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Page 750
150 A.2d 750  38 Del.Ch. 313 Harry LEWIS, David H. Harmon, Louis
Dubow, George J. Campo,
Jr., Seymour Bayewitch, Beatrice Korman,
Arthur Kalman,
Morris Brockman, and Louis Kaye, Co-Partners
doing business
under the name of Joint Operating Company,
Plaintiffs,
v.
HAT CORPORATION OF AMERICA, Bernard L.
Salesky, Joseph M.
Salesky, David Salesky, Charles Salesky,
Charles R.
Stevenson, Earl K. Mueller, George B. Moran,
Tillman Cahn,
Frank H. James, John Cavanagh, J. Garvan
Cavanagh, Harold J.
Mahnken, Henry Reeve and Salesky Brothers,
Inc., Defendants. Court of Chancery of Delaware, New
Castle County. May 1, 1959.
Page 751
[38 Del.Ch. 314] Irving Morris of
Cohen & Morris, Wilmington, and Milton
Paulson, New York City, for plaintiffs.
William S. Potter of Berl, Potter
& Anderson, Wilmington, and Paul D. Miller,
of Mudge Stern, Baldwin & Todd, New York
City, for defendant, Hat Corporation of
America.
[38 Del.Ch. 315] S. Samuel Arsht,
of Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,
Wilmington, and Abraham L. Freedman, of
Wolf, Block, Schorr & Solis-Cohen,
Philadelphia, Pa., for defendants, Bernard
L. Salesky, Joseph M. Salesky and David
Salesky.
MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.
Plaintiffs as partners are the
owners of twenty shares of Hat Corporation
of America's 4 1/2% cumulative preferred
voting stock and bring this action for the
benefit of such corporation, naming the
directors of Hat Corporation and Salesky
Brothers, Inc.
1
as the real defendants.
The verified complaint alleges
that in April 1955 Salesky Brothers, Inc.
directly and indirectly acquired sufficient
voting stock of Hat Corporation to cause to
be elected to its board a majority of
Salesky nominees or designees. It is further
charged that thereafter, in July 1956, Hat
Corporation was caused to purchase the
operating assets and business of Salesky
Brothers, Inc. and its affiliates at an
agreed price of $1,875,373.52, a transaction
which was consummated in September 1956.
It is contended that the price
paid for such assets was excessive and
exorbitant bearing no proper relationship to
their fair and reasonable value, being more
than $400,000 in excess of the value of such
assets as carried on the books of the
selling corporation and more than thirteen
times the average earnings attributable to
said assets over a period of three years
prior to said sale; that such acquisition
benefited the Saleskys rather than Hat
Corporation; that the corporation had
established an enviable reputation as a
leading manufacturer of quality hats, and
that the acquisition by it of the Saleskys'
business, which was essentially in the low
price hat field, had not
Page 752 only injured Hat Corporation's established
reputation and good will but had served the
improper purpose of enabling the Saleskys to
discharge bank loans of approximately
$1,900,000.
The complaint goes on to allege
that under the terms of the agreement Hat
Corporation was caused to agree to ship
finished hats and make collections for the
account of Salesky Brothers, Inc., and that
the [38 Del.Ch. 316] Saleskys upon acquiring
domination and control of the corporation
had caused the corporation to pay excessive
and exorbitant salaries and other benefits
to themselves in addition to continuing the
salaries and other benefits paid to officers
and executives whose duties had been assumed
by the Saleskys or their nominees.
The complaint further charges
that the individual defendants have caused
the facilities of the corporation to be used
for the benefit of Salesky Brothers, Inc.
and its affiliates without consideration,
and concludes with a prayer that defendants
other than Hat Corporation be required to
account for their profits and for the
damages sustained by such corporation as a
result of the matters complained of.
Defendants have moved for summary
judgment on three grounds, (1) that the
transactions complained of were approved and
ratified by the stockholders of Hat
Corporation, (2) that plaintiffs have not
complied with Rule 23(c) of this Court,
Del.C.Ann., and (3) that plaintiffs as
beneficial owners of preferred rather than
common stock can point to no injury suffered
by them as a result of the acts complained
of and accordingly lack the capacity to
maintain this derivative action.
