| Page 400 535 A.2d 400  56 USLW 2406 Georges MARCIANO, Maurice Marciano,
Armand Marciano, and
Paul Marciano, Plaintiffs Below, Appellants,
v.
Joe NAKASH, Ralph Nakash, Avi Nakash and
Gasoline, Ltd., a
Delaware corporation, Defendants Below,
Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: July 7, 1987.
Decided: Dec., 23, 1987. William O. LaMotte, III (argued),
Thomas C. Grimm and Leone L. Ciporin of
Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,
Wilmington, and Marshall B. Grossman, Robert
A. Shlachter and John A. Schwimmer of
Alschuler, Grossman & Pines, Los Angeles,
Cal., Of Counsel, for appellants.
Joseph A. Rosenthal (argued) of
Morris, Rosenthal, Monhait & Gross,
Wilmington, and Blank, Rome, Comisky &
McCauley, Philadelphia, Pa., of counsel, for
appellees.
Before HORSEY, MOORE and WALSH,
JJ.
WALSH, Justice.
This is an appeal from a decision
of the Court of Chancery which validated a
claim in liquidation of Gasoline, Ltd.
("Gasoline"), a Delaware corporation, placed
in custodial status pursuant to 8 Del.C. §
226 by reason of a deadlock among its board
of directors. Fifty percent of Gasoline is
owned by Ari, Joe, and Ralph Nakash (the
"Nakashes") and fifty percent by Georges,
Maurice, Armand and Paul Marciano (the
"Marcianos"). The Vice Chancellor ruled that
$2.5 million in loans made by the Nakashes
faction to Gasoline were valid and
enforceable debts of the corporation,
notwithstanding their origin in self-dealing
transactions. The Marcianos argue that the
disputed debt is voidable as a matter of law
but, in any event, the Nakashes failed to
meet their burden of establishing full
fairness. We conclude that the Vice
Chancellor applied the proper standard for
review of self-dealing transactions and the
finding of full fairness is supported by the
record. Accordingly, we affirm.
I
The factual basis underlying the
contested loans was fully developed in the
Court of Chancery. The liquidation
proceeding marked the end of a joint venture
launched in 1984 by the Marcianos and the
Nakashes to market designer jeans and
sportswear. Through a solely owned
corporation called Guess? Inc. ("Guess"),
the California based Marcianos had been
engaged in the design and distribution of
stylized jeans for several years. In 1983
they decided to form a separate division to
market copies of Guess creations in a
broader retail market. In order to secure
financing and broaden market exposure the
Marcianos entered into negotiations with the
New York based Nakash brothers, the owners
of Jordache Enterprises, Inc. a leading
manufacturer of jeans. Ultimately, it was
agreed that the Nakashes would receive fifty
percent of the stock of Guess for a
consideration of $4.7 million. As a result,
the three Nakash brothers joined three of
the Marcianos on the Guess board of
directors.
Similarly, when Gasoline was
formed, stock ownership and board
composition was shared equally by the two
families. Although corporate control and
direction were equally divided, from an
operational standpoint Gasoline functioned
in New York under the Nakashes' operational
guidance while the parent, Guess, continued
under the primary attention of the
Page 402 Marcianos. Differences between the two
factions quickly surfaced with resulting
deadlocks at the director level of both
Guess and Gasoline. The Marcianos filed an
action, partly derivative, against Guess and
the Nakashes in California followed by the
Delaware proceeding in which the Marcianos
sought the appointment of a custodian for
Gasoline in addition to asserting derivative
claims for diversion of corporate
opportunities and assets arising out of the
Nakashes' operation of Gasoline. Ultimately,
the derivative aspect of the Delaware action
was stayed in favor of the California
proceedings and the Court of Chancery, after
a court-ordered shareholder's meeting failed
to resolve the director deadlock, appointed
a custodian whose power was limited to
resolving deadlocks on the Gasoline board.
