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CASE SUMMARY PROCEDURAL POSTURE: Defendants filed
a motion for summary judgment arising from plaintiffs'
stockholder derivative action challenging defendants'
distribution of a dividend.
OVERVIEW:
Plaintiffs filed a derivative action against defendants
arising from defendants' decision to issue a dividend.
Defendants filed for summary judgment on the grounds
that no viable action had been made. On review,
the court held that it would not interfere with
decisions of directors of a corporation unless
there had been some sort of fraud, dishonest practices,
or other grounds that allowed for equitable interference.
The court held that questions of policy and business
management were better left to the judgment of
corporate management. Additionally, to maintain
an action for neglect against a director pursuant
to N.Y. Bus. Corp. Law § 720(a), plaintiffs
must establish that the director neglected his
duties. Misjudgment by the director did not amount
to neglect. In this case, plaintiffs' claim was
based on their disagreement with defendants' decision
to distribute a dividend. As a result, the court
granted summary judgment and dismissed the claim.
OUTCOME:
The court awarded summary judgment for defendants
because questions of policy and business management
were better left to discretion of board of directors
unless plaintiffs could show acts, such as fraud,
that justified judicial interference, and here,
plaintiffs' suit was only based on their disagreement
with defendants' business decisions.
COUNSEL:
Carter, Ledyard & Milburn for American Express
Company, defendant. Winthrop,
Stimson, Putnam & Roberts for Hoyt Ammidon and
others, defendants.
Cowan,
Liebowitz & Latman, P. C., for plaintiffs.
Edward
J. Greenfield, J.
In
this stockholders' derivative action, the individual
defendants, who are the directors of the American
Express Company, move for an order dismissing
the complaint for failure to state a cause of
action pursuant to CPLR 3211 (subd [a], par 7),
and alternatively, for summary judgment pursuant
to CPLR 3211 (subd [c]).
The
complaint is brought derivatively by two minority
stockholders of the American Express Company,
asking for a declaration that a certain dividend
in kind is a waste of corporate assets, directing
the defendants not to proceed with the distribution,
or, in the alternative, for monetary damages.
The motion to dismiss the complaint requires the
court to presuppose the truth of the allegations.
It is the defendants' contention that, conceding
everything in the complaint, no viable cause of
action is made out.
After
establishing the identity of the parties, the
complaint alleges that in 1972 American Express
acquired for investment 1,954,418 shares of common
stock of Donaldson, Lufken and Jenrette, Inc.
(hereafter DLJ), a publicly traded corporation,
at a cost of $ 29,900,000. It is further alleged
that the current market value of those shares
is approximately $ 4,000,000. On July 28, 1975,
it is alleged, the board of directors of American
Express declared a special dividend to all stockholders
of record pursuant to which the shares of DLJ
would be distributed in kind. Plaintiffs contend
further that if American Express were to sell
the DLJ shares on the market, it would sustain
a capital loss of $ 25,000,000 which could be
offset against taxable capital gains on other
investments. Such a sale, they allege, would result
in tax savings to the company of approximately
$ 8,000,000, which would not be available in the
case of the distribution of DLJ shares to stockholders.
It is alleged that on October 8, 1975 and October
16, 1975, plaintiffs demanded that the directors
rescind the previously declared dividend in DLJ
shares and take steps to preserve the capital
loss which would result from selling the shares.
This demand was rejected by the board of directors
on October 17, 1975.
It
is apparent that all the previously-mentioned
allegations of the complaint go to the question
of the exercise by the board of directors of business
judgment in deciding how to deal with the DLJ
shares. The crucial allegation which must be scrutinized
to determine the legal sufficiency of the complaint
is paragraph 19, which alleges: "19. All of the
defendant Directors engaged in or acquiesced in
or negligently permitted the declaration and payment
of the Dividend in violation of the fiduciary
duty owed by them to Amex to care for and preserve
Amex's assets in the same manner as a man of average
prudence would care for his own property."
