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Page 582
196 A.2d 582
41 Del.Ch. 379
In the Matter of FARM INDUSTRIES,
INC., a Delaware Corporation.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New
Castle County.
Nov. 20, 1963.
Page 583
[41 Del.Ch. 380] Hugh L. Corroon,
of Berl, Potter & Anderson, Wilmington, and
Wesley J. Liebeler, of Carter, Ledyard &
Milburn, of New York City, for petitioners.
Howard L. Williams, of Morris,
James, Hitchens & Williams, Wilmington, for
defendants.
SEITZ, Chancellor:
The petitioner Herman Knaust has
applied for a summary order for the election
of directors of Farm Industries, Inc., a
Delaware corporation. He alleges that he
owns a majority of the outstanding Class A
and Class B common stock of the corporation
and that together with his immediate family
he owns 73% of all the issued and
outstanding stock. He further alleges that
the annual meeting of stockholders which
should have been held, according to the
Page 584
by-laws, on February 15, 1963, has never
been noticed or held.
The defendants, John A. Bouvier,
Jr., Joseph T. Garland, and Morris
Rosenblum, are certain officers and
directors of Farm Industries. They have
filed an answer on behalf of themselves and
the corporation and admit that the annual
meeting has not been held.
They contend, however, by way of
cross-claim against the petitioner and
others, that under the terms of an agreement
dated November 2, 1960, the Class B stock is
entitled to elect five of the nine directors
of the corporation at the annual meeting of
stockholders. They further contend that
under the above agreement of November 2,
1960, which was executed by all the holders
of Class B stock, and also under a Voting
Trust Agreement of August 21, 1961, which
was [41 Del.Ch. 381] entered into by the
petitioner and certain members of his
family, the defendant, John A. Bouvier, Jr.,
is authorized to vote the Class B stock, or
a majority thereof, as the holder of an
irrevocable proxy or as voting trustee. They
pray therefore that the relief requested by
the petitioner be denied and that the court
specifically enforce the obligations of the
petitioner and the members of his family as
aforesaid by compelling such persons to
transfer an irrevocable proxy to Bouvier and
to deposit with him their Class B stock as
voting trustee.
Petitioner replies to the
cross-claim admitting the execution of the
agreement of November 2, 1960 and the Voting
Trust Agreement of August 21, 1961 by
himself and the others involved. He urges,
however, that the cross-claim be dismissed
on the grounds, inter alia, that the
defendants in effect obtained such
agreements by overreaching and later
breached the purported contracts themselves.
He invokes in this regard the equitable
doctrine of unclean hands.
After the petitioner filed his
reply to the cross-claim, the petitioner's
wife, Katherine Knaust, and his sons, Warren
Knaust and H. Karl Knaust, all of whom are
named as defendants therein, submitted
generally to the jurisdiction of this court.
They have joined in the reply to the
cross-claim, and reference hereinafter to
the 'petitioner' shall be deemed to include
all of these persons. Parenthetically, the
Class B stock certificates held by the
members of the Knaust family have been
deposited with the court. Thus, at the
present time all the signatories of the
November 2, 1960 agreement and of the voting
trust agreement of August 21, 1961 are now
before the court as well as the certificates
representing the shares whose voting rights
are in issue.
The background for the issues
presented by the cross-claim and reply are
as follows. Prior to November 1960, Herman
Knaust and his brother, Henry Knaust, owned
all the common stock of two New York
corporations, Knaust Brothers, Inc. and K-B
Products Corp., in equal amounts, except for
a few shares owned by their respective
families. The Knausts were at one time the
world's largest producers of mushrooms.
For reasons which do not appear
in the record, the brothers Herman and Henry
fell into disagreement. Herman was engaged
in the [41 Del.Ch. 382] promotion of Iron
Mountain Atomic Storage Corporation which
was intended to provide storage facilities
on a commercial basis for valuable
documents. Admittedly, the Knausts' mushroom
business had begun to falter financially
although the parties herein are not in
strict agreement as to the cause. In part at
least the decline in the fortunes of Knaust
Brothers and K-B Products has been
attributable to severe competition in the
domestic market by mushrooms imported from
the island of Formosa.
In July of 1960, Herman was
forced to withdraw from the management of
the two mushroom companies at the instance
of certain creditors. Henry, however, signed
an agreement giving Herman an option to
Page 585
buy his fifty per cent interest in the two
companies for $200,000 and certain other
considerations. Herman was required to
agree, however, that if he could not meet
these terms, he would deliver his stock in
trust to Henry. It was at this juncture that
the defendants were invited to join the
Knausts' business venture.
