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Page 288
163 A.2d 288
39 Del.Ch. 244
Dorothy I. HALL et al., Plaintiffs
Below, Appellants,
v.
JOHN S. ISAACS & SONS FARMS, INC., et al.,
Defendants Below,
Appellees.
JOHN S. ISAACS & SONS FARMS, INC., et al.,
Defendants Below,
Appellants,
v.
Dorothy I. HALL et al., Plaintiffs Below,
Appellees.
Earle L. ISAACS, Jr., Plaintiff Below,
Appellant,
v.
JOHN S. ISAACS & SONS FARMS, INC., et al.,
Defendants Below,
Appellees, and
Dorothy I. Hall et al., Plaintiffs Below,
Appellees.
Supreme Court of Delaware.
July 21, 1960.
Page 289
[39 Del.Ch. 246] Interlocutory
appeal and cross-appeals from an order of
the Court of Chancery in and for New Castle
County.
Page 290
E. N. Carpenter, II; Louis J.
Finger and William E. Wiggin, of Richards,
Layton & Finger, Wilmington, for plaintiffs
Hall.
John VanBrunt, Jr., of Killoran &
VanBrunt, Wilmington, for plaintiff Earle L.
Isaacs, Jr.
Samuel R. Russell, of Morford,
Young & Conaway, Wilmington, for defendants
below.
[39 Del.Ch. 247] SOUTHERLAND, C.
J., and WOLCOTT and BRAMHALL, JJ., sitting.
WOLCOTT, Justice.
This appeal, in reality, is a
consolidation for argument of an
interlocutory appeal and cross-appeals from
an order of the Court of Chancery of New
Castle County.
The plaintiffs, Dorothy and
Nelson Hall, have appealed from the denial
of the claim for the appointment of
liquidating receivers for the corporate
defendants, and from the denial of the claim
of Dorothy for an accounting and money
judgment against the individual defendants.
The plaintiff, Earle L. Isaacs, Jr., has
appealed from the ruling of invalidity of an
employment contract between him and the
corporate defendants and the reservation of
the question of the amount of his
compensation for future decision. The
corporate defendants appeal from the ruling
of invalidity of the employment contract of
Earle L. Isaacs, Jr., and the deferring for
further hearing of the issue of the value of
the services rendered by the individual
defendants and Earle L. Isaacs, Jr., to the
corporate defendants.
The suit below was brought by
Dorothy Hall and her husband, Nelson Hall,
who were joined by the Administrators of the
Estate of Earle Isaacs, Sr., deceased.
Together, the plaintiffs owned 50% of the
stock of the four corporate defendants. The
defendants are four corporations and two
individuals, J. Howard Isaacs and Harry H.
Isaacs, who together owned 50% of the stock
of the four corporate defendants.
The suit sought the appointment
of liquidating receivers of the four
corporate defendants pursuant to 8 Del.C. §
226 on the ground that a stockholders'
deadlock had resulted in the failure to
elect directors of the corporations. An
additional ground alleged for the
appointment of liquidating receivers was
mismanagement of the corporate affairs by
the officers. Derivative relief was also
sought in the form of a money judgment
against the individual defendants for
alleged breach of trust and misconduct in
office. In addition, the plaintiff, Dorothy
Hall, sought a money judgment against the
individual defendants for the alleged
misapplication by them of the proceeds of
certain corporate bonds belonging to her.
[39 Del.Ch. 248] The litigation
follows an intra-family squabble which can
be made understandable only by a fairly full
factual statement.
The litigation involves a
business enterprise which basically is the
estate amassed by John S. Isaacs, late of
Sussex County, Delaware. The estate consists
of lands and equipment used in a large scale
farming operation; residential real estate
rented to the public; a cold storage plant,
and other unrelated assets having
substantial value.
The farming operation is
conducted upon approximately 8000 acres of
land located near Ellendale in Sussex
County, Delaware. This operation consists of
raising annual crops; raising and selling
approximately one million chickens annually;
the annual conditioning for sale of 300 beef
cattle, 150 sheep and 100 hogs; the periodic
operation of a cannery with a daily capacity
of 3000 cans of foodstuffs; the periodic
operation of a sawmill, and the operation of
a dozen broiler houses with an annual
capacity of one million chicks. A long list
of equipment of varied types is owned to
carry on this large scale enterprise.
The cold storage plant is located
in Georgetown, Delaware and has a capacity
Page 291
of 7,000,000 tons. The plant, itself,
occupies an entire city block.
The investment and unrelated
property of the estate consists of dwelling
houses scattered throughout Sussex County
rented to the public, and securities having
a total market value in 1955 in excess of
$400,000.
