Swanson v. Shockley

364 N.W.2d 252, 1985 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 981
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 20, 1985
Docket83-1492
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 364 N.W.2d 252 (Swanson v. Shockley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swanson v. Shockley, 364 N.W.2d 252, 1985 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 981 (iowa 1985).

Opinion

CARTER, Justice.

Both plaintiff and defendant appeal from district court judgment denying damages to plaintiff in an action alleging sale of corporate stock by the defendant in violation of plaintiff’s right of first refusal. The defendant, formerly the majority stockholder in a closely-held corporation, sold his stock to an outsider. The plaintiff, minority stockholder, sued for damages allegedly resulting from this sale.

The plaintiff Paul Swanson has owned twenty-five shares of a corporation now known as North Central Adjustment Co., Inc. since 1959 and continued to own such shares at the time of trial. Defendant Robert Shockley had owned seventy-five shares of this corporation prior to December of 1977 at which time he sold them to John B. *254 Davis, who was not and never had been a shareholder in the corporation. Davis agreed to pay $90,000 for defendant’s shares in installments payable over a ten-year period. At the time of that sale, the shares of the plaintiff and the defendant represented all of the stock of the corporation except for two shares issued to corporate directors.

Subsequent to the sale to Davis, plaintiff commenced the present action, alleging that the sale was in violation of his vested contractual rights under a bylaw of the corporation restricting sales of the corporation’s stock. The bylaw in question permitted sale of the stock of the corporation to outsiders only after the corporation had been given a right of first refusal to buy the stock at a formula price and, failing purchase by the corporation, the other stockholders had been given a right of refusal at the same formula price. This bylaw had been in effect at the time plaintiff acquired his stock in the corporation and for some eighteen years thereafter. It was repealed eight months prior to the challenged transaction in accordance with the procedure established in the bylaws for amendments. That repeal was by the affirmative vote of all stockholders of the corporation except plaintiff, who abstained from voting.

The formula price for the defendant’s seventy-five shares at the time of their sale to Davis was $7500. Plaintiff contends that he was ready, willing and able to purchase the shares at that price had they been tendered to him. He asserts that he has sustained damages measured by the difference between the value of the stock at the time it was sold to Davis and the formula price under which plaintiff would have been entitled to buy it.

Defendant defended the action, in part, on the ground that the repeal of the bylaw was valid and removed any obligation on his part to tender the shares to the corporation or plaintiff. The district court rejected defendant’s contention that the repeal of the bylaw restricting sale of stock to outsiders could diminish plaintiff’s rights with respect thereto. Relying on Berger v. Amana Society, 250 Iowa 1060, 95 N.W.2d 909 (1959), the district court held that the bylaw in question had created a vested contractual right in the plaintiff which could not be defeated in the absence of his affirmative consent to the challenged transaction. Nevertheless, the district court denied damages to the plaintiff after finding that plaintiff had failed to establish with any reasonable likelihood that the stock would have been available for him to purchase had it first been tendered to the corporation as was required under the bylaw.

On plaintiff’s appeal, it is urged that his contractual rights exist separate and apart from the bylaw which created the rights of first refusal. He contends that the action of the corporation in repealing that bylaw was a waiver of any contractual rights it might have had with respect to the challenged transaction, therefore leaving plaintiff as the holder of the only remaining right of first refusal. Defendant treats this issue as one of proximate cause and urges that the transaction would never have occurred had the defendant believed that there were any outstanding rights of refusal at a formula price many thousands of dollars below the market value of the stock.

On his cross-appeal, the defendant asserts that the district court erred in recognizing any contractual right of refusal on plaintiff’s part subsequent to the repeal of the bylaw upon which such right is predicated. Because we find that consideration of the cross-appeal is dispositive of the case, we do not reach the issues presented on plaintiff’s appeal.

In Berger, 250 Iowa at 1070, 95 N.W.2d at 915, we held that a provision in the articles of incorporation of the Amana Society that class “A” stockholders were entitled to surrender their stock for redemption at an agreed value conferred vested contractual rights upon those stockholders which could not be defeated by amending the articles. The trial court relied on this decision in concluding that in the present *255 case plaintiff held a contractual right of first refusal on the sale of defendant’s stock which could not be defeated by an amendment to the bylaws of the corporation.

Defendant urges that the Berger decision is not in point and that plaintiff has otherwise failed to establish that he was possessed of a contractual right to purchase defendant’s shares at the time they were sold to a third party. Defendant’s first attempt to distinguish Berger is on the basis that the provisions giving rise to the contractual rights in that case were in the articles of incorporation rather than in the bylaws. We do not believe that the contractual theory recognized in Berger is only available where the rights upon which reliance has been placed are conferred by the articles of incorporation. Several courts have recognized that contractual rights may arise from shareholder reliance on corporate bylaws. Palmer v. Chamberlin, 191 F.2d 532, 537 (5th Cir.1951) (applying Missouri law); Oakland Scavenger Co. v. Gandi, 51 Cal.App.2d 69, 81, 124 P.2d 143, 150 (1942); Elson v. Schmidt, 140 Neb. 646, 650, 1 N.W.2d 314, 317 (1941); Bechtold v. Coleman Realty Co., 367 Pa. 208, 213, 79 A.2d 661, 663-64 (1951); Annot. 61 A.L.R.2d 1318, 1326 (1958).

Our decisions in Norton v. Catholic Order of Foresters, 138 Iowa 464, 114 N.W. 893 (1908), and Sieverts v. National Benevolent Association, 95 Iowa 710, 64 N.W. 671 (1895), appear to recognize that bylaws may have this potential. See also 8 W. Fletcher, Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations §§ 4177, 4188 (rev. ed. 1982); Cataldo, Stock Transfer Restrictions and The Closed Corporation, 37 Ya. L.Rev. 229 (1951). The general rule is as stated in Bechtold, 367 Pa. at 213, 79 A.2d at 663-64:

Provisions in corporate by-laws may, generally speaking, be divided into two classes (a) those that are mere regulations governing the conduct of the internal affairs of the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
364 N.W.2d 252, 1985 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swanson-v-shockley-iowa-1985.