It is apparent from the record
that the mushroom business was in serious
need of working capital. Herman Knaust and
his immediate family, however, not only
could not meet such needs but were not then
in a position to pay to Henry Knaust the
purchase price for his half interest in the
business. Also, Herman Knaust was personally
indebted to the two mushroom companies in
the amount of $300,000 which apparently had
been expended in the organization of Iron
Mountain.
At the recommendation of one of
the defendants, Joseph Garland, who is a
son-in-law of Herman Knaust, John Bouvier
was brought into the Knaust enterprises to
provide managerial skills as well as the
required financial assistance. The outcome
of the negotiations among the interested
parties is evidenced in part by the
agreement of November 2, 1960. Under the
terms of that agreement Herman Knaust and
the members of his family agreed to raise
$125,000 for the purpose of purchasing the
outstanding stock interest of Henry Knaust
in Knaust Brothers and K-B Products. The
balance of $75,000 was to be raised by the
defendants Rosenblum ($50,000) and Bouvier
($25,000). Herman Knaust also agreed to
cause Iron Mountain to secure a loan of
$300,000 to be used by the parties under the
terms of the agreement [41 Del.Ch. 383] to
stabilize the financial condition of the two
mushroom companies. The purchasers were to
share in the stock acquired from Henry
Knaust in proportion to their respective
cash investments. Thus, Rosenblum, for
example, was to have a one-fourth interest
in the purchased stock and a one-eighth
interest in the entire business.
Next, the parties mutually agreed
that they would cause a Delaware corporation
to be formed which would have both Class A
and Class B common stock. Both classes were
to be identical in every respect except that
the Class A would be authorized to elect
four of the proposed board of nine directors
and the Class B to elect five. The parties
further agreed that their Knaust Brothers
and K-B Products shares should be exchanged
share and share alike for the Class A and
Class B stock of the proposed Delaware
corporation when organized.
Herman Knaust further agreed that
he would transfer all his stock in Iron
Mountain to Knaust Brothers in exchange for
the cancellation of his personal
indebtedness to the two mushroom companies
of $300,000 and for a non-interest bearing
note in the amount of $60,000.
Finally, it was provided, inter
alia, that when the Delaware corporation was
organized and the stock issued, all the
holders of the Class B stock would give an
irrevocable proxy to Bouvier to be
surrendered by him only when all the bank
debts of Farm Industries and its
subsidiaries were paid off and other past
due accounts made current. Other provisions
specified the duties attaching to the
various executive positions in the proposed
corporation and designated the particular
office that certain of the parties joining
in such agreement were to hold when the
corporation was duly organized. To the
extent that these provisions become relevant
to the matters in issue discussed later
herein, they are set forth in greater
detail.
Farm Industries was thereafter
duly organized under the laws of this State.
As noted later herein, a technical error was
made in the incorporation process in that
the special voting rights of the two classes
of stock were not set forth in the
certificate of incorporation though
subsequently included in the by-laws.
[41 Del.Ch. 384] Later events may
be described briefly. Bouvier, as provided
by the agreement, became the president of
Farm Industries and its subsidiaries, Knaust
Brothers and K-B Products. Herman Knaust
became chairman
Page 586
of the board though, as agreed, he was also
in charge of the Iron Mountain subsidiary.
In general, Bouvier as president provided
active executive direction to the
corporation while Herman Knaust was its
'elder statesman'. This was so even though
Bouvier was absent in Europe during part of
1961 and only returned in the month of
August. During his absence he corresponded
on a confidential basis with Garland, then
Executive Vice President and later General
Manager, who kept him informed as to the
progress of events. In view of the difficult
financial situation Bouvier's primary task
appears to have been the arranging of loans
sufficient to provide needed working capital
for the mushroom subsidiaries. In order to
secure the necessary funds Bouvier was
obliged to guarantee personally the
repayment of certain substantial obligations
of Farm Industries or its subsidiaries. I
refer particularly to a bank loan of
$500,000 in the spring or summer of 1961
which appears to have led to the execution
of the Voting Trust Agreement in August of
that year.
The downward trend in the
fortunes of the two mushroom companies
continued after the organization of Farm
Industries and the shift in management to
Bouvier and Garland although efforts were
made to increase production and lessen
costs. Dissension began to develop between
the Knausts on the one hand and the Bouvier
group on the other. Largely this resulted
from the fact that the 1960 agreement placed
control of what had been a family business
in the hands of newcomers who sought to
implement policies of their own. The adverse
financial situation obviously aggravated the
difficulties.
