Weissman v. Lincoln Corporation

76 So. 2d 478
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 9, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 76 So. 2d 478 (Weissman v. Lincoln Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weissman v. Lincoln Corporation, 76 So. 2d 478 (Fla. 1954).

Opinion

76 So.2d 478 (1954)

K.B. WEISSMAN, Appellant,
v.
LINCOLN CORPORATION, a Florida corporation, Appellee.

Supreme Court of Florida. Division A.

November 9, 1954.
Rehearing Denied December 17, 1954.

*479 Anderson & Nadeau, Miami, for appellant.

Williams, Salomon & Katz, Miami, for appellee.

SEBRING, Justice.

Lincoln Corporation was organized under the laws of Florida in 1946. The stock of the corporation was issued to two family groups, the Freisingers and the Cohens. The articles of incorporation contained a provision that "stockholders may include in their agreements between themselves the following as valid matters of agreement; to-wit * * * (2) Any limitation upon the transferability or assignment of the stock; (3) the conferring of preemptive rights of purchase upon stockholders as conditions precedent to the sale of any other stock * * *." The by-laws of the corporation contained provisions in that identical language, together with certain regulations for transfer of stock on the corporate books, with an express statement that "Nothing herein contained shall be construed as authorizing a transfer of the stock in violation of any agreement which may be entered into between stockholders limiting and prescribing the manner * * * of such transfer."

Pursuant to the provisions of the articles of incorporation, a stockholders' agreement was entered into by all the stockholders, which provided:

"6) No stock in this corporation shall be sold unless all of the stock in the group which contains the stock proposed to be sold is first offered to the holders of stock in the other group * * *
"8) A transfer by operation of law shall not be deemed a transfer such as is prohibited by the terms of this agreement; but any such transferee shall hold the stock so required subject in all respects to the terms of this agreement * * *
"12) No stock in this corporation shall be subject to pledge excepting with the consent, in writing, of all of the stockholders to this agreement * * *
"13) Whenever any stock of this company is subject to any pledge * * * or encumbrance, or charge of any kind (other than one which is prohibited by the terms hereof, the parties agreeing that attempt at a prohibited pledge will be wholly ineffectual), any member of any group, upon the debt evidenced by the said encumbrance being in default, may pay unto the holder of such encumbrance that amount of said debt so as to release the said stock from such encumbrance * * *."

On October 14, 1946, Freisinger, Inc., a corporation dominated by the Freisinger family, issued a series of promissory notes to Wek Sales Company, a New York partnership. The notes were endorsed by Henry and Bertha Freisinger, two of the stockholders of Lincoln Corporation, who, in violation of the terms of the stockholders' agreement, pledged stock certificates of the corporation as security for the loan. There was a default in the payment of the loan and in 1949 the certificates were sold in a New York lien foreclosure proceeding to satisfy the debt. The appellant Weissman, who was manager of Wek Sales Company, purchased the pledged stock at the foreclosure sale. Thereafter, he instituted this present proceeding in equity to be recognized as a stockholder in Lincoln Corporation by virtue of his purchase of the stock; praying in his complaint that the corporation be dissolved, that a receiver be appointed, and that the assets be distributed, because the corporation had ceased to have any corporate functions due to the fact that it had sold its primary asset, an apartment *480 building in Miami, and had unlawfully distributed the proceeds to other stockholders.

In due course Lincoln Corporation filed an answer and a counterclaim, denying Weissman's status as a stockholder and requesting a declaration as to the ownership of the stock in question. In reply to the counterclaim, three cross defendants, Bernard Cohen, Phillip Cohen and Jack Warsaw, who had acquired the Freisingers' interest in the stock, in 1950, asserted rights under the stockholders' agreement and prayed for relief thereunder, in the alternative, as follows:

"7 * * * a) That the ownership of the Stock Certificates in question be determined and confirmed by this court and that the plaintiff, Weissman, be required to deliver the Certificates in question to these cross-defendants.
"b) That, in the alternative, these cross-defendants be permitted to exercise their preemptive right of purchase by paying unto the plaintiff the sums bid by him for the acquisition of the two Certificates and that thereupon the plaintiff be required to assign to these cross-defendants whatever right, title or interest in said Certificates he claims to have.
"c) In the alternative, if the court should determine adversely to these cross-defendants under the first and second prayers of this reply, that this court determine their rights under paragraph `13' of the said Stockholders' Agreement and permit the discharge of the plaintiff's claim to said Stock Certificates by the payment to him of the sum due and unpaid upon the notes executed by the Freisingers and Freisinger, Inc., in favor of Wek Sales Company, together with interest thereon to the date of the institution of the first suit to enforce said pledge, but without any requirement to pay counsel fees as stipulated in said note by virtue of the fact that these cross-defendants were not given an opportunity to discharge the said obligation, prior to the institution of said suit, as in equity and good conscience they should have been accorded."

Testimony was taken before a master, who concluded that "the limitations on the sale and pledge of stock * * * imposed by the agreement * * * are valid and binding;" that "equity will not permit the circumvention of a preemptive right of sale of stock by a pledge of such stock;" that the endorsement on the certificates was sufficient to give notice of the restrictions on transfer, and accordingly Wek Sales Company and Weissman took subject thereto, no notice of the New York proceedings having been given to Lincoln Corporation or its stockholders; that "although there is no express provision in the agreement * * * for a redemption of stock certificates by other stockholders, when the pledge is made without [their] consent * * * equity gives * * * right of redemption in order that a pledge of stock may not be used as a device to circumvent the preemptive right to purchase * * *;" and that the cross defendants "are entitled to redeem stock certificates No. 1 and 2 upon the payment to [Weissman] of the balance due upon the indebtedness * * * to Wek Sales Company," together with interest through date of payment, costs and counsel fees in connection with the New York foreclosure proceeding, but not in connection with the instant suit.

The final decree from which this appeal has been taken confirmed the findings of the master, dismissed the complaint with prejudice, and provided "that the affirmative relief sought by the cross-defendants * * * as prayed for alternatively in Paragraph 7(c) of their amended reply to the counterclaim * * * be and the same is herewith granted against the plaintiff inasmuch as no exceptions were filed by said cross-defendants to the failure of the Special Master to recommend that they be accorded alternative relief under paragraph 7(a) or (b) of their amended reply aforesaid." (Emphasis supplied.)

*481

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Bluebook (online)
76 So. 2d 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weissman-v-lincoln-corporation-fla-1954.