The custodial arrangement failed
to resolve the underlying policy differences
between the two factions and neither group
appeared willing to invest additional funds
or provide guarantees to permit Gasoline to
function as a viable commercial enterprise.
In early 1987 the custodian advised the
Court of Chancery that because of a lack of
financing Gasoline had no prospects of
continuation and recommended liquidation. A
court-approved plan of liquidation
authorized the custodian to sell the assets
of Gasoline (with both the Marcianos and the
Nakashes permitted to bid), pay all valid
debts of the corporation and distribute the
net proceeds to the shareholders. The
determination of those debts, in particular
the loan claims asserted by the Nakashes,
was sharply disputed in the Court of
Chancery and is the focus of this appeal.
The circumstances underlying the
Nakashes' claim were determined by the Vice
Chancellor following an evidentiary hearing.
Prior to March, 1986, Gasoline had secured
the necessary financing to support its
inventory purchases from the Israel Discount
Bank in New York. The bank advanced funds at
one percent above prime rate secured by
Gasoline's accounts receivable and the
Nakashes' personal guarantee. Although
requested to do so, the Marcianos were
unwilling to participate in loan guarantees
because of their dissatisfaction with the
Nakashes' management. In response, the
Nakashes withdrew their guarantees causing
the Israel Discount Bank to terminate its
outstanding loan of $1.6 million.
Without consulting the Marcianos,
the Nakashes advanced approximately $2.3
million of their personal funds to Gasoline
to enable the corporation to pay outstanding
bills and acquire inventory. In June, 1986,
the Nakashes arranged for U.F. Factors, an
entity owned by them, to assume their
personal loans and become Gasoline's lender.
U.F. Factors charged interest at one percent
over prime to which the Nakashes added one
percent for their personal guarantees of the
U.F. Factors loan. As of April 24, 1987,
Gasoline's debt to U.F. Factors amounted to
$2,575,000 of which $25,000 represented the
Nakashes' guarantee fee. Another Nakash
entity, Jordach Enterprises, also sought
payment from Gasoline of two percent of the
company's gross sales, or $30,000 for
warehousing and invoicing services.
In November, 1986, the Nakashes
had replaced the U.F. Factors loan, secured
by a series of promissory notes executed by
Gasoline, with a line of credit
collateralized by Gasoline's assets
including trademarks and copyrights. This
action took place without the knowledge or
consent of the custodian and was
subsequently rescinded by the Nakashes. At
the time of the court-ordered sale of
assets, the Nakashes and their entities were
general creditors of Gasoline. If allowed in
full the Nakashes' claim will exhaust
Gasoline's assets, leaving nothing for its
shareholders.
1
The parties agree that the loans
made by the Nakashes to Gasoline were
interested transactions. The Nakashes as
officers of Gasoline executed the various
documents which supported the loans and at
the same time guaranteed those loans
extended
Page 403 through their wholly owned entities. It is
also not disputed that, given the control
deadlock, the questioned transactions did
not receive majority approval of Gasoline's
directors or shareholders. The Marcianos
argue that the loan transaction is voidable
at the option of the corporation
notwithstanding its fairness or the good
faith of its participants. A review of this
contention, rejected by the Court of
Chancery, requires analysis of the concept
of director self-dealing under Delaware law.
II
It is a long-established
principle of Delaware corporate law that the
fiduciary relationship between directors and
the corporation imposes fundamental
limitations on the extent to which a
director may benefit from dealings with the
corporation he serves.
Guth v. Loft, Inc., Del. Supr., 5 A.2d 503
(1939). Thus, the "voting [for] and
taking" of compensation may be deemed
"constructively fraudulent" in the absence
of shareholder ratification, or statutory or
bylaw authorization.
Cahall v. Lofland, Del. Ch., 114 A. 224, 232
(1921). Perhaps the strongest
condemnation of interested director conduct
appears
Potter v. Sanitary Co. of America, Del. Ch.,
194 A. 87 (1937), a decision which the
Marcianos advance as definitive of the rule
of per se voidability. In Potter the Court
of Chancery characterized transactions
between corporations having common directors
and officers "constructively fraudulent,"
absent shareholder ratification.