Late in August 1961, Garland was
appointed General Manager of the mushroom
operation by Warren Knaust, then Vice
President in charge of production. This in
effect put Garland in control in the
production area. Next, in the summer and
fall of 1961, efforts were made by the
Bouvier group to prevent Herman Knaust from
interfering with the lines of operational
command established by the new management.
Ultimately this led to a request that he
'absent' himself from Farm Industries for
several months. Thereafter, on November [41
Del.Ch. 385] 29, 1961, he was removed as
president of Iron Mountain by the board of
that subsidiary, and Bouvier was elected in
his place. Apart from the changes referred
to above, however, the executive arrangement
remained as set forth in the November 2,
1960 agreement. The financial situation did
not thereafter improve and sometime after
the present suit and a companion suit in New
York were filed, the two mushroom
subsidiaries filed petitions under Chapter
XI of the Bankruptcy Act.
There is no question that a
stockholders' election of directors should
be ordered. The issue presented here is what
the voting rights of the respective parties
will be at such election. Petitioner and the
members of his family contend that the
defendants are not entitled to exercise the
voting rights purportedly vested in them by
the 1960 and 1961 agreements. They claim
that the November 2, 1960 agreement resulted
from bad faith and overreaching on the part
of the defendants, that the defendants
themselves are guilty of breaches of that
agreement, and that the defendants have
abused the position of dominance and control
which that agreement has given them over the
affairs of Farm Industries and its
subsidiaries.
Does the record support these
charges of 'unclean hands'? I turn first to
the contention that the initial agreement
itself was the result of bad faith and
overreaching. The Knausts, in support of
such claim, rely principally on the fact
that Morris Rosenblum, one of the
defendants, acted as attorney for Herman
Knaust in negotiating such agreement. They
point out that by virtue of the agreement
the Knausts surrendered control of the
mushroom companies and also of the valuable
Iron Mountain asset. They further indicate
that
Page 587
Rosenblum became the purchaser of
approximately a one-eighth interest in the
entire enterprise for the sum of $50,000,
which they contend was grossly inadequate,
and that he later became a director and
officer of Farm Industries as a nominee of
Bouvier, the chief beneficiary of the
agreement. Thus, the Knausts urge that the
entire agreement was tainted by the bad
faith of the attorney who allegedly
encouraged the Knausts to execute it and
that the other defendants knowingly
participated therein.
[41 Del.Ch. 386] In my opinion
the record when viewed in proper perspective
does not fairly sustain these contentions.
The dominant factor in the negotiation of
the November 2, 1960 agreement was
undoubtedly the serious financial condition
of the mushroom companies and the inability
of Herman Knaust to provide adequate
financing. Unfortunately the record herein
does not permit a fully detailed description
of the events underlying this transaction.
It appears, however, that in July 1960,
current liabilities of the mushroom
companies exceeded current assets by
$500,000 and that a bank was threatening to
call a demand note involving a total sum of
$280,000. The bank agreed to extend the loan
provided that management of the company was
shifted from Herman to his brother Henry. At
this juncture Herman and Henry executed an
option agreement dated July 14, 1960, by
which Herman was given an option to purchase
Henry's stock for the sum of $200,000,
provided that Herman could secure Henry's
release from all personal obligations for
the debts of the two companies. The
agreement also provided, however, that if
that option was not exercised within one
week, i. e., by July 21, 1960, Herman would
cause his stock to be delivered to Henry in
trust for 20 years which Henry could deal
with, under certain conditions, as his own.
The trust could only be earlier terminated
if the stock or the assets of the companies
were sold, if Herman were to repay his
$300,000 indebtedness to the companies and
arrange for the redemption of about $300,000
of the preferred stock of Iron Mountain held
by such companies, or if Herman within three
years purchased Henry's stock for $200,000
or twice the book value, whichever was
greater, and secured a release of his
liability for the companies' obligations.
The agreement further provided that upon
failure to exercise the option by July 21,
1960, Herman would resign as an officer and
director of the mushroom companies.
Herman Knaust was unable to
exercise the option agreement by July 21,
1960, and thus lost control of his own stock
as well as control of the mushroom
companies. The agreement which brought the
defendants into the enterprise was executed
under these prevailing circumstances.
