| Page 437 285 A.2d 437  Andrew H. SCHNELL, Jr. and Jack
Safer, Plaintiffs Below, Appellants,
v.
CHRIS-CRAFT INDUSTRIES, INC., a Delaware
corporation,
Defendant Below, Appellee. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Nov. 29, 1971. H. Albert Young and Edward B.
Maxwell, 2nd, of Young, Conaway, Stargatt &
Taylor, Wilmington, and Carl F. Goodman, New
York City, and Jay L. Westbrook, of Surrey,
Karasik & Greene, Washington, D.C., for
plaintiffs below, appellants.
David F. Anderson and Charles S.
Crompton, Jr., of Potter, Anderson &
Corroon, Wilmington, and Arthur L. Linman
and Daniel P. Levitt, of Paul, Weiss,
Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, New York City,
and Washington, D.C., for defendant below,
appellee.
Before WOLCOTT, Chief Justice,
and CAREY and HERRMANN, Associate Justices:
HERRMANN, Justice (for the
majority of the Court):
This is an appeal from the denial
by the Court of Chancery of the petition of
dissident stockholders for injunctive relief
to prevent management
*
from advancing the date of the annual
stockholders' meeting from January 11, 1972,
as previously set by the by-laws, to
December 8, 1981.
The opinion below is reported at
285 A.2d 430. This opinion is confined to
the frame of reference of the opinion below
for the sake of brevity and because of the
strictures of time imposed by the
circumstances of the case.
It will be seen that the Chancery
Court considered all of the reasons stated
by management as business reasons for
changing the date of the meeting; but that
those reasons were rejected by the Court
below in making the following findings:
"I am satisfied, however, in a situation
in which present management has
disingenuously resisted the production of a
list of its stockholders to plaintiffs or
their confederates and has otherwise turned
a deaf ear to plaintiffs' demands about a
change in management designed to lift
defendant from its present business
Page 439 doldrums, management has seized on a
relatively new section of the Delaware
Corporation Law for the purpose of cutting
down on the amount of time which would
otherwise have been available to plaintiffs
and others for the waging of a proxy battle.
Management thus enlarged the scope of its
scheduled October 18 directors' meeting to
include the by-law amendment in controversy
after the stockholders committee had filed
with the S.E.C. its intention towage a proxy
fight on October 16.
''Thus plaintiffs reasonably contend that
because of the tactics employed by
management (which involve the hiring of two
established proxy solicitors as well as a
refusal to produce a list of its
stockholders, coupled with its use of an
amendment to the Delaware Corporation Law to
limit the time for contest), they are given
little chance, because of the exigencies of
time, including that required to clear
material at the S.E.C., to wage a successful
proxy fight between now and December 8. * *
*."
In our view, those conclusions
amount to a finding that management has
attempted to utilize the corporate machinery
and the Delaware Law for the purpose of
perpetuating itself in office; and, to tht
end, for the purpose of obstructing the
legitimate efforts of dissident stockholders
in the exercise of their rights to undertake
a proxy contest against management. These
are inequitable purposes, contrary to
established principles of corporate
democracy. The advancement by directors of
the by-law date of a stockholders' meeting,
for such purposes, may not be permitted to
stand. Compare Condec Corporation v.
Lunkenheimer Company, Del.Ch.,
230 A.2d 769
(1967).
When the by-laws of a corporation
designate the date of the annual meeting of
stockholders, it is to be expected that
those who intend to contest the reelection
of incumbent management will gear their
campaign to the by-law date. It is not to be
expected that management will attempt to
advance the date in order to obtain an
inequitable advantage in the contest.
Management contends that it has
complied strictly with the provisions of the
new Delaware Corporation Law in changing the
by-law date. The answer to that contention,
of course, is that inequitable action does
not become permissible simply because it is
legally possible.
Management relies upon
American Hardware Corp. v. Savage Arms
Corp., 37 Del.Ch. 10, 135 A.2d 725,
aff'd 37 Del.Ch. 59,
136 A.2d 690 (1957).
The case is inapposite for two reasons: It
involved an effort by stockholders, engaged
in a proxy contest, to have the
stockholders' meeting adjourned and the
period for the proxy contest enlarged; and
there was no finding there of inequitable
action on the part of management. We agree
with the rule of American Hardware that, in
the absence of fraud or inequitable conduct,
the date for a stockholders' meeting and
notice thereof, duly established under the
by-laws, will not be enlarged by judicial
interference at the request of dissident
stockholders solely because of the
circumstance of a proxy contest. That, of
course, is not the case before us.
We are unable to agree with the
conclusion of the Chancery court that the
stockholders' application for injunctive
relief here was tardy and came too late. The
stockholders' learned of the action of
management unofficially on Wednesday,
October 27, 1971; they filed this action on
Monday 27, 1971; they filed this action on
Monday, November 1, 1971. Until management
changed the date of the meeting, the
stockholders had no need of judicial
assistance in that connection. There is no
indication of any prior warning of
management's intent to take such action;
indeed, it appears that an attempt was made
by management to conceal its action as long
as possible. Moreover, stockholders may not
be charged with the duty of anticipating
inequitable action by management, and of
seeking anticipatory injunctive relief to
foreclose such action, simply because the
Page 440 new Delaware Corporation Law makes such
inequitable action legally possible.
Accordingly, the judgment below
must be reversed and the cause remanded,with
instruction to nullify the December 8 date
as a meeting date for stockholders; to
reinstate January 11, 1972 as the sole date
of the next annual meeting of the
stockholders of the corporation; and to take
such other proceedings and action as may be
consistent herewith regarding the stock
record closing date and any other related
matters.
WOLCOTT, Chief Justice
(dissenting):
I do not agree with the majority
of the Court in its disposition of this
appeal. The plaintiff stockholders concerned
in this litigation have, for a considerable
period of time, sought to obtain control of
the defendant corporation. These attempts
took various forms.
In view of the length of time
leading up to the immediate events which
caused the filing of this action, I agree
with the Vice Chancellor that the
application for injunctive relief came too
late.
I would affirm the judgment below
on the basis of the Vice Chancellor's
opinion.
* We use this word as meaning "managing
directors". |