Viele v. Devaney

679 A.2d 993, 1996 WL 251429
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 29, 1996
DocketCivil Action 14729
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 679 A.2d 993 (Viele v. Devaney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Viele v. Devaney, 679 A.2d 993, 1996 WL 251429 (Del. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

JACOBS, Vice Chancellor.

On December 7, 1995, the plaintiffs commenced this action pursuant to 8 Del. C. § 225, for a determination of the de jure officers and directors of Atlas Energy Corporation (“Atlas”). Specifically, the plaintiffs seek an adjudication that (i) plaintiffs Tony Viele (“Viele”) and James Williams (‘Williams”), together with Michael Anneehi-no, Richard Johnson, and R.L. Pfeffer, Jr., constitute Atlas’ de jure board of directors; and that (ii) Tony Viele and James Williams are Atlas’ lawful President-Treasurer and Vice President-Secretary, respectively. These claims are contested by the defendants Thomas Devaney (“Devaney”), Lou Dimauro (“Dimauro”) and Tige Branch (“Branch”), who were Atlas’ directors and officers before the events that led to this action. The defendants claim continued lawful title to those corporate positions. Pursuant to a status quo order issued in a related case by the United States District Court in Nevada on December 8, 1995, the defendants have remained in de facto operating control of Atlas pending this Court’s determination of the merits.

The case was tried on January 24-25,1996. Mr. Devaney appeared pro se, and conducted the trial on the defendants’ behalf. This is the Court’s post-trial decision.

I. FACTS 1

Atlas is a Delaware corporation headquartered in Nevada and engaged in the oil and gas business. In 1987 defendant Devaney, who at that time was Atlas’ controlling stockholder and Chairman of Atlas’ board of directors, invited plaintiff Raymond Stefans (“Stefans”) to join Atlas’ board and to serve as its President. Beginning in 1987, Stefans served as Atlas’ President, and later also as its Chief Financial Officer until 1994, at which time Stefans resigned from his board and management positions.

After his departure Stefans was to receive deferred compensation, including certain health benefits. Six months after his resignation, however, the relationship between Stefans and the Atlas board deteriorated. The board criticized Stefans for having retired without giving prior notice, and also for having failed to provide the board certain tax-related financial information that he had promised to furnish. For those reasons, during the spring of 1995 the board notified Stefans that Atlas would no longer provide for his health benefits; and in August of that year the board formally voted to deny Ste-fans all further compensation.

Needless to say, Stefans was upset with the board’s actions, as he believed that he was entitled to the additional compensation, and that he had provided Atlas with the information the board had requested. In the *995 spring of 1995, Stefans began soliciting proxies for written consents to remove the incumbent Atlas board and replace that board with his own director-nominee slate.

On October 16, 1995, Stefans, together with Williams, served written consents upon Atlas at its principal place of business, pursuant to 8 Del.C. § 228. Those consents purported to vote 1,037,345 shares to remove the existing Atlas board (the “Devaney board”) and to elect a new board consisting of Messrs. Williams, Viele, Annechino, Johnson, and Pfeffer, Jr. (the “Stefans board”). The newly-elected Stefans board then voted to remove the defendants from their positions as officers, and elected Viele as Atlas’ President and Treasurer, and Williams as its Vice President and Secretary. The validity of those actions 2 is an issue to be determined in this proceeding.

Later that same day, the Devaney board, which consisted of Messrs. Devaney, Branch and DiMauro, held a telephonic board meeting. The Devaney board instructed Messrs. Devaney and Branch to examine the Stefans proxies to determine whether those proxies represented a majority of Atlas’ outstanding voting stock and were otherwise valid. The defendants’ initial conclusion — memorialized in board minutes and made before they had examined any of the consents — was that the proxies submitted in favor of the October 16 consent action did not constitute the majority stockholder vote required to oust the incumbent board.

On October 17,1995, Devaney sent a letter to the plaintiffs’ counsel, advising him that the incumbent (Devaney) board had concluded that the Stefans consents did not represent a majority of Atlas’ outstanding voting stock and, therefore, did not constitute valid shareholder action. The defendants proffered two reasons for that conclusion.- The first was that the plaintiffs had wrongly assumed that 2,061,897 shares of common stock were eligible to vote, whereas in fact (defendants claimed), 2,552,784 Atlas shares were eligible to vote. The second reason was that several proxies submitted by the Stefans group action were invalid on a variety of grounds.

Resting on their position that the October 16 consent action was a nullity, the defendants continued to hold themselves out as Atlas’ directors and officers. In late October, 1995, Devaney filed a lawsuit against the plaintiffs and other members of the Stefans board in the United States District Court in Nevada, charging them with federal RICO violations, breach of fiduciary duty, tortious interference, civil conspiracy, and conversion. On December 8, 1995, at a hearing on a motion for a preliminary injunction, the Nevada defendants (who included the Delaware plaintiffs) argued that the Federal Court should defer ruling on the issues presented so that this Court could determine the issue of corporate control. Subsequently, the Federal Court in Nevada entered an order directing the parties to maintain the status quo pending the outcome of this Delaware action. That order remains in effect.

On December 11,1995, Devaney noticed an Atlas stockholders meeting to be held on December 21, 1995. The agenda for the December 21 meeting consisted of two items: (i) to re-elect the Devaney board, and (ii) to re-incorporate Atlas in Nevada. On December 19, the Nevada Federal Court enjoined any attempt by the Devaney board to reincorporate Atlas in Nevada, but did permit the December 21, 1995 stockholders meeting to go forward for the limited purpose of electing new directors.

At the December 21 stockholders meeting, Devaney and the other defendants re-elected themselves as Atlas’ Board of Directors. The validity of that action is also an issue to be determined in this proceeding.

II. ANALYSIS

There are three issues to be addressed: (i) the number of outstanding Atlas shares that were eligible to vote at the time of the October 16 consent action, (ii) the legal validity of certain proxies, voted in favor of the October 16 consent action, that the defendants have *996 challenged, and (iii) the validity of the actions taken by the defendants at the December 21, 1995 stockholders meeting.

At the heart of the control dispute is the validity of approximately 522,000 shares that the defendants claim to have authorized and caused to be issued during the two month period preceding the October 16 consent action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
679 A.2d 993, 1996 WL 251429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/viele-v-devaney-delch-1996.