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Page 565
134 A.2d 565
36 Del.Ch. 533
Ralph B. CAMPBELL, Plaintiff,
v.
LOEW'S Incorporated, a Delaware corporation,
Joseph R.
Vogel, William A. Parker, George L. Killion
and
John L. Sullivan, Defendants.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New
Castle County.
Sept. 3, 1957.
[36 Del.Ch. 534] Henry M. Canby
(of Richards, Layton & Finger) and Arthur G.
Logan and Aubrey B. Lank (of Logan, Marvel,
Boggs & Theisen), Wilmington, and Milton S.
Pollack, New York City, for plaintiff.
David F. Anderson (of Berl,
Potter & Anderson), Wilmington, and Louis
Nizer (of Phillips, Nizer, Benjamin & Krim),
New York City, and Benjamin Melniker, New
York City, for corporate defendant.
The individual defendants have
not yet appeared.
SEITZ, Chancellor.
Plaintiff, a stockholder of
Loew's Incorporated ('Loew's' or
'corporation'), here sues the corporation
and four of its nine encumbent directors.
The four constitute the so-called 'Vogel
faction'. The other five directors, there
being four vacancies, constitute the
so-called 'Tomlinson faction'. See Tomlinson
v. Loew's, Inc.,
Page 566
Del., 134 A.2d 518 (appeal pending). The two
factions are fighting for control of the
corporation.
Plaintiff seeks the following
relief:
(a) to require the individual defendants
to account for money they have caused the
corporation to pay for solicitation of
proxies on their behalf in connection with a
stockholders' meeting called by Vogel, the
president, for September 12.
[36 Del.Ch. 535] (b) to restrain the
defendants, their officers and agents from
using the corporate funds in the
solicitation of proxies by two of the
individual defendants (Vogel and Killion)
and their associates and from using or
allowing corporate officials or employees to
solicit proxies for the individual
defendants or anyone associated with them.
(c) to have the Court enjoin the holding
of a stockholders' meeting called for
September 12, 1957, on the ground that it
was illegally called.
The individual defendants have
not yet appeared in this action. A motion to
dismiss the complaint was made by the
corporation on the ground that the action is
derivative in nature and fails to comply
with Chancery Rule 23(b) Del.C.Ann.
Plaintiff has moved for a preliminary
injunction enjoining the holding of the
special meeting of stockholders and
enjoining the use of proxies solicited
pursuant to a letter to stockholders dated
August 9, 1957. Alternatively, plaintiff
asks that the stockholders' meeting be
stayed or adjourned until such time as the
Court can decide the preliminary injunction.
I first consider the corporate
defendant's motion to dismiss on the ground
that it fails to comply with Chancery Court
Rule 23(b).
Insofar as pertinent Rule 23(b)
provides:
'In an action brought to enforce a
secondary right on the part of one or more
shareholders * * * because the association
refuses to enforce rights which may properly
be asserted by it, * * * The Complaint shall
also set forth with particularity the
efforts of the plaintiff to secure from the
managing directors or trustees and, if
necessary, from the shareholders such action
as he desires, and the reasons for his
failure to obtain such action or the reasons
for not making such effort.'
While I seriously doubt that all
aspects of the pending action are derivative
in nature, I shall pass over that point.
Admittedly the action is derivative insofar
as it seeks to recover corporate money
already spent for proxy solicitation by at
least one of the individual defendants.
[36 Del.Ch. 536] The brief filed
in support of the motion to dismiss makes no
particular attempt to analyze the complaint
in relation to the provisions of Rule 23.
Thus, the Court must do so.
It is alleged as follows in
Paragraph 22 of the Complaint:
'Plaintiff has not requested the Board of
Directors, nor stockholders, to make Vogel
account, as he will not recognize the
authority of the Board of Directors and is
now in the process of soliciting
stockholders with corporate funds, which the
plaintiff is unable to stop. Plaintiff knows
of no way through request, Board or
stockholder action, that the Vogel group can
be stopped from illegally spending the
$100,000.'
Obviously, plaintiff's allegation
is an attempt to justify the fact that no
demand was made for an accounting. In other
words, in the language of the Rule,
plaintiff purports to give the reasons for
not making an effort to have the directors
or stockholders take the action he has
taken.
On a motion to dismiss, the
allegations of the complaint must be taken
to
Page 567
be true. Do the quoted allegations in
combination with the other allegations of
the complaint constitute compliance with the
pleading requirements of Rule 23(b)?
Clearly, if Vogel will not
recognize the board then it is futile to ask
the board to act under the circumstances of
this strange case. Admittedly, the Vogel
faction will not attend board meetings and
so no quorum is possible. The result is that
the board as a board cannot act. I conclude
that plaintiff's complaint shows with
sufficient particularity and reason why no
demand was made upon the board.
Clearly the stockholders could
not act in time to prevent the defendants
from spending corporate funds as indicated
in the proxy statement. Moreover, absent
unanimous approval the stockholders could
not ratify the spending of corporate funds
for an allegedly invalid purpose.
Kerbs v. California Eastern Airways, 33
Del.Ch. 69, 90 A.2d 652, 34 A.L.R.2d 839.
I therefore conclude from the
pleadings that a demand upon the
stockholders was not necessary under the
facts alleged, but in any event a demand
here would have been futile under the
circumstances. A demand upon the
stockholders implies that legally they can
do something about it. Where they cannot,
the Rule does not contemplate that such a
useless act must nevertheless be performed.
Sohland
v. Baker, 15 Del.Ch. 431, 141 A. 277, 58
A.L.R. 693, is relied upon by the
defendant. Neither in its statement of law
nor its conclusion is it inconsistent with
the result here reached. Nor does the recent
opinion of the Vice Chancellor in Mayer v.
Adams, Del.Ch., 133 A.2d 138, call for a
different conclusion. That case involved the
'demand on stockholders' requirement of Rule
23(b). First of all, as the pleading there
show, no attempt was made by that plaintiff
to comply with Rule 23(b). Here the
plaintiff has specifically alleged matters
pertinent to the Rule. Second, the language
of the Vice Chancellor makes it clear that
he did not intend to rule, for instance,
that where less than unanimous stockholder
action by way of ratification or otherwise
would be futile, a stockholder would still
have to make demand on the stockholders.
And, I add, demand to do what? Other
distinguishing factors are evident by a
reading of the Vice Chancellor's opinion.
[36 Del.Ch. 537] I therefore
conclude that plaintiff's complaint, to the
extent required, complies with the pleading
requirement of Rule 23(b). The corporate
defendant's motion to dismiss must therefore
be denied.
I turn now to plaintiff's motion
for a preliminary injunction or a stay
thereof until such time as this Court has an
opportunity to decide plaintiff's motion.
This Court recognizes that a
court will interfere with the holding of
stockholders' meetings only with great
reluctance. Nevertheless, I believe that
some of the matters relied upon by plaintiff
are of such substance that no action other
than an adjournment to a fixed future date
should be taken at the stockholders' meeting
called for September 12. The Court will fix
the adjourned date.
The stay will give the Court an
opportunity to pass upon the many matters
pressed upon the Court upon very short
notice. Such [36 Del.Ch. 538] a stay will
not prejudice the rights of those with the
ultimate say--the stockholders. It may be
noted that in the meantime the executive
committee is not prevented from acting
despite the factional feud.
A stay to the above effect will
be entered upon the plaintiff's posting a
bond in the sum of $5,000.
The Court will be happy to
discuss the adjourned date with counsel.
Present order on notice.
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