All of this enterprise was
amassed and owned by John S. Isaacs. By 1942
his taxable income from the enterprise had
understandably reached the higher income tax
brackets. Accordingly, on January 1, 1943 he
formed a partnership consisting of himself,
his wife, Mary C. Isaacs, and their four
children, Earle (now deceased), Howard,
Harry and Dorothy, the wife of Nelson Hall,
to operate the enterprise. Under the
partnership agreement, Mrs. Isaacs and
Dorothy were each to receive 10% of the
profits and each of the other four partners
were to receive 20%. On January 1, 1944 the
partnership [39 Del.Ch. 249] agreement was
amended to provide for an equal distribution
of profits among the six parties.
The partnership thereafter
operated the enterprise, divided the profits
and the partners reported their taxable
income under this arrangement. The taxes on
the partners' income thus reported were
actually paid from the partnership's funds.
In 1947 the Federal Internal Revenue Service
challenged the validity of the partnership
for tax purposes and assessed additional tax
by reason of the understatement of
partnership income. The resulting claim for
increased tax assessment was finally settled
in 1954 by the disallowance of Dorothy's
status as a partner and the addition of her
percentage of partnership income to the
income of her father and mother. Substantial
assessments for understatement of
partnership income were made against the
remaining partners. As part of the
settlement Dorothy received a tax refund
which, with interest amounted to about
$42,000. With her consent this was applied
to the tax liability of her father.
As of March 1, 1949, some five
years before the final settlement of the
income tax matter, the partnership was
dissolved and two of the four corporate
defendants organized. First, John S. Isaacs
& Sons, Inc. (hereafter Sons) was organized
and to it was transferred all of the farm
land and buildings. Second, John S. Isaacs &
Sons Farms Inc. (hereafter Farms) was
organized and to it was transferred all of
the farm and factory equipment. Thereafter,
Sons leased to Farms at an annual rental of
$33,000 the farm land and buildings. All of
the stock of these two corporations was
ultimately issued in equal shares to the
four children, Earle, Howard, Harry and
Dorothy, except that Dorothy's shares in
Farms were issued in the name of her
husband, Nelson Hall.
John S. Isaacs kept the balance
of his assets as his individual property
and, thereafter, until his death on July 29,
1950, carried on individually the cold
storage business and rented the dwelling
houses owned by him. By his will, with the
exception of a legacy to his wife, he
bequeathed his estate in equal shares to his
four children who, from his death until
March 1, 1952, carried on the cold storage
business as a partnership.
[39 Del.Ch. 250] At his death,
John S. Isaacs owed Farms $341,181.84 while
Farms owed him $55,689.94. The Estate of
John S. Isaacs transferred to Farms certain
securities, assets of the estate, at their
appraised value of $346,875.67 as payment of
his indebtedness to Farms. This transfer was
made subject to a Federal tax lien which had
been imposed by reason of the tax assessment
against the Estate of John S. Isaacs. The
balance remaining to the credit of the
estate was added to the amount owed by Farms
to John S. Isaacs and was thereafter carried
on the books of Farms as an open account in
the amount of $61,383.77 to the credit of
the four children.
On March 1, 1952 John S. Isaacs &
Sons Realty Co., Inc. (hereafter Realty) was
organized and the land, cold storage plant,
and dwelling houses were transferred to it.
At the same time, John S. Isaacs & Sons
Page 292
Storage, Inc. (hereafter Cold Storage) was
organized and the office and shop equipment,
repair parts, supplies and intangibles were
transferred to it. Thereafter, Realty leased
to Cold Storage at a fixed rental of $39,000
the land and buildings owned by it. The
stock of Realty and Cold Storage was issued
to the four children in equal shares. Each
stockholder, in addition, received a bond in
the amount of $34,638.52 from Realty and a
bond in the amount of $46,246.80 from Cold
Storage.
There is a dispute among the
parties as to the purpose for which these
bonds were issued. Dorothy and Nelson
maintain that the bonds were intended as a
device for the payment of money as interest
and principal to the stockholders free of
corporate income tax. Howard and Harry, on
the other hand, maintain that the bonds were
issued on the advice of their accountant as
a method of accumulating money free of
corporate tax to be ultimately applied
against the tax liability arising from the
tax assessment against the John S. Isaacs
partnership. Whatever the underlying
purpose, it is apparent that the bonds were
issued on the advice of the accountant,
presumably for tax reasons.
Thereafter, the enterprise was
carried on by Earle, Howard, Harry and
Nelson Hall. Each drew a salary of $12,000.