Support can also be found for the
per se rule of voidability in this Court's
decision
Kerbs v. California Eastern Airways Inc.,
Del. Supr.,
90 A.2d 652 (1952). The
Kerbs court, in considering the validity of
a profit sharing plan, ruled that the
self-interest of the directors who voted on
the plan caused the transaction to be
voidable. The court concluded that the
profit sharing plan was voidable based on
the common law rule that the vote of an
interested director will not be counted in
determining whether the challenged action
received the affirmative vote of a majority
of the board of directors. Id. at 658
(citing Bovay v. H.M. Byllesby & Co., Del.
Supr., 38 A.2d 808 (1944)).
The principle of per se
voidability for interested transactions,
which is sometimes characterized as the
common law rule, was significantly
ameliorated by the 1967 enactment of Section
144 of the Delaware General Corporation Law.
2 The Marcianos
argue that section 144(a) provides the only
basis for immunizing self-interested
transactions and since none of the statute's
component tests are satisfied the stricture
of the common law per se rule applies. The
Vice Chancellor agreed that the disputed
loans did not withstand a section 144(a)
analysis but ruled that the common law rule
did not invalidate transactions determined
to be intrinsically fair. We agree that
section 144(a) does not provide the only
validation standard for interested
transactions.
Page 404
It overstates the common law rule
to conclude that relationship, alone, is the
controlling factor in interested
transactions. Although the application of
the per se voidability rule in early
Delaware cases resulted in the invalidation
of interested transactions, the result was
not dictated simply by a tainted
relationship. Thus in Potter, the Court,
while adopting the rule of voidability,
emphasized that interested transactions
should be subject to close scrutiny. Where
the undisputed evidence tended to show that
the transaction would advance the personal
interests of the directors at the expense of
stockholders, the stockholders, upon
discovery, are entitled to disavow the
transaction. Potter, 194 A. at 91. Further,
the court examined the motives of the
defendant directors and the effect the
transaction had on the corporation and its
shareholders. Id.
In other Delaware cases, decided
before the enactment of section 144,
interested director transactions were deemed
voidable only after an examination of the
fairness of a particular transaction
vis-a-vis the nonparticipating shareholders
and a determination of whether the disputed
conduct received the approval of a
noninterested majority of directors or
shareholders.
Keenan v. Eshleman, Del. Supr., 2 A.2d 904,
908 (1938);
Blish v. Thompson Automatic Arms Corp., Del.
Supr., 64 A.2d 581, 602 (1948); Kerbs,
90 A.2d at 658. The latter test is now
crystallized in the ratification criteria of
section 144(a), although the non-quorum
restriction of Kerbs has been superceded by
the language of subparagraph (b) of section
144.
The Marcianos view compliance
with section 144 as the sole basis for
avoiding the per se rule of voidability. The
Court of Chancery rejected this contention
and we agree that it is not consonant with
Delaware corporate law. This Court in
Fliegler v. Lawrence, Del.Supr.,
361 A.2d 218 (1976), a post-section 144 decision,
refused to view section 144 as either
completely preemptive of the common law duty
of director fidelity or as constituting a
grant of broad immunity. As we stated in
Fliegler: "It merely removes an 'interested
director' cloud when its terms are met and
provides against invalidation of an
agreement 'solely' because such a director
or officer is involved." Id. at 222. In
Fliegler this Court applied a two-tiered
analysis: application of section 144 coupled
with an intrinsic fairness test.