I think it apparent that under
such circumstances the terms of the November
2, 1960 agreement can hardly be considered
'unfair'. [41 Del.Ch. 387] Rosenblum and
Bouvier invested $75,000 in an enterprise
which seemingly was threatened with
bankruptcy. Neither had any financial stake
in the enterprise up to that time which they
were called upon to protect. With the funds
they provided, Herman Knaust and his family
were able to terminate the trust over his
own stock and buy out Henry's interest. By
the terms of the November 2, 1960 agreement
he and the members of his family were again
permitted to have a voice in management. The
conditions imposed were reasonable, viz.,
that Iron Mountain become a subsidiary of
the mushroom companies (73% of whose stock
would be owned by the Knausts) and that the
defendant Bouvier be permitted to name five
members of the new board of directors.
I am satisfied that there was no
impropriety in Rosenblum's purchase of an
interest in the business himself. There is
nothing to indicate that any unfair
advantage was taken by him by virtue of his
position as Herman Knaust's attorney. I find
that Herman Knaust fully understood the
consequences of the November 2, 1960
agreement with respect to ownership and
control of the Knaust enterprises when he
executed it and conclude that no equitable
grounds
Page 588
appear in that regard for refusing to
enforce it.
Next, I consider petitioner's
claim that the defendants were guilty of
breaches of contract and also abused the
position they obtained by virtue of the
agreement. All these claims are somewhat
interrelated and are perhaps better
understood when viewed against the
background of events that unfolded after the
signing of the November 2, 1960 agreement.
That agreement, as noted before, permitted
Bouvier to name five members of the Board of
Farm Industries. The agreement also
specified how the management of the
corporation was to be organized once the
incorporation process was completed. Herman
Knaust and his sons, Warren and Herman Karl,
were each allotted executive positions, but
the principal posts were given to Bouvier
and Garland.
The obvious result of this
arrangement was that the Knausts were given
only a subordinate position in the direction
of corporate affairs. The new managers set
about instituting what they considered to be
necessary reforms which not unexpectedly met
with a certain amount [41 Del.Ch. 388] of
resistance. This led ultimately, as noted
before, to Garland's appointment as General
Manager of the mushroom operation and Henry
Knausts' replacement by Bouvier as president
of Iron Mountain.
The Knausts claim that the
defendants violated the terms and the spirit
of the 1960 agreement by displacing their
authority within the corporate structure.
They appear to take the position that that
agreement was intended to 'freeze' the
management by forbidding any change in
executive personnel without the consent of
the person involved. While I recognize that
such agreements are frequently executed for
the purpose of assuring a minority
stockholder a voice in the management of the
company, I think that a proper construction
may be achieved only by considering the
circumstances surrounding the execution of
the particular instrument and the actions
sought to be taken thereunder.
I am of the opinion, after
reviewing the record herein, that the
parties executing the November 2, 1960
agreement fully understood that a condition
of Bouvier's joining the enterprise was that
he would have the dominant voice in the
management. By the agreement he undertook
the responsibility of making satisfactory
arrangements with the bank holding the
demand obligation of $200,000. He was given
the power by proxy to name five members of
the board, and his responsibilities as
President were to include, inter alia,
operations and management and banking
relations.
I think it fair to conclude that
one purpose of the 1960 agreement was to
make it certain that while the Knausts would
retain a considerable voice in the affairs
of the enterprise, they could not otherwise
prevent the implementation of new policies
by creating a corporate deadlock.
The alleged breach of contract
upon which the petitioner Herman Knaust
principally relies is the fact that he was
replaced by Bouvier as president of Iron
Mountain. The 1960 agreement states that the
Chairman of the Board of Farm Industries
shall be 'in charge of' Iron Mountain.
Petitioner argues that since by the terms of
that agreement he was to be chairman, it was
improper for him to be replaced[41 Del.Ch.
389] by action of the board of Iron
Mountain, which presumably was dominated by
Bouvier, at a meeting which he did not
attend.
Assuming for the moment, without
deciding, that the agreement had the effect
of assuring Herman Knaust the chairmanship
for an indefinite period of time, was it an
act of bad faith or, more particularly, a
breach of contract for the defendants to
cause him to be removed as president of Iron
Mountain? I note first that the agreement
does not specifically state that the
petitioner shall be 'president' of the
subsidiary. At the time the 1960 agreement
was entered into by the parties, Herman
Knaust owned substantially all the common
stock of Iron Mountain personally although
the
Page 589
mushroom companies held about $300,000 of
preferred stock and a personal obligation in
like amount. As part of the 1960 transaction
the defendants required Iron Mountain to
become a subsidiary of the mushroom
companies in exchange for the cancellation
of the personal obligation and the issuance
to Herman Knaust of a note for $60,000. This
step was undoubtedly intended to substitute
an asset of real value, i. e., the Iron
Mountain property, for an asset of somewhat
dubious value, viz., the unsecured
obligation of Herman Knaust.
