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Page 569
183 A.2d 569
40 Del.Ch. 389
Jocob S. RICHMAN, Plaintiff,
v.
DeVAL AERODYNAMICS, INC., a Delaware
corporation, John A.
Baldinger, Joseph F. Carrasco, Edward
Sawyer,
George R. Eulo and John Bello, Defendants.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New
Castle County.
Aug. 3, 1962.
[40 Del.Ch. 390] Irving Morris,
of Cohen & Morris, Wilmington, for
plaintiff.
Clair John Killoran, of Killoran
& Van-Brunt, Wilmington, and Frank B.
Murdoch, of Schnader, Harrison, Segal &
Lewis, Philadelphia, Pa., for appearing
defendants.
SEITZ, Chancellor.
Plaintiff, stockholder of DeVal
Aerodynamics, Inc. ('DeVal'), brought this
action against DeVal and the five individual
defendants who constitute its entire board
of directors. All the defendants except Eulo
answered the complaint. This is the decision
after final hearing on plaintiff's prayer
for a mandatory injunction to compel the
corporation to call a special meeting of the
stockholders under the pertinent by-law. The
parties have agreed that there is no issue
as to this court's jurisdiction.
On May 29, 1962, plaintiff
delivered to DeVal's president a written
request ('Request') for a special meeting of
the stockholders of DeVal. It was
purportedly signed by the owners of a
majority in amount of its outstanding stock,
as required
Page 570
by the by-law. The president, in effect,
refused to honor the Request and this action
followed.
The first two issues posed
involve a question as to whether the
requisite number of shares were represented
in the Request for the call of the special
meeting.
I first consider the shares
listed on the Request in the name of Herbert
A. Johnson, partner for Johnson Engineering
Co. Defendants say they could not be counted
for purposes of ascertaining the total
number of shares because that stockholder
signed at a date when [40 Del.Ch. 391] he
was not the registered owner. Admittedly, he
was the registered owner at the time the
Request was delivered to the corporation. In
the margin next to the Johnson signature
appears the date '5/16/62'. There is nothing
at the top of the margin to indicate what
the date is supposed to signify but I think,
in the setting, the corporate officials
reasonably assumed that the date was the
date that the stockholders signed the
Request. However, the uncontradicted
testimony was that the date was in fact
inserted by plaintiff later and was
erroneous; that the date of the actual
signing was some days later than the date
inserted and at a date subsequent to a time
when the partnership became a registered
shareholder. Because of my subsequent
determination I need not evaluate this
evidence.
Was DeVal required to count
Johnson Engineering Company in determining
whether the holders of the requisite number
of shares had demanded a stockholders'
meeting under the by-law? The pertinent
by-law is as follows:
'Article II. Section 5. Special meetings
of the stockholders, for any purpose or
purposes, unless otherwise presecribed by
statute or by the certificate of
incorporation, may be called by the
president and shall be called by the
president or secretary at the request in
writing of a majority of the board of
directors, or at the request in writing of
stockholders owning a majority in amount of
the entire capital stock of the corporation
issued and outstanding and entitled to vote.
Such request shall state the purpose or
purposes of the proposed meeting.'
The language of the by-law does
not explicitly deal with the present issue.
In arriving at a practical rule to govern
this type of situation the court turns to a
consideration of the purpose behind such a
by-law provision. It would seem that it
exists primarily to give the stockholders
the right to take certain action when they
are dissatisfied with the current management
or when the current management will not
honor their wishes. While the by-law deals
with the calling of a special meeting, it is
but the necessary preliminary to the more
important objective, i. e., voting on
particular matters of concern or interest at
the meeting duly called. Consequently, the
primary emphasis is on the right of the
stockholders to vote. This [40 Del.Ch. 392]
in turn suggests that the corporation's
interest should be directed to ascertaining
whether those signing such requests are
stockholders entitled to vote. Certainly
they would have to be registered
stockholders at the time the Request was
delivered to the corporation, whether or not
they were such before that time. Thus, as a
convenient matter the corporation could
check its records at the date the Request is
received to ascertain whether or not those
signing were then entitled to vote and thus
presumably entitled to vote when the meeting
is held. It is of no meaningful concern to
the corporation whether the stockholders
were or were not registered at some earlier
date.
I therefore conclude that in
applying this particular by-law DeVal was
governed by the date of delivery of the
Request. Thus, the Johnson Engineering
Company shares which were then registered on
the corporate books should have been
included in the total of those requesting a
stockholders' meeting.
I next consider defendants'
contention that DeVal had the right to
refuse to count
Page 571
the Russo shares in computing the number of
shares involved in the Request. The basis of
the corporation's refusal was that the
ownership of such shares was undetermined
and under the controlling by-law the
corporation was required to apply the
ownership test.