If section 144 validation of
interested director transactions is not
deemed exclusive, as Fliegler clearly holds,
the continued viability of the intrinsic
fairness test is mandated not only by fact
situations, such as here present, where
shareholder deadlock prevents ratification
but also where shareholder control by
interested directors precludes independent
review. Indeed, if an independent committee
of the board, contemplated by section
144(a)(1) is unavailable, the sole forum for
demonstrating intrinsic fairness may be a
judicial one. See Merritt v. Colonial Foods,
Inc., Del.Ch., 505 A.2d 757, 764 (1986). In
such situations the intrinsic fairness test
furnishes the substantive standard against
which the evidential burden of the
interested directors is applied. It is this
burden which was addressed by this
Court in Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., Del.
Supr.,
457 A.2d 701 (1983):
When directors of a Delaware corporation
are on both sides of a transaction, they are
required to demonstrate their utmost good
faith and the most scrupulous inherent
fairness of the bargain.
* * *
* * *
The requirement of fairness is
unflinching in its demand that where one
stands on both sides of a transaction, he
has the burden of establishing its entire
fairness, sufficient to pass the test of
careful scrutiny by the courts.
Id. at 710.
This case illustrates the
limitation inherent in viewing section 144
as the touchstone for testing interested
director transactions. Because of the
shareholder deadlock, even if the Nakashes
had attempted to invoke section 144, it was
realistically unavailable. The ratification
process contemplated by section 144
presupposes the functioning of corporate
constituencies capable of providing assents.
Just as the
Page 405 statute cannot "sanction unfairness" neither
can it invalidate fairness if, upon judicial
review, the transaction withstands close
scrutiny of its intrinsic elements.
3
III
On the issue of intrinsic
fairness, the Court of Chancery concluded
that the "U.F. Factors loans compared
favorably with the terms available from
unrelated lenders" and that the need for
external financing had been clearly
demonstrated.
4
The Marcianos attack this ruling as
factually and legally erroneous. Since the
Vice Chancellor's factual findings were
arrived at after an evidentiary hearing we
are not free to reject them unless they are
without record support or not the product of
a logical deductive process.
Levitt v. Bouvier, Del. Supr., 287 A.2d 671,
673 (1972). We find this standard to
have been fully satisfied here.
Apart from the initial investment
of $300,000 contributed equally by the
Marcianos and the Nakashes, Gasoline's
financial needs had been met through
external borrowings. It is unnecessary to
lay blame for the impasse which resulted in
the Marcianos refusal to supply additional
equity funding. It suffices to note that
throughout 1985 and 1986, Gasoline was able
to function only through cash advances from,
and loans obtained by, the Nakashes, first
through the Israel Discount Bank and later
through U.F. Factors. During this period the
evidence reflects the continued threat of
bank overdrafts and inability to pay for
purchases, particularly imported finished
goods.
A finding of fairness is
particularly appropriate in this case
because the evidence indicates that the
loans were made by the Nakashes with the
bona fide intention of assisting Gasoline's
efforts to remain in business. Directors who
advance funds to a corporation in such
circumstances do not forefeit their claims
as creditors merely because of relationship.
New York Stock Exchange v. Pickard & Co.,
Inc., Del. Ch., 296 A.2d 143, 149 (1972).
Further, in arranging for the loan, the
interested directors were not depriving the
corporation of a business opportunity but
were instead providing a benefit for the
corporation which was unavailable elsewhere.
The Marcianos argue that the
Nakashes failed to demonstrate the full
fairness of the loan transactions in two
fundamental respects: the cost of the
borrowings and the use of the funds. It is
not disputed, however, that the direct
financing by the Nakashes was essentially
duplicative of the terms imposed by the
Israel Discount Bank in an apparent
arms-length transaction. We agree therefore
with the Vice Chancellor that, on a
comparative basis, the direct loans were
favorable to Gasoline.
With respect to the use of the
borrowings, the Marcianos contend that the
Chancery Court's finding that the borrowed
funds were expended for a proper corporate
purpose was based upon inadmissible evidence
to which a timely objection was made. The
disputed evidence consisted of voluminous
invoices and related shipping documents for
purchases of finished goods, principally
from foreign vendors. Gasoline's Controller,
Michael Hayes, the only witness who
testified at the evidentiary hearing,
referred to such documents as "back-up,"
files which supported entries in the
company's purchase journal. The Marcianos'
Page 406 argue that these documents were improperly
admitted under the business records
exception to the hearsay rule.