While it appears that the parties
intended to make some special arrangement
with respect to the management of Iron
Mountain, I do not think that they intended
to exempt it from the overall scheme of
corporate control envisaged by the 1960
agreement. Thus, I do not think that when
the agreement stated that the chairman
should be 'in charge of' Iron Mountain, that
was meant to imply that a special sphere of
control was cut out for that particular
subsidiary. Of the three operating companies
only Iron Mountain appears to have been
operating 'in the black' at the time Farm
Industries was formed. If the defendants
were incapable of implementing their
policies with respect to that subsidiary,
then the security which they purported to
provide for themselves under the agreement
would have been of a most dubious quality.
I am persuaded that as fairly
read, the agreement merely provided that the
chairman should have general oversight with
respect to the policies of Iron Mountain.
Active management I think was intended to be
geared to the other provisions of the
agreement which [41 Del.Ch. 390] placed the
responsibility for such matters in other
hands. Moreover, I believe that this view
comports with the parties' own understanding
of the matter. When the climactic dispute
arose between Herman Knaust and the Bouvier
group with respect to the implementation of
certain policies, Knaust was asked to absent
himself for several months from the company.
Initially he agreed, but after one month
unexpectedly returned from a trip to Europe.
Thereupon, the board of Iron Mountain voted
to replace him, both his sons concurring
therein. I am of the opinion that under the
circumstances the replacement of Herman
Knaust by Bouvier was a reasonable exercise
of powers which were implicit within the
agreement itself, an adequate showing having
been made for the necessity of such removal.
Thus, I conclude that no breach of contract
was there involved.
Claims of a similar nature were
made with respect to Herman's sons, Warren
Knaust and H. Karl Knaust. I find such
claims to be without merit on the present
record.
Petitioner also contends herein
that the so-called management provision is
invalid because it tends to limit the
discretion of the corporate directors. He
further contends that such provision is not
severable from the rest of the terms of the
agreement and thus that the entire agreement
must fall. Petitioner in effect is arguing
that by the agreement the parties intended
to preclude the boards of directors from
replacing those named initially to the
various corporate offices. He admits that
such a construction only arises by
implication. Since the adoption of that
implication would, according to petitioner,
result in a finding of complete invalidity,
the court believes that a more reasonable
finding is that the parties did not so
intend. Certainly, if reasonably possible,
the court should adopt a construction which
would uphold an agreement rather than one
which would invalidate it. My finding here,
moreover, is supported by the by-laws of
Farm Industries which clearly vest the board
with the power to elect officers and fix
their compensation.
Next, I turn briefly to a claim
of selfdealing asserted against Bouvier
concerning the sale and leaseback to a
separate corporation controlled by Bouvier
of certain facilities belonging to Knaust
Brothers. It is said that Bouvier improperly
received, directly or [41 Del.Ch. 391]
indirectly, interest in the amount
Page 590
of 12%. Petitioner claims that this and
other actions of Bouvier indicate a misuse
of the position of dominance and control
given him by the agreements in issue. Thus,
petitioner contends that the court should
refuse to grant Bouvier and the other
defendants any relief with respect to such
agreements.
It is settled law in Delaware
that relief may be barred by the doctrine of
unclean hands only by reason of some conduct
relating directly to the matter in
controversy.
Walter v. Walter, 36 Del.Ch. 280, 129 A.2d
253. Since none of the claims with which
we are now concerned have any relation to
the formation of the agreements in issue or
to purported breaches thereof, I am of the
opinion that that doctrine may not be
invoked so as to deny relief. That is not to
say of course that petitioner may not
otherwise assert these claims as the basis
of an independent action against the
defendants, if so desired.
Other issues raised by the
petitioner have been considered and resolved
in a manner consistent with the conclusions
herein reached. It follows from the
foregoing that the defendants are not
chargeable with unclean hands on any score
with regard to the agreements in issue.