Each had an expense allowance of $50 per
week; each had the use of a corporate
automobile, free gasoline, free use of the
cold storage plant, and [39 Del.Ch. 251] the
right to take any foodstuffs desired for the
use of his family. Each had the privilege of
keeping 15 cattle and 6 hogs on the farms at
corporate expense.
It appears that all four worked
hard and that tensions grew among them. In
November, 1952, Nelson Hall resigned as a
salaried employee. In January, 1953, Earle,
Howard and Harry raised their respective
salaries to $18,000. Tension, however,
continued and in the spring of 1953 Earle
withdrew from active participation and, on
March 11, 1954, was killed in an automobile
accident. His interest thereafter was
represented by his widow and son, Earle,
Jr., as Administrators. In March, 1954,
Howard and Harry, who have continued to
operate the business, increased their
salaries to $27,000. Since the incorporation
of the business--in reality, as the
Vice-Chancellor described it, an
incorporated partnership--no dividends have
been paid the stockholders.
Since January 19, 1950 no
directors of Farms and Sons have been
elected. No directors of Realty and Cold
Storage have ever been elected. At a
stockholders meeting ordered by the Court of
Chancery no directors were elected for any
of the companies because of a deadlock among
the stockholders arising from the fact that
each contesting group voted its 50% stock
interest for different slates of directors.
Following the meeting this suit
was filed for the appointment of liquidating
receivers on the ground, inter alia, that a
deadlock existing among stockholders,
receivers should be appointed pursuant to 8
Del.C. § 226.
The foregoing in broad outline is
the factual situation of this family
squabble. Where necessary, additional facts
will be referred to in our discussion of the
various questions presented to us for
decision. We take up initially the question
of the appointment of liquidating receivers.
The first ground urged by
plaintiffs is the existence of a deadlock
among the stockholders. Following the filing
of this action, the individual defendants
caused the corporations to enter into an
employment contract with Earle, Jr. At
Earle, Jr.'s insistence, the corporations
also agreed to purchase, at her request, the
stock of his mother, [39 Del.Ch. 252] the
widow of Earle, Sr., deceased. The 25% stock
interest originally the property of Earle,
Sr., thus deserted the plaintiffs Hall and
took the side of the individual defendants.
Howard and Harry thereupon argued that the
stockholders' deadlock had been broken. The
Vice-Chancellor held, however, the
agreements to be invalid and
Page 293
concluded that in equity the stockholders'
deadlock had not been broken. He,
accordingly, ordered a new election which
he, himself, conducted in the guise of
special master.
At the new election a majority of
stock of each of the corporations was voted
for the Howard-Harry slate of directors by
the addition to their one-half interest of
the stock received by Earle, Jr., as an heir
of his father, the Estate of Earle, Sr. in
the interim having been settled and the
assets distributed. The Vice-Chancellor held
that while Earle, Jr.'s employment contract
was invalid, he could nevertheless vote his
stock as he wished irrespective of his
motive in so doing, and that the deadlock
had been broken.
From this ruling the plaintiffs
Hall appealed. Since then, however, Howard
and Harry have personally purchased the
stock inherited by the widow of Earle, Sr.
The question of stockholders' deadlock
therefore, now appears to be moot, since
Howard and Harry now own in their own names
a majority of the stock of the four
corporate defendants. There is, therefore,
nothing for us to consider under this
heading in the light of the present facts.
No receiver may be appointed, therefore,
under 8 Del.C. § 226.
The second ground urged by
plaintiffs for the appointment of a receiver
is alleged mismanagement of the corporate
enterprise by Howard and Harry. The acts of
mismanagement alleged by plaintiffs are the
paying of excessive salaries and incidental
benefits to Howard, Harry and Earle, Jr.;
the refusal to keep proper corporate records
for the inspection of stockholders; the
policy of Howard and Harry to refuse to pay
dividends but to draw profits from the
enterprise solely by the payment of
salaries; the use of corporate money to
bribe Earle, Jr. to support them rather than
the Halls; and the misuse by Howard and
Harry of the proceeds of Dorothy's bonds.
[39 Del.Ch. 253] These
corporations for which plaintiffs ask the
appointment of liquidating receivers are all
solvent. Under some circumstances courts of
equity will appoint liquidating receivers
for solvent corporations, but the power to
do so is always exercised with great
restraint and only upon a showing of gross
mismanagement, positive misconduct by the
corporate officers, breach of trust, or
extreme circumstances showing imminent
danger of great loss to the corporation
which, otherwise, cannot be prevented.
Thoroughgood v. Georgetown Water Co., 9
Del.Ch. 84, 77 A. 720; 43 A.L.R. 242;
Vale v. Atlantic Coast and Inland Corp., 34
Del.Ch. 50, 99 A.2d 396;
Zuchowski v. Boxwood Coal Corp., 33 Del.Ch.