The complaint centers on the
alleged impropriety of the acquisition of
the properties of Champ Hats by Hat
Corporation and ignores the fact that this
basic transaction was fully disclosed to the
stockholders and ratified by them. In a
proxy statement of August 2, 1956 sent out
prior to the special meeting which approved
the purchase here attacked stockholders were
informed that the transaction in question
had been negotiated by a committee of
directors not allied to the Salesky group
notwithstanding the fact that such group as
of June 15, 1956 owned or controlled 42.7%
of the common stock of Hat Corporation. An
earlier proxy statement of January 27, 1956
sent out prior to the annual meeting of
stockholders disclosed substantially the
same Salesky stock interest as of January
1956, an interest which had been acquired in
April 1955 and had led to the election of
three Salesky directors on June 23, 1955.
The stockholders were also informed in the
August 2, 1956 proxy statement that the
Salesky directors did not act for Hat
Corporation in the negotiations leading up
to the purchase [38 Del.Ch. 317] under
attack or take part in meetings of directors
when the transaction was considered and
later approved,
2
and it was recommended that the stockholders
ratify the decision of the board in
contracting to acquire an established
business in the low price hat field in order
to complement the corporation's traditional
line of medium and high priced hats. The
approximate price agreed on was disclosed
together with the information that it was
based among other things on a study of the
earnings of the Champ companies and the book
value of the properties to be acquired.
Furnished with such information the
stockholders overwhelmingly approved
3 the purchase.
To ignore the facts above
outlined and merely to charge as plaintiffs
do that the bargain complained of (which was
made at a time when the Hat Corporation was
just emerging from the effects of a
crippling
Page 753 strike at its Norwalk, Connecticut plant)
was unconscionable and so void is to beg the
question. Defendants having submitted the
records concerning the transaction under
attack and moved for summary judgment, it
became incumbent on plaintiffs to offer
proof which would either establish that the
purchase was constructively fraudulent or
otherwise invalid thereby carrying the
required burden in a situation in which the
proxy information was explicit and in which
a majority of the stock, excluding the
Salesky controlled shares, approved the
transaction (Compare Schiff v. R.K.O.
Pictures, Del.Ch.,
104 A.2d 267 and
Allaun v. Consolidated Oil Co., 16 Del.Ch.
318, 147 A. 257), or in the alternative
filed affidavits raising genuine issues of
fact as to the legality of the purchase.
Plaintiffs have done neither.
It is clearly established in
Delaware that stockholder ratification of
corporate action which is not per se void
renders such action immune from minority
stockholder attack,
Fidanque v. American Maracaibo Co., 33
Del.Ch. 262, 92 A.2d 311, and there is
nothing in the record before me to indicate
that plaintiffs' grievance is anything[38
Del.Ch. 318] more than disagreement with a
business decision duly ratified by the
stockholders.
The proxy statement setting forth
the matters to be acted on at the August 29
special meeting of stockholders clearly
described the specific matter before the
meeting to be approval of the agreement to
purchase Champ Hats, Inc. at a price not to
exceed $1,915,000. The various items to be
purchased, including trademarks and
trade-names, were described in detail, and
it was pointed out that Hat Corporation did
not assume any debts, obligations or
liabilities of the seller except those
assumptions specifically described, i. e.,
the obligations as well as the rights of the
seller '* * * in and under leases and
customers', suppliers', union and employees'
contracts * * *.'
The proxy statement disclosed
that the purchase contemplated a cash
payment of $825,000 of which $500,000 was to
be paid on closing with the balance of
$325,000 conditionally payable out of
aggregate net earnings under specified terms
and conditions. The statement further
pointed out that the sum of $75,000 would be
paid for Champ's molds, blocks, flanges and
dies, items which had not been included in
the April 28, 1956 Champ Hats balance
sheets. The difference between the total
purchase price and the stipulated cash
payment was, according to the proxy
statement, to be paid by notes.
The total price to be paid for
the property, plants and equipment of the
seller was stated to be $385,000 in excess
of their carrying value, which was given at
$733,750, and it was explained that to the
extent the purchase price for such property,
plants and equipment was in excess of the
carrying amounts on the seller's books, the
annual depreciation would be greater than
the charges currently provided for, but that
such amount of depreciation could not be
immediately determined because of the terms
and conditions controlling payment of the
balance of $325,000 due on the purchase
price. As of July 22, 1958, according to the
affidavit of the secretary of Hat
Corporation, no payments on such balance had
been made.