Petitioner contends, however,
that even if the agreements involved were
validly executed and are otherwise free of
fault, they cannot be enforced herein as a
matter of law. As to the November 2, 1960
agreement, petitioner says that the proxies
contemplated by such agreement would not
have been 'irrevocable' if in fact
transferred to Bouvier and, if irrevocable,
they would have amounted to an illegal
voting trust. Next, as to the Voting Trust
Agreement, petitioner urges that since none
of the formal steps allegedly prescribed by
8 Del.C. § 218 for the effective creation of
a voting trust were ever carried out, that
purported trust must fail.
Petitioner urges one further
matter of defense. He points out that the
purported effect of both these agreements
was to give Bouvier control of the board of
Farm Industries by virtue of the assumed
power of the Class B stock to elect five of
the nine corporate directors. He now takes
the position that 8 Del.C. § 102 and 8
Del.C. § 151 impose a mandatory requirement
that such voting rights, in order to [41
Del.Ch. 392] exist, must be set forth in the
certificate of incorporation. Admittedly,
while both Class A and Class B stock are
authorized by the certificate of Farm
Industries, nothing appears therein as to
the respective voting rights of these
classes. Article 6, Section 1 of the
corporate by-laws, which were later adopted,
does in fact set forth such rights. No
action was ever taken to amend the
certificate so as to include the pertinent
terms. Thus, petitioner contends that all
the common stock of both classes are
entitled to an equal vote, share for share,
in matters involving a vote of the
stockholders.
Section 212 of the Delaware
Corporation Law states:
'Unless otherwise provided in the
certificate of incorporation, each
stockholder shall at every meeting of the
stockholders be entitled to one vote in
person or by proxy for each share of the
capital stock held by such stockholder, * *
*'.
The defendants tacitly concede
that §§ 102 and 151 govern the existence of
the voting rights which they are here
seeking to establish and that such
provisions in substance require that the
voting rights and powers of corporate stock
be set forth in the certificate. Thus,
defendants do not contend that they have in
fact complied with the statute. Rather they
urge that the court may implement the
November 2, 1960 agreement by permitting the
parties to vote as if the necessary voting
provision had in fact been included in the
certificate.
It is not necessary to consider
this most doubtful 'as if' proposition
because of my decision on the request
specifically to enforce the 1960 and 1961
agreements.
Page 591
Assuming that under the present
certificate each share of both the A and B
is entitled to vote for all nine directors,
can it be said to reflect a failure to
implement the intentions of the parties as
expressed in the November 2, 1960 agreement?
It is apparent from a reading of such
agreement that the parties did not specify
or even consider the location of the voting
rights provision in any particular legal
instrument. Obviously they intended that
that provision should be made legally
effective since it was one of the keystones
of the parties' agreement. The record shows
that the failure to include the voting [41
Del.Ch. 393] rights provision in the
certificate resulted from an omission on the
part of the attorney who handled the
incorporation process. Accordingly, the
defendants here take the position that the
court may grant such equitable relief as
will rectify the error that was
inadvertently made.
I pause to note that the
situation present here is significantly
different from that
Gaskill v. Gladys Belle Oil Co., 16 Del.Ch.
289, 146 A. 337. There certain
preferences were set forth in the
certificate of incorporation at the time of
incorporation which the parties subsequently
attempted to change by means of a by-law.
Since as a practical matter the certificate
alone would have had the status of a public
record, later purchasers of the common could
undoubtedly have been misled by the fact
that the preferences of the preferred stock
set forth in such certificate had been
considerably enlarged by the later by-law.
There is nothing in the opinion of the then
Chancellor to indicate that the common and
preferred stockholders at the time of
dissolution were the same persons who had
earlier approved the by-law enlarging the
preferences.
One further point in that case I
think is of some significance. The
stockholders who approved the by-law in the
Gladys Belle Oil case understood that it was
a by-law they were passing. They expressly
provided that the by-law involved should
have the same force and effect as if it were
in fact a part of the certificate of
incorporation. Thus, they intended to
effectuate their purpose by a particular
legal device or instrument. Here it can
fairly be said that the parties merely
intended that the attorney in charge of the
incorporation process select any device
prescribed by law for making the voting
provision effective and that they were
otherwise wholly indifferent as to the
particular device to be used.
Brooks
v. State, 3 Boyce 1, 26 Del. 1, 79 A. 790,
51 L.R.A.,N.S., 1126, and
Standard Scale and Supply v. Chappel, 16
Del.Ch. 331, 141 A. 191, which were
cited by the Chancellor in Gladys Belle Oil,
are also I believe readily distinguishable
from the present case.