331, 93 A.2d 119. Mere dissension among
corporate stockholders seldom, if ever,
justifies the appointment of a receiver for
a solvent corporation. The minority's remedy
is withdrawal from the corporate enterprise
by the sale of its stock.
Drob v. National Memorial Park, Inc., 28
Del.Ch. 254, 41 A.2d 589.
Plaintiffs rely upon Tansey v.
Oil Producing Royalties, Del.Ch., 133 A.2d
141, in which a receiver was appointed for a
solvent corporation. In that case the proof
was that there had been a substantial
failure of management, the managing officer
had utilized the corporate assets for his
own benefit, and, furthermore, he
contemplated the total abandonment of the
corporate enterprise. It was thus held that
the appointment of a receiver was necessary
to prevent imminent loss to the corporation.
In the case of the corporations
at bar no comparable situation exists. The
corporations are solvent and show annual
profits. The Vice-Chancellor found the fact
to be that they are well and efficiently run
by the present management. The corporate
properties are kept in good
condition--indeed, they are probably in
better condition than when the corporations
commenced operations. We think the proof
supports the Vice-Chancellor's conclusion
Page 294
that there is no showing at all of
mismanagement on the part of officers, the
two individual defendants.
The charge that the defendants
caused the corporations to pay them
excessive salaries and incidental benefits,
and the charge of [39 Del.Ch. 254] bribery
of Earle, Jr. with corporate funds through
the medium of an employment contract, stand
in the present record as unresolved issues,
since the Vice-Chancellor reserved decision
on the points until after a further hearing
to develop the facts necessary to determine
them. Obviously, therefore, it is premature
to ask this court to decide these issues.
Indeed there is nothing in the record which
would enable us to decide them.
With respect to the charge that
inadequate books and records are kept which
prevents the plaintiffs from ascertaining
the value of their shares, it appears that
the record keeping of the companies conforms
to the system initiated at the time when all
of the now divergent owners were working
together harmoniously within the companies.
It further appears that the method of
keeping the books conforms to the
requirements of the Internal Revenue
Service. All of these records are available
for inspection by the plaintiffs and,
apparently, were produced at the hearing
before the Vice-Chancellor. The main
complaint of the plaintiffs under this
heading is that they have been denied the
right to make an independent audit of the
corporations to determine their true value
and earnings. This fact, however, alone,
does not justify the stringent remedy of
receivership.
Lichens Co. v. Standard Commercial Tobacco
Co., 28 Del.Ch. 220, 40 A.2d 447, and
see Paulman v. Kritzer Radiant Coils, Inc.,
Del.Ch., 143 A.2d 272. Furthermore, the
plaintiffs are not seeking an appraisal of
their stock in this proceeding. If the suit
were one to force the payment of dividends
there can be no doubt of the power of the
Court of Chancery to order an audit if one
is required. That is not this case, however.
Plaintiffs also claim that the
policy of Howard and Harry to pay out
profits of the enterprise in the form of
salaries and to refuse to pay any dividends
leave them without remedy, unless a receiver
is appointed. The argument is subject to
several infirmities at this stage of the
proceedings. There is no showing in this
record that during the period the
corporation had any funds available for the
payment of dividends. It is, of course,
axiomatic that dividends may not be paid
absent a legal source for their payment.
Furthermore, one of the factual matters in
dispute is as to the existence of [39
Del.Ch. 255] the non-dividend policy
complained of since Howard and Harry
maintain, at least on the briefs of counsel,
that if earnings justify it, dividends will
be declared.
Furthermore, it certainly is not
without some bearing on the point that
through the medium of the corporations total
tax liabilities of about $550,000 have been
paid. It is true that this liability was
composed of assessments against the Estate
of John S. Isaacs, the children (with the
exception of Dorothy), and the corporations.
While not the obligation directly of the
corporations, the securities transferred to
them from the Isaacs Estate were transferred
subject to a Federal tax lien, and it is
equally true, as found by the
Vice-Chancellor, that Howard and Harry
caused the corporations to pay off the tax
obligations in accordance with their tax
accountant's advice and in the belief that
in so doing they were acting in the best
interests of the enterprise, which, in the
last analysis, meant the four children.
Whether or not it was proper for corporate
funds to be used to pay off the individual
assessments made against Earle, Sr., Howard
and Harry as former partners, on the theory
that such assessments were in reality
partnership obligations, might well be an
issue in an action to compel the payment of
dividends, but it is not an issue in the
present action.