5
Although the disputed invoices
were in the possession of Gasoline's
comptroller he conceded that he was not
knowledgeable of events reflected in the
documents. Superficially, this lack of
knowledge would appear to bar admission
under D.R.E. 803(6). However, if the
invoices have become integrated into the
company's records and are relied upon in
day-to-day operations they are admissible as
supporting or corroborative data on the
limited question of whether the invoices
were paid. Black Sea & Baltic General v.
S.S. Hellenic Destiny, S.D.N.Y., 575 F.Supp.
685, 691 (1983);
In re King Enterprises, 8th Cir., 678 F.2d
73, 78 (1982). If the dispute between
the parties centered on the source of the
shipments, as opposed to whether they were
paid for, the absence of a knowledgeable
person to verify the origination data might
bar their admissibility. See, N.L.R.B. v.
First Termite Control Co., Inc., 9th Cir.,
646 F.2d 424 (1981). In view of the limited
purpose for which these documents were
received in evidence, we find no error in
their admissibility.
The Marcianos intimate that the
admissibility of the back-up invoices
foreclosed the question of whether Gasoline
received full consideration for the goods
reflected on the invoices. This suggestion
is based on the claim that certain of the
vendors were also entities controlled by the
Nakashes. The disputed records were
apparently available for examination by the
Marcianos' accountants who had access to
Gasoline's financial records prior to trial.
The Marcianos thus had full opportunity to
demonstrate the falsity of the documents or
collusion in the underlying transactions. At
trial they chose to present no evidence with
respect to the back-up files. Under the
circumstances, it cannot be said that the
admissibility of these documents foreclosed
further proof concerning the accuracy of the
documents and the claim of collusion.
IV
Apart from the question of
whether the corporation was disadvantaged by
the terms of the loan transactions, the
Marcianos contend, as a separate basis for
disallowance of the loans, that the Nakashes
were guilty of unfair dealing. The
Marcianos' argument of unfair dealing is
constructed upon the dual test of fairness
for interested director transaction
fashioned by this Court in Weinberger,
457 A.2d 701. Although the Vice Chancellor
expressed doubt that the Weinberger standard
is applicable to interested loan
transactions, the Court concluded, that in
any event, the unfair dealing claim would
survive liquidation and be assertable in the
ongoing derivative actions.
We agree with the Vice Chancellor
that a Weinberger "fair dealing" analysis is
not applicable in this case. This conclusion
is based in part on the limited scope of a
section 226 liquidation hearing and in part
on the context in which this dispute arises.
The purpose of the hearing was to test the
validity of the challenged loans and was
not, as the Marcianos suggest, a forum to
try derivative claims based on allegations
of unfair dealing. However, as
Page 407 stated above, because of the interested
nature of this transaction, Weinberger's
concept of fairness is implicated. Moreover,
the Nakashes' burden of proving fairness as
well as good faith in relation to the
financial considerations of the loan
transaction is well settled. Gottlieb v.
Heyden, Del.Supr., 90 A.2d 660, 663 (1952).
More to the point, if, as the
Marcianos claim, the corporation has been
harmed by the loan transactions crafted by
the Nakashes, or that they realized a
special benefit in the form of the one
percent guarantee fee, a derivative claim to
that effect offers a clear remedy. Fliegler
v. Lawrence, Del.Supr.,
361 A.2d 218 (1976).
Indeed, if the claims are not asserted in
the pending derivative litigation the
Marcianos may be barred under principles of
res judicata from bringing them in a
separate action. See Trans World Airlines,
Inc. v. Hughes, Del.Ch., 317 A.2d 114, 118
(1974). Further support for the continued
viability of derivative claims arising out
of the loan transactions is evidenced by the
Court of Chancery order of April 14, 1987,
which authorized the custodian, as nominal
defendant, to exercise his discretion in
permitting the continued prosecution of the
derivative claims asserted on behalf of
Gasoline by the Marcianos.