In the Brooks case the
corporation in question attempted to create
a class of nonvoting preferred stock in its
charter under the authority [41 Del.Ch. 394]
of the General Corporation Law in effect at
the time of its incorporation. The Supreme
Court there held that the statutory
provision relied upon by the incorporators
violated Article 9, Section 6 of the
Constitution of 1897, Del.C.Ann. which was
construed as requiring that each share of
stock of a Delaware corporation have one
vote. The court further held that the right
to vote attached to the share of stock
itself and could not be eliminated by any
form of waiver on the part of the holder.
Thus, the Brooks case differs substantially
from the present case in that the action
sought to be taken there could not lawfully
have been accomplished regardless of the
'form' which the parties chose for adjusting
the voting rights of the preferred stock.
In Standard Scale & Supply Corp.
v. Chappel, cited above, the court held that
a restriction printed on a stock
certificate, which purported to restrict the
right to vote the shares represented thereby
under certain conditions, could not be
enforced against a purchaser of the stock
where there was no authority for the
restriction in the corporation's certificate
or by-laws and the holder was not a party to
any
Page 592
agreement with respect to such stock,
assuming any such agreement existed. The
court noted therein that the printed
restriction did not by its terms bar the
right to vote in all cases and also that the
purchaser's predecessor had in fact voted
the shares though his stock certificate had
contained the same voting limitations on its
face. The circumstances presented by that
case I think also differ substantially from
those in the case now before the court.
May the court order the
certificate of incorporation of Farm
Industries to be reformed so as to reflect
the agreement of the parties with respect to
the voting rights of the Class A and Class B
stock, the stock still being held by the
parties to the agreement and no third-party
interest being involved? While no Delaware
case has been found where such relief has
been granted under any circumstances, the
power of a court of equity to grant such
relief has nowhere been denied.
The case of
Millspaugh v. Cassedy, 191 App.Div. 221, 181
N.Y.S. 276, is very persuasive here. The
certificate of incorporation of the company
there involved authorized the issuance of
both common and preferred stock. The voting
rights of these classes were not further [41
Del.Ch. 395] delineated in the certificate.
At the first meeting of the incorporators,
however, a by-law was adopted which
purported to disfranchise the preferred
stock.
The lower court found that it was
the intention and purpose of the
incorporators that the preferred stock
should have no voting power and that the
sole voting power should be vested in the
common stock of the company. Furthermore,
the court found that the attorney who
prepared the certificate of incorporation
was advised of the intention of the
incorporators and was directed to prepare
the papers to effectuate such intention. The
court also found that the attorney in
attempting to carry out the direction of the
incorporators prepared the by-law involved
but failed to insert the provision in the
certificate of incorporation. The by-laws
were thereafter unanimously adopted at the
first meeting of the incorporators which was
held under the supervision of the attorney,
and the trial judge found that it was the
intention of the attorney and the
stockholders present at the meeting,
representing all the capital stock of the
company, that the preferred stock should
have no voting power.
The appellate court held (181
N.Y.S. 276) that although the preferred
stockholders had acted in accordance with
the purported limitation on their voting
rights for a period of twenty years, the
by-law was legally ineffective to accomplish
the purpose which the incorporators had
sought to achieve. The court concluded,
however, that the omission in the
certificate was the result of a mutual
mistake of the parties and could be
rectified by a decree ordering the
certificate to be reformed in accordance
with the intentions of the parties. Thus, it
affirmed the decision below.
Under the circumstances present
here I am satisfied that the failure to
delineate the voting rights of the Class A
and Class B stock in the certificate of
incorporation resulted in an instrument
which in its legal effect does not truly
express the intentions of the parties. This
situation, which amounts to mutual mistake,
provides, in my opinion a legally sufficient
basis for causing the certificate to be
reformed so as to reflect their intentions.
It follows therefore that, assuming the
agreement of November 2, 1960 is otherwise
legally enforceable,[41 Del.Ch. 396] it
should be reformed by appropriate action to
reflect the true intent of the parties.
Petitioner next says that the
voting trust agreement of August 21, 1961,
is wholly void and of no effect because the
parties never took the steps prescribed by 8
Del.C. § 218 to implement the trust
formally. Petitioner thus contends that the
court may not specifically enforce that
agreement under the governing Delaware
precedents. He does not dispute that the
agreement is supported by adequate
consideration nor does he suggest that the
voting trust contemplated
Page 593
by the agreement would be defective if the
parties had taken appropriate steps to carry
such agreement into effect by depositing
their shares, etc.