Plaintiffs
never moved for temporary injunctive relief, and
did nothing to bar the actual distribution of
the DLJ shares. The dividend was in fact paid
on October 31, 1975. Accordingly, that portion
of the complaint seeking a direction not to distribute
the shares is deemed to be moot, and the court
will deal only with the request for declaratory
judgment or for damages.
Examination
of the complaint reveals that there is no claim
of fraud or self-dealing, and no contention that
there was any bad faith or oppressive conduct.
The law is quite clear as to what is necessary
to ground a claim for actionable wrongdoing. HN2"In
actions by stockholders, which assail the acts
of their directors or trustees, courts will not
interfere unless the powers have been illegally
or unconscientiously executed, or unless it be
made to appear that the acts were fraudulent or
collusive and destructive of the rights of the
stockholders. Mere errors of judgment are not
sufficient as grounds for equity interference;
for the powers of those entrusted with corporate
management are largely discretionary." ( Leslie
v Lorillard, 110 NY 519, 532; see, also, Winter
v Anderson, 242 App Div 430, 432; Rous v Carlisle,
261 App Div 432, 434, affd 290 NY 869; 11 NY Jur,
Corporations, § 378.)
HN3More
specifically, the question of whether or not a
dividend is to be declared or a distribution of
some kind should be made is exclusively a matter
of business judgment for the board of directors.
"Courts will not interfere with such discretion
unless it be first made to appear that the directors
have acted or are about to act in bad faith and
for a dishonest purpose. It is for the directors
to say, acting in good faith of course, when and
to what extent dividends shall be declared * *
* The statute confers upon the directors this
power, and the minority stockholders are not in
a position to question this right, so long as
the directors are acting in good faith" ( Liebman
v Auto Strop Co., 241 NY 427, 433-434; accord:
City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v Hewitt Realty Co.,
257 NY 62; Venner v Southern Pacific Co., 279
F 832, cert den 258 U.S. 628).
Thus,
HN4a complaint must be dismissed if all that is
presented is a decision to pay dividends rather
than pursuing some other course of conduct. (
Weinberger v Quinn, 264 App Div 405, affd 290
NY 635.) A complaint which alleges merely that
some course of action other than that pursued
by the board of directors would have been more
advantageous gives rise to no cognizable cause
of action. Courts have more than enough to do
in adjudicating legal rights and devising remedies
for wrongs. The directors' room rather than the
courtroom is the appropriate forum for thrashing
out purely business questions] which will have
an impact on profits, market prices, competitive
situations, or tax advantages. As stated by Cardozo,
J., when sitting at Special Term, the substitution
of someone else's business judgment for that of
the directors "'is no business for any court to
follow.'" ( Holmes v Saint Joseph Lead Co., 84
Misc 278, 283, quoting from Gamble v Queens County
Water Co., 123 NY 91, 99.)
It
is not enough to allege, as plaintiffs do here,
that the directors made an imprudent decision,
which did not capitalize on the possibility of
using a potential capital loss to offset capital
gains. More than imprudence or mistaken judgment
must be shown. "Questions of policy of management,
expediency of contracts or action, adequacy of
consideration, lawful appropriation of corporate
funds to advance corporate interests, are left
solely to their honest and unselfish decision,
for their powers therein are without limitation
and free from restraint, and the exercise of them
for the common and general interests of the corporation
may not be questioned, although the results show
that what they did was unwise or inexpedient."
( Pollitz v Wabash R.R. Co., 207 NY 113, 124.)
Section
720 (subd [a], par [1], cl [A]) of the Business
Corporation Law permits an action against directors
for "[the] neglect of, or failure to perform,
or other violation of his duties in the management
and disposition of corporate assets committed
to his charge." This does not mean that a director
is chargeable with ordinary negligence for having
made an improper decision, or having acted imprudently.
The "neglect" referred to in the statute is neglect
of duties (i.e., malfeasance or nonfeasance) and
not misjudgment. To allege that a director "negligently
permitted the declaration and payment" of a dividend
without alleging fraud, dishonesty or nonfeasance,
is to state merely that a decision was taken with
which one disagrees.
