9th Avenue properties made an offer in April 1981, Rose-Marie negotiated with them to arrive at the sales price of $1,050,000. The buyers, both real estate brokers with considerable experience in marketing downtown Anchorage properties, testified that they believed this price was above fair market value, and that they had been willing to pay it only because they had a specific development project in mind.

On April 28,1981, after notice, the corporation held a combined special meeting of directors and shareholders. All of the shareholders participated, either in person or by proxy. By a two-thirds vote, the shareholders elected Mr. and Mrs. Richardson and Mr. and Mrs. Guzman directors, and .named Morgan Richardson president, Hector Guzman vice-president, and Rose-Marie Richardson secretary and treasurer. All of the new directors and five of the six shareholders (including Elizabeth Stevens but not her husband) then approved a proposed liquidation plan.

On May 18, 1981, at another combined special meeting, all of the directors and two-thirds of the shareholders voted both to accept the offer Rose-Marie had obtained on the 9th Avenue properties and to award Rose-Marie a commission of $37,-000, or 3.5% of the sales price. The Ste-venses dissented.

Rose-Marie had previously sold property for the corporation, but this was the first and only time the corporation paid her a commission. However, the corporation had paid commissions to other real estate agencies. Three Anchorage real estate agencies advised Rose-Marie that they would have required a commission of six to ten percent to sell the 9th Avenue properties. Rose-Marie decided to sell the properties herself to save the corporation money. She requested a 3.5% commission after the Guzmans and two attorneys advised her it was fair. Rose-Marie obtained her real estate license in 1973, for personal reasons and not at the request of the corporation.

On January 18, 1982, the corporation’s last special meeting, the shareholders voted to dissolve the corporation, with Robert Stevens abstaining. Upon dissolution, each shareholder received a net distribution of approximately $253,000.

*392 In August, 1982, Robert Stevens brought a derivative suit on behalf of the shareholders of the now-dissolved corporation against the Richardsons and the Guzmans. The complaint alleged ten counts of wrongdoing and included numerous claims for relief, including a claim for recovery of Rose-Marie’s $37,000 commission.

Each party moved for summary judgment and each opposed the other’s motion. The superior court entered summary judgment in favor of the Richardsons and Guz-mans on every issue except a claim for recovery of $329.96 paid to Providence Guzman for travel expenses. Subsequently, the court awarded costs and attorneys’ fees to the Richardsons and Guzmans. The attorneys’ fees award was $14,000, approximately 60% of their actual attorneys’ fees.

Stevens appeals, challenging the court’s ruling regarding the $37,000 commission and the award of attorneys’ fees. Stevens argues that the payment of the commission to Rose-Marie is invalid per se, unless required by an enforceable contract or ratified by the shareholders. Furthermore, he argues that the purported shareholder ratification was invalid because interested shareholders were permitted to participate.

II.

At common law, directors are not entitled to retroactively compensate themselves for services already rendered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
755 P.2d 389, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-ex-rel-park-view-corp-v-richardson-alaska-1988.