Tanzer v. Turbodyne Corp.

68 A.D.2d 614, 417 N.Y.S.2d 706, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11300
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 26, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 68 A.D.2d 614 (Tanzer v. Turbodyne Corp.) 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
Tanzer v. Turbodyne Corp., 68 A.D.2d 614, 417 N.Y.S.2d 706, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11300 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Silverman, J.

These are appeals by defendants from orders of the Supreme Court, at Special Term, granting leave to maintain the actions as class actions pursuant to CPLR 902.

The two cases raise substantially identical issues on substantially identical facts.

Both cases involve "going private”, or as plaintiffs put it "freeze-outs”, whereby two subsidiary corporations with a minority of stock publicly outstanding were merged into wholly owned subsidiaries of the parent corporations presumably created for that purpose. In both cases, the parent corporations are Studebaker-Worthington, Inc. (SWI) and its wholly owned subsidiary Worthington Corporation (hereinafter together referred to as the "parent corporations”). The merged subsidiary corporations were Turbodyne Corporation in the one case and Masoneilan International, Inc., in the other. The parent corporations owned approximately 82% of the stock of Turbodyne and 78% of the stock of Masoneilan. The parent corporations announced that the controlling stock held by the parent corporations would be voted on the merger whichever way the public stock was voted. The merger was approved by the public stockholders by a margin of approximately 12 to 1 in the case of Turbodyne and approximately 5 to 1 in the case of Masoneilan, and the parent corporations voted their controlling stock accordingly, and the mergers were consummated.

The same plaintiffs by the same attorneys bring both lawsuits. The plaintiffs are Michael D. Tanzer and Deborah Tanzer, as trustees of Tanzer Economic Associates, Inc., Profit Sharing Plan. The Tanzers are husband and wife; the sole beneficiary of the profit-sharing plan is Michael D. Tanzer. Mrs. Tanzer is the daughter of Benedict Wolf, a partner in the firm of Wolf, Popper, Ross, Wolf & Jones, the attorneys for the plaintiffs (although we are informed that Mr. Benedict Wolf has not personally participated in the lawsuit). About two or three years before the mergers plaintiffs bought 25 shares each of Turbodyne and Masoneilan at prices of $7.125 for Turbodyne and $5.75 for Masoneilan for a total investment of under $200 in each case. Under the merger, they received [618]*618$19.50 cash per share in the case of Turbodyne and .8461 shares of SWI common stock with a market value of approximately $40 for each share of Masoneilan stock.

The total number of publicly held shares of stock in Turbo-dyne was 730,295 held by approximately 1,200 stockholders. The total number of publicly held shares of stock in Masoneilan was 405,840 held by approximately 375 stockholders.

Plaintiffs allege fraud and inadequacy of price in connection with the mergers. They primarily seek damages.

Defendants allege that class certification was improper because (a) plaintiffs will not fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class; (b) in any event, plaintiffs having held their stock until the actual merger are not representative of those who sold their stock on the public market before the merger and after the issuance of the proxy statement with respect to the merger; and (c) the class cannot include nonresidents of New York.

I am skeptical of the protestation of the defendants that they merely want to make sure that the judgment that is ultimately rendered will bind all members of the class. It is apparent that defendants’ real hope must be that if class certification is denied, the action will die.

I am equally skeptical of plaintiffs’ protestations that they merely bought the stock as an investment and that their interest is solely to protect their investment. Plaintiffs invested less than $200 in each of the corporations; they have already received several hundred percent profit on each investment. If successful, they may realize another few hundred dollars in each corporation. They can hardly be expected, just to protect this claim, to spend the many thousands of dollars that this lawsuit will cost, or to risk the imposition of costs and disbursements which might easily run to thousands of dollars.

These same plaintiffs have brought at least 13 class action lawsuits: in virtually all of them they have been represented by the same attorneys. There is no indication that their interest as stockholders in any of those cases was any greater than it is in the present case. Plaintiff Michael Tanzer has testified that after study of the situation he decided that these companies might be candidates for a possible merger, with a possibility of profit to the stockholders and that was why they bought the stock. But all they bought was 25 shares in each [619]*619company, thus acquiring a possibility of only a few hundred dollars profit in each company if they were fortunate.

I am led to conclude that plaintiffs have made a regular practice of seeking out companies where there is a likelihood of merger and then making a very small investment in the company precisely to position themselves to bring a class action lawsuit if there were a merger in circumstances where it appeared auspicious to bring such a lawsuit.

I note that plaintiff Michael Tanzer has a Ph.D. in economics and that among his activities' is acting as consultant to lawyers with respect to lawsuits.

I recognize that on the one hand if we deny class action maintenance, litigation by these plaintiffs may well cease; and that on the other hand, the real interest of these plaintiffs is that of their lawyers who will advance disbursements and who, if successful, will presumably receive substantial fees. Thus we are presented again with the conflicting considerations of the usefulness of minority stockholders’ suits in protecting the interests of the minority stockholders and the risk of abuse of this procedure by suits by plaintiffs who have only a nominal interest in the lawsuits with the possibility of settlements or other dispositions that pay more attention to the interests of the lawyers than to those of the nominal beneficiaries.

CPLR 901 sets forth a number of prerequisites to class action. One of them is that "the representative parties will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class” (CPLR 901, subd a, par 4).

It is obvious that in many class action suits it is the lawyer who really protects the interests of the class and that the protection that the representative parties, the plaintiffs, can give is rather limited.

It may well be that in derivative suits the plaintiff need not know anything about or contribute anything to the action. (Cf. Surowitz v Hilton Hotels Corp., 383 US 363.)

But the class action statute differs in two important respects from derivative suits, (a) To begin with derivative actions require no court authorization to be brought as such. Class actions on the other hand affirmatively require a discretionary determination by the court as to whether the action may be maintained as a class action (CPLR 902). (b) The class [620]*620action statute expressly contemplates that the plaintiff shall play some independent role, however small.

Class actions are to result in judgments which will bind or inure to the benefit of many persons who have not expressly authorized suit on their behalf. Therefore "[t]he entire process of adjudication which is comprised of the class representative, class counsel, and the trial judge must ensure adequacy of representation. National Ass’n of Regional Medical Programs, 551 F.2d at 346; Developments in the Law-Class Actions, 89 Harv.L.Rev.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A.D.2d 614, 417 N.Y.S.2d 706, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanzer-v-turbodyne-corp-nyappdiv-1979.