There would appear to be a little
doubt but that the claimed price disparity
of $400,000 alluded to in the complaint
finds its source in such conditional item of
$325,000 and in the unlisted item of $75,000
[38 Del.Ch. 319] for molds, blocks and the
like. In any event a careful reading of the
material presented to the stockholders
persuades me that the basis for the
committee's recommendation was fully and
fairly presented to them, including its
advantages for the Saleskys, and nothing in
the record raises any inference that the
directors in a situation in which at least
certain of them stood to benefit as a result
of consummation of the transaction
complained of acted dishonestly or with
reckless indifference to the welfare of the
whole body of stockholders.
Page 754
Turning to the question of value,
this Court on more than one occasion has
pointed out the uncertainties in book value,
and here not only the value of the seller's
assets as well as its earnings but
considerations such as the desirability of
entering the cheap hat field obviously
entered into the decision to buy and the
ultimate fixing of a price for the purchase
under attack. It is well established that it
is not the proper function of this Court to
overturn a business transaction duly
ratified by the stockholders absent a
showing of fraud, a gift of assets,
illegality, or ultra vires action, and
plaintiffs have failed to cast any real
doubt on the basic legality of the purchase
of which they complain.
In short, assuming that a clear
case of director self-dealing has been
presented, faced with stockholder
ratification plaintiffs have failed either
to carry the burden of establishing a
shocking disparity between the price paid
and the value of the purchased assets or
otherwise effectively to discredit data
contained in the papers attached to
defendants' motion.
Potter v. Sanitary Co. of America, 22
Del.Ch. 110, 194 A. 91, and Schiff v.
R.K.O. Pictures, Corp., supra.
While the Delaware cases on sales
of assets under the statute are not strictly
in point, they are, of course, persuasive,
Gerlach v. Gillam, Del.Ch.,
139 A.2d 591.
However, the situation here is not
comparable to the one found in the cited
case, one in which a proposed purchase of
assets for stock, if consummated, would have
served to fortify the position of the seller
as the dominant figure on the buyer's board.
Here, the Saleskys acquired their Hat
Corporation stock prior to asserting their
views on the proposed purchase of their
corporation's assets, and their proposal was
fairly presented to the stockholders and
approved. Accordingly, summary judgment for
defendants will be [38 Del.Ch. 320] entered
on those allegations of the complaint
pertaining to matters having to do with the
proposed purchase which were disclosed to
stockholders and ratified by them.
The other allegations of the
complaint as pleaded which are concerned
with technically unratified actions such as
allegedly excessive salaries and other
benefits claimed to have been paid to
themselves by the Saleskys, the use of Hat
Corporation facilities by Salesky Brothers,
Inc. and the retirement of Salesky bank
loans by means of the proceeds of the sale
do not set forth that type of intracorporate
action which is not subject to stockholder
ratification. They will be dismissed for
failure of plaintiffs to comply with Rule
23(b), no proper explanation having been set
forth in the complaint for plaintiffs'
failure to obtain from the stockholders such
action as plaintiffs desire.
In view of these determinations,
which were reached after consideration of
the pleadings, briefs and after oral
argument, the technical defense of
plaintiffs' alleged lack of interest as
preferred stockholders and the question of
their capacity to sue will not be
considered. Such defense should have more
properly been raised in a separate argument
on defendants' motion to dismiss on such
grounds rather than as an afterthought to
defendants' motion for summary judgment
based on ratification. Had the purchase
complained of been brought about through the
issuance of common stock defendants'
argument on this score would carry
considerable force inasmuch as any property
so acquired regardless of its true value
would have been purchased entirely at the
expense of common stockholders. Having
determined, however, in disposing of
defendants' motion based on stockholder
ratification that the purchase complained of
caused no legally recognizable injury to the
corporation or any of its stockholders,
there is no need to decide the question of
plaintiffs' possible future injury and
whether or not their capacity to sue could
be determined short of a full hearing.
Order on notice.
1 In September 1956, the name of Champ
Hats, Inc. was changed to Salesky Brothers,
Inc.
2 As of July 19, 1956 when the
transaction was approved by the board, six
out of fourteen directors represented the Salesky interests, however, it was a quorum
of five old directors which voted approval.
3 Excluding all of the shares owned by
defendants, it appears that a majority of
'disinterested' stockholders voted in favor
of the plan. |