What are the facts? Russo entered
into a contract to sell the shares which are
still registered in his name. Under the
agreement, part of the consideration for the
shares was paid and the certificates were
put in escrow pending payment of the
balance. The purchaser was given an
irrevocable proxy for a term. The term
expired before the date of the serving of
the Request here involved. The purchaser did
not make the required payment of the
balance. Rather, he brought suit in New York
to rescind the transaction on the ground of
fraud. That issue has not yet been tried.
This information was known to DeVal.
We have then a situation where
the Request was signed by the registered
owner. Admittedly, the other party to the
contract of sale, aware of the Request and
aware of this action, has not made any
demand on DeVal as to this matter. The
question then is [40 Del.Ch. 393] whether,
in this circumstance, the corporation has
any standing to raise the ownership issue
and to insist that such shares cannot be
counted for present purposes until the
matter is finally decided in New York.
There is much learning in the
books concerning the relationship between
stockholders and the corporation and the
relationship between stockholders. A
discussion of many of these problems may be
found
In re Giant Portland Cement Co., 26 Del.Ch.
32, 21 A.2d 697. The general purport of
the Giant Portland case is that absent some
legal action by the alleged beneficial
owner, the corporation is generally bound to
recognize and give effect to the action of
the registered owner. But the defendants say
that the by-law requires that the demand be
by the owners. By this they presumably mean
that when the registered owner and the
beneficial owner are different, the demand
must be made by the beneficial owner. If
that is in doubt, no one votes until that
doubt is resolved, regardless of the
attitudes of those parties. Defendants point
to the fact that in other portions of the
by-laws there is specific reference to
registered owner. By not using such
terminology in Section 5, defendants
conclude that the distinction for which they
contend was intended. Plaintiff argues that
in the overall context it must mean
registered owner.
One immediately observes the
difficulty of adopting the construction for
which the defendants contend. For example,
would they honor a request in writing by a
stockholder who claimed he was the real
owner even though not registered on the
corporate books? It is hard to imagine that
such a course of conduct would be adopted.
Certainly such a person could not vote at
the subsequent meeting without becoming the
registered stockholder or obtaining a proxy.
It would not seem reasonable to suppose that
it was intended to permit the corporation to
go beyond its stock ledger.
In re Canal Construction Co., 21 Del.Ch.
155, 182 A. 545, 548. Moreover, the
following by-law of DeVal (Art. VI, Sec. 6)
adds weight to my construction of Section 5:
'Section 6. The corporation shall be
entitled to recognize the exclusive right of
a person registered on its books as the
owner of shares to receive dividends and to
vote as such owner, [40 Del.Ch. 394] and to
hold liable for calls and assessments a
person registered on its books as the owner
of shares, and shall not be bound to
recognize any equitable or other claim to or
interest in such share or shares on the part
of any other person, whether or not it shall
have express or other notice thereof, except
as otherwise provided by the laws of
Delaware.'
I therefore conclude that the
corporation was bound to recognize the
registered
Page 572
owner for purposes of implementing Article
II, Section 5 of the by-law. I am not called
upon to determine whether in an appropriate
proceeding, the action taken upon the
Request or at the stockholders' meeting
would be subject to challenge either by the
corporation or by a person claiming rights
superior to the registered owner. It
therefore follows that the Russo shares
should have been counted in considering the
Request.
In view of the two conclusions
reached above, I decide that the Request for
the special meeting of stockholders was made
by the holders of the required number of
shares. The president should have called the
meeting requested and a mandatory injunction
compelling him to do so will be entered.
Finally, I consider the propriety
of noticing for consideration at the special
meeting an amendment to the by-laws
conferring upon the stockholders the power:
1) to increase the number of directorships
and 2) to fill vacancies and newly created
directorships.
The Request states that the
meeting is to be called, inter alia, for the
following purposes:
'1. To consider an amendment to the
By-Laws of the Corporation by amending
Article III, Section 1, to provide that the
Board of Directors shall not be less than
six nor more than nineteen, and that the
number of Directors shall be determined, in
addition to existing methods, by the
stockholders at a special meeting; and
'2. To consider an amendment to the
By-Laws of the Corporation by amending
Article III, Section 2, to provide that [40
Del.Ch. 395] vacancies and newly created
directorships resulting from any increase in
the authorized number of Directors may be
filled, in addition to existing methods, by
a majority of stockholders at a special
meeting; and'
Defendants say the stockholders
cannot amend the by-laws to give the
stockholders the exclusive right to create
additional directors and elect them without
first amending the Certificate of
Incorporation. Plaintiff says it does not
desire to vote to make the by-law exclusive.
The language in the Request bears out the
plaintiff's statement. Since defendants
tacitly concede that the stockholders have
the power here to amend the by-laws to add
this additional method of director creation
and election, no decision would seem to be
required. The Request will be considered
proper as stated by plaintiff.
Present order on notice.
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