Wick v. Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.

31 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 289
CourtMahoning County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 29, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 31 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 289 (Wick v. Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mahoning County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wick v. Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., 31 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 289 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Jenkins, J.

These actions, submitted and tried together, seek an injunction restraining defendant The Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company from executing a contract to sell all its property and assets to defendant Bethlehem Steel Corporation, and seek a judgment holding the latter to have no interest in the property of the former by reason of such contract.

The consideration of these cases has been continuous for six months, to the exclusion of all other matters. A vast mass of evidence, oral and documentary, was offered, and the many, complex and often novel questions of fact and law involved were argued at great length, orally and upon printed briefs, during and following the trial.

The court gave intensive and continuous attention to all the evidence and arguments; heard and saw all the witnesses on the stand and weighed their statements; carefully studied the briefs and made independent research into the questions presented.

I have arrived at a decision on the issue before me, and will dispose of these cases through the following comparatively short but sufficiently determinative summarization of what I find to be the basic controlling principles and facts involved. A multitude of other problems of fact and law enter into these cases. I do not pass on them because I do not reach them.

No pretense is made of setting forth all the facts, enough only being given for a general understanding of the situation under review. No attempt is made to marshal all legal authorities or all facts in the record supporting my conclusions.

The contract sought to be enjoined was drafted on March 2nd, 1930, by attorneys for both corporations after conversations and negotiations beginning January 2nd, 1930, [291]*291privately conducted between some of the officers and directors of both corporations. The proposal in any of its phases did not come before a meeting of the board of directors of the Youngstown company until March 12th, when it was approved by a vote of six, another voting no, two, including one who was a director of both corporations, not voting, and two being absent.

The fact that any such negotiations had been in progress was not made known to one director who did not vote, until March 7th, nor to the director who voted no, until March 10th, the day for which a directors’ meeting had been first called to consider and act on the proposal. That these negotiations had culminated in a written contract was not made known to either of these directors until the meeting of March 12th.

An adjournment of the meeting set for March 10th was had until the 12th. At this meeting a suggestion for a postponement was denied without a dissenting vote, and then the vote on the proposal was taken as stated above. Notices of a special meeting of shareholders to be held April 8th to act on the authorization of the proposal were ordered and sent to all shareholders of record as of March 22nd, the record date fixed by the directors for determination of the shareholders entitled to such notice and to vote at such meeting. In the resolution submitting the proposal a proxy committee was constituted and a recommendation to the shareholders to authorize the proposal was included. A circular letter and proxy form was approved and sent to all shareholders.

Thereafter a committee of shareholders opposed to the sale and dissolution of the Youngstown company was formed. After a heated proxy campaign conducted by these committees, an assembly of shareholders convened on April 8th and shares more in number than the required statutory two-thirds of all common shares outstanding were counted and certified by the inspectors as having been voted in favor of authorizing the contract proposed.

The present suits were brought within the time fixed by statute, to enjoin the execution of such contract on the grounds, among others, that the provisions of law relating to the sale or exchange of all the corporate assets had not been complied with in the attempted action and authoriza[292]*292tion, and that in connection with such contemplated sale and their acts and conduct in furtherance thereof the directors of Youngstown were guilty of breach of duty tantamount to fraud.

The proceedings in question were by virtue of Section 8623-65, General Code, sufficient of which is included in the following:

“A corporation may, by action taken at any meeting of its board of directors, sell, lease or exchange or otherwise dispose of all * * * of its property and assets * * * upon such terms and conditions and for such considerations, * * * as its board of directors deems expedient, when and as authorized by the vote of holders of shares entitling them to exercise at least two-thirds of the voting power on such proposal, * * * at a shareholders’ meeting called for the purpose.”

To sell all its corporate assets a corporation can do so only by the action of its board of directors, authorized by the requisite number of shareholders. The action is not by the shareholders. It is by the board of directors acting as an unit. That it must and can act only as an unit is clear beyond controversy by the legislative use of the word “deems,” a verb in the singular number.

'This unit action of the board must be at a meeting, and there the terms, conditions and considerations of the proposed sale of all the corporate property and assets must, by the board acting as an unit, be deemed expedient. “Deems” means “to judge or to form an opinion; to determine.” To deem expedient thus requires and pre-supposes fully informed judgment on the part of each and every member of the board present to take action, after reasonable opportunity afforded for investigation, weighing and determination at the meeting of all the terms, conditions and considerations entering into the proposal.

Without going into details, the evidence conclusively and irrefutably to the court’s mind shows that several members of the board who voted affirmatively either had no reasonable opportunity or sufficient facts for the necessary investigation and formation of any fully informed judgment at the meeting, as required by the statute, or, having such opportunity, made no independent investigation, were not supplied with adequate information, but acted on the opinion or advice of other directors.

[293]*293The director voting no frankly said he didn’t have sufficient knowledge to judge of the merits of the proposal, which the statute mandatorily required of him as one of the board previous to its action as a whole. His lack of information and of opportunity for obtaining it was well known to all, and is a shocking and outstanding feature of this case. Another of the directors was not fully informed on the matter and for that reason did not vote. Each should have been given time and each should have demanded time. They could not waive their rights; these rights were not personal, they were representative. It is not a question of mere majority action; it is informed action of every director, whether affirmative or negative, after qualifying by investigation and knowledge to deem the considerations, terms, etc., expedient. The corporation and its shareholders were entitled to these directors’ separate judgment, their arguments when fully informed, as well as to those of a favorable majority. Each of them and all the shareholders had an absolute right to this.

Most clearly the meeting of the board of directors was held with unseemly precipitation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wick-v-youngstown-sheet-tube-co-ohctcomplmahoni-1930.