Apart from the equitable defense
of unclean hands, which has already been
considered, petitioner offers no sound
reason why the voting trust agreement may
not be specifically enforced. The Delaware
cases cited by the petitioner, while
undoubtedly upholding the view that the
provisions of § 218 are mandatory, do not
suggest that a voting trust agreement which
otherwise contemplates full compliance with
the terms of the statute may not be
specifically enforced at the instance of a
party thereto, especially where as here,
there is no third-party interest involved.
Abercrombie
v. Davies, 36 Del.Ch. 371, 130 A.2d 338,
reversing 35 Del.Ch. 599, 123 A.2d 893, the
Supreme Court held that an Agents' Agreement
there in issue constituted an illegal voting
trust and thus was void in its entirety.
While the agreement contemplated a
conversion of the 'agency' arrangement into
a formal voting trust under certain
circumstances, this court, on remand (36
Del.Ch. 445, 131 A.2d 822), held that the
effect of the Supreme Court's decision was
to terminate any obligation of the parties
under such agreement. Thus, there was no
legally subsisting agreement to support
judicial enforcement of the conversion
provision. The court also held that the
deficiencies in the agreement could not be
cured by taking steps to meet the
requirements of the voting trust statute
since such steps had not been part of the
agreement of the parties.
[41 Del.Ch. 397] In other
instances where judicial enforcement of a
voting trust agreement was refused, the
court found that the agreement of the
parties envisioned action in violation of
the mandatory provisions of the voting trust
statute.
Perry v. Missouri-Kansas Pipe Line Co., 22
Del.Ch. 33, 191 A. 823, the court
refused to enforce an agreement which
contemplated a voting trust of eleven years
duration.
Appon v. Belle Isle Corporation, 29 Del.Ch.
122, 46 A.2d 749; aff'd. 29 Del.Ch. 554,
49 A.2d 1, this court held that a purported
extension of a voting trust agreement which
was executed more than one year prior to the
terminal date of the trust was a nullity
since it did not conform with the
requirements of the statute.
In re Chilson, 19 Del.Ch. 398, 168 A. 82,
the court held a voting trust agreement
invalid because the parties had agreed
thereunder that their original stock
certificates should be returned to them,
rather than voting trust certificates, after
the initial transfer to the trustees.
Smith
v. Biggs Boiler Works Co., 32 Del.Ch. 147,
82 A.2d 372, it was held that a voting
trust agreement could not be enforced where
the parties thereto contemplated the
establishment of a present trust, but the
certificates which were to constitute the
res were held in escrow by a third party
upon conditions which might never be
fulfilled.
Here, the agreement of the
parties does not envision any action not in
conformity with the terms of the voting
trust statute, nor is there any circumstance
precluding the establishment of a present
trust as contemplated by such agreement.
Although no attempt was made to comply with
the statutory provisions concerning the
filing of a copy of the agreement until this
action was filed, there is no showing of any
intention on defendants' part to abandon the
agreement. Intervening rights of third
persons are not involved, and there has been
no change of position on the part of the
petitioner or the other concerned parties in
reliance on any supposed abandonment.
Hirschwald v. Erlebacher, Inc., 27 Del.Ch.
180, 33 A.2d 148, aff'd on opinion
below, 27 Del.Ch. 343, 36 A.2d 167. I
conclude therefore that the voting trust
agreement of August 21, 1961 should be
specifically enforced.
Next, I turn briefly to the
provision of the agreement of November 2,
1960 by which all the holders of Class B
stock agreed to deliver [41 Del.Ch. 398] an
'irrevocable proxy' to Bouvier to vote such
stock until such time
Page 594
as the bank debts of Farm Industries and its
subsidiaries were paid off and all past due
accounts made current. The defendants seek
specific performance with respect to that
provision.
The defendant Bouvier, as voting
trustee, will have absolute voting control
of the Class B stock. What the relationship
would be between Bouvier's status as the
holder of an irrevocable proxy and his
status as voting trustee is not entirely
clear. In any event the defendants have not
briefed the serious issue as to the
enforceability of the provision for the
creation of a proxy. Therefore, unless
defendants desire to press the matter, the
court will assume that defendants are
content with the relief granted herein.
The order to be entered hereon
will provide the mechanics for first
implementing the reformation and specific
performance aspects of this matter including
a provision directing the depositing
stockholders either to endorse the
certificates or to execute blank stock
powers. It will next direct the holding of a
stockholders' meeting to elect directors.
Present order on notice.
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