Finally, there is no suggestion
that permitting the Nakashes to realize a
partial return of the loan principal will
render them less likely to respond to a
derivative claim and any judgment
subsequently realized.
We hold, therefore, that the
Court of Chancery properly applied the
intrinsic fairness test in determining the
validity of the interested director
transactions and its finding of full
fairness is clearly supported by the record.
Accordingly, the decision is AFFIRMED.
1 The Nakashes used their $2.5 million
claim as the basis for their liquidation bid
($1,000,101) for Gasoline's non-cash assets.
2 Section 144 of Title 8 Del.C. now
provides:
(a) No contract or transaction between a
corporation and 1 or more of its directors
or officers, or between a corporation and
any other corporation, partnership,
association, or other organization in which
1 or more of its directors or officers, are
directors or officers, or have a financial
interest, shall be void or voidable solely
for this reason, or solely because the
director or officer is present at or
participates in the meeting of the board or
committee which authorizes the contract or
transaction, or solely because his or their
votes are counted for such purpose, if:
(1) The material facts as to his
relationship or interest and as to the
contract or transaction are disclosed or are
known to the board of directors or the
committee, and the board or committee in
good faith authorizes the contract or
transaction by the affirmative votes of a
majority of the disinterested directors,
even though the disinterested directors be
less than a quorum; or
(2) The material facts as to his
relationship or interest and as to the
contract or transaction are disclosed or are
known to the shareholders entitled to vote
thereon, and the contract or transaction is
specifically approved in good faith by vote
of the shareholders; or
(3) The contract or transaction is fair
as to the corporation as of the time it is
authorized, approved or ratified, by the
board of directors, a committee or the
shareholders.
(b) Common or interested directors may be
counted in determining the presence of a
quorum at a meeting of the board of
directors or of a committee which authorizes
the contract or transaction.
3 Although in this case none of the
curative steps afforded under section 144(a)
were available because of the
director-shareholder deadlock, a
non-disclosing director seeking to remove
the cloud of interestedness would appear to
have the same burden under section
144(a)(3), as under prior case law, of
proving the intrinsic fairness of a
questioned transaction which had been
approved or ratified by the directors or
shareholders. Folk, The Delaware General
Corp. Law: A Commentary and Analysis, 86
(1972). On the other hand, approval by
fully-informed disinterested directors under
section 144(a)(1), or disinterested
stockholders under section 144(a)(2),
permits invocation of the business judgment
rule and limits judicial review to issues of
gift or waste with the burden of proof upon
the party attacking the transaction.
4 The Vice Chancellor rejected U.F.
Factors' claim for a two percent warehousing
fee on the ground that the Nakashes were
unable to show, on a comparability basis,
that the charge was fair to Gasoline. The
Nakashes have not appealed that ruling.
5 This exception to the hearsay rule is
set forth in section 803(6) of the Delaware
Rules of Evidence:
The following are not excluded by the
hearsay rule, even though the declarant is
available as a witness:
* * *
(6) Records Of Regularly Conducted
Activity. A memorandum, report, record or
data compilation, in any form, of acts,
events, conditions, opinions or diagnoses,
made at or near the time by, or from
information transmitted by, a person with
knowledge, if kept in the course of a
regularly conducted business activity, and
if it was the regular practice of that
business activity to make the memorandum,
report, record or data compilation, all as
shown by the testimony of the custodian or
other qualified witness, unless the source
of information or the method or
circumstances of preparation indicate lack
of trustworthiness. The term "business" as
used in this paragraph includes business,
institution, association, profession,
occupation and calling of every kind,
whether or not conducted for profit.
* * * |