Finally, the Vice-Chancellor has
reserved for further hearing the charge of
excessive
Page 295
payment of salaries and incidental benefits.
This obviously is pertinent to the dividend
payment question. One result of this further
hearing undoubtedly will be to establish the
facts with more preciseness as to moneys
available for the payment of dividends. At
any rate, we think, at least in the light of
this record, that the failure per se to pay
any dividends is not sufficient ground to
cause the Chancellor, in his discretion, to
appoint a receiver.
If the plaintiffs are able to
establish as the fact that money is
available in the corporations which should
be paid out in dividends, and that the
management wilfully refuses to do so in
order to freeze out the minority interest,
then upon such a showing the extraordinary
relief of a direction to management to
declare and pay a dividend might become
available to them. Cf. Dodge v. Ford Motor
Co., 204 [39 Del.Ch. 256] Mich. 459, 170
N.W. 668, 3 A.L.R. 413;
Raynolds v. Diamond Mills Paper Co., 69
N.J.Eq. 299, 60 A. 941; 11 Fletcher,
Cyclopedia Corporations, § 5325. In any
event, however, the refusal to declare
dividends seems not to be ground for the
appointment of liquidating receivers.
The final ground urged for the
appointment of a receiver is the alleged
misuse of Dorothy's bonds without her
consent, to defray a portion of the tax
liability. Whether or not the application of
the proceeds of these bonds to the tax claim
has subjected Howard and Harry to a suit by
Dorothy for misappropriation is one matter,
but, irrespective of that, we do not think,
in view of the Vice-Chancellor's holding of
bona fide purpose, that it is evidence of
mismanagement of the corporations so as to
require the remedy of receivership.
We are of the opinion that the
Vice-Chancellor was correct in refusing to
appoint receivers for these corporations.
We turn now to the claim asserted
by Dorothy for a money judgment against
Howard and Harry for alleged
misappropriation of the proceeds of her
bonds. It will be recalled that upon the
organization of Realty and Cold Storage,
each of the four Isaacs children received,
in addition to their 25% stock interest, two
corporate bonds, totaling approximately
$81,000. These bonds, all are agreed, were
issued on the advice of a tax accountant who
conceived of them as a way to draw from the
corporations money by redeeming the bonds
without subjecting the recipients to an
income tax on a dividends. Dorothy claims
this was the sole purpose of the bonds,
while Howard and Harry contend that a
further purpose existed, viz., to use the
money so drawn off for the discharge of the
tax liability on the Isaacs Estate.
This issue is as yet
undetermined, for the Vice-Chancellor
declined to take jurisdiction since Dorothy
had, and still has pending, an action at law
for this claim. We think, however, that it
was error for the Vice-Chancellor to refuse
to decide the issue and to leave the parties
to retry it at law. We are of this opinion
because of the principle that once equity
acquires jurisdiction over a dispute, [39
Del.Ch. 257] it will proceed to adjudicate
all related matters in order to put the
controversy at rest, even though it would
not have jurisdiction over the particular
matter by way of independent suit.
Scotton v. Wright, 13 Del.Ch. 214, 117 A.
131, affirmed 13 Del.Ch. 402, 121 A. 69,
31 A.L.R. 1162;
Tull v. Turek, Del., 147 A.2d 658. We
think this claim is sufficiently related to
the matter over which Chancery had admitted
jurisdiction as to bring the rule into play.
A mandate will, accordingly,
issue affirming the order of the
Vice-Chancellor appealed from except that
portion refusing to take jurisdiction of the
claim of Dorothy for a money judgment
against Howard and Harry with directions to
finally decide that claim.
This leaves for decision the
cross-appeals seeking reversal of the
Vice-Chancellor's reservation for future
determination of the charge of the excessive
compensation of the officers. The argument
is
Page 296
based upon the Vice-Chancellor's holding
that in so far as the appointment of a
receiver was concerned, he found no
excessive compensation paid to the officers.
From this, the argument is built that he
necessarily, therefore, decided the question
of excessive salary payments complained of.
We have difficulty in following the argument
since the two issues are not necessarily
related. For example, salaries might be
excessive and, at the same time, not an
example of gross abuse by the officers of
their positions of control. In any event, we
are of the opinion that the Vice-Chancellor
has not decided the question.
It is also argued that the salary
payments have been ratified by the
stockholders. It is sought to supplement the
record to show this fact. Although all
parties are apparently agreed that the
record before us may be supplemented, we do
not pass on the propriety of so doing for
the reason that on remand and further
hearing before the Vice-Chancellor the
question of ratification may be presented to
him and decided.
We affirm that portion of the
Vice-Chancellor's order reserving for
further hearing the question of the payment
of excessive compensations.
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