Nor
does this appear to be a case in which a potentially
valid cause of action is inartfully stated. The
defendants have moved alternatively for summary
judgment and have submitted affidavits under CPLR
3211 (subd [c]), and plaintiffs likewise have
submitted papers enlarging upon the allegations
of the complaint. The affidavits of the defendants
and the exhibits annexed thereto demonstrate that
the objections raised by the plaintiffs to the
proposed dividend action were carefully considered
and unanimously rejected by the board at a special
meeting called precisely for that purpose at the
plaintiffs' request. The minutes of the special
meeting indicate that the defendants were fully
aware that a sale rather than a distribution of
the DLJ shares might result in the realization
of a substantial income tax saving. Nevertheless,
they concluded that there were countervailing
considerations primarily with respect to the adverse
effect such a sale, realizing a loss of $ 25,000,000,
would have on the net income figures in the American
Express financial statement. Such a reduction
of net income would have a serious effect on the
market value of the publicly traded American Express
stock. This was not a situation in which the defendant
directors totally overlooked facts called to their
attention. They gave them consideration, and attempted
to view the total picture in arriving at their
decision. While plaintiffs contend that according
to their accounting consultants the loss on the
DLJ stock would still have to be charged against
current earnings even if the stock were distributed,
the defendants' accounting experts assert that
the loss would be a charge against earnings only
in the event of a sale, whereas in the event of
distribution of the stock as a dividend, the proper
accounting treatment would be to charge the loss
only against surplus. While the chief accountant
for the SEC raised some question as to the appropriate
accounting treatment of this transaction, there
was no basis for any action to be taken by the
SEC with respect to the American Express financial
statement.
The
only hint of self-interest which is raised, not
in the complaint but in the papers on the motion,
is that 4 of the 20 directors were officers and
employees of American Express and members of its
executive incentive compensation plan. Hence,
it is suggested, by virtue of the action taken
earnings may have been overstated and their compensation
affected thereby. Such a claim is highly speculative
and standing alone can hardly be regarded as sufficient
to support an inference of self-dealing. There
is no claim or showing that the four company directors
dominated and controlled the 16 outside members
of the board. Certainly, every action taken by
the board has some impact on earnings and may
therefore affect the compensation of those whose
earnings are keyed to profits. That does not disqualify
the inside directors, nor does it put every policy
adopted by the board in question. All directors
have an obligation, using sound business judgment,
to maximize income for the benefit of all persons
having a stake in the welfare of the corporate
entity. (See Amdur v Meyer, 15 AD2d 425, app dsmd
14 NY2d 541.) What we have here as revealed both
by the complaint and by the affidavits and exhibits,
is that a disagreement exists between two minority
stockholders and a unanimous board of directors
as to the best way to handle a loss already incurred
on an investment. The directors are entitled to
exercise their honest business judgment on the
information before them, and to act within their
corporate powers. That they may be mistaken, that
other courses of action might have differing consequences,
or that their action might benefit some shareholders
more than others present no basis for the superimposition
of judicial judgment, so long as it appears that
the directors have been acting in good faith.
The question of to what extent a dividend shall
be declared and the manner in which it shall be
paid is ordinarily subject only to the qualification
that the dividend be paid out of surplus (Business
Corporation Law, § 510, subd [b]). The court
will not interfere unless a clear case is made
out of fraud, oppression, arbitrary action, or
breach of trust.
Courts
should not shrink from the responsibility of dismissing
complaints or granting summary judgment when no
legal wrongdoing is set forth. As stated in HN8
Greenbaum v American Metal Climax (27 AD2d 225,
231-232): "It is well known that derivative actions
by stockholders generally involve extensive pretrial
procedures, including lengthy examinations before
trial, and then, finally, prolonged trials; and
that they also entail large litigation costs,
including the probability of a considerable liability
upon the corporation for the defense costs of
defendant offices. Such actions are a heavy burden
upon the courts and litigants. Consequently, the
summary judgment remedy should be fully utilized
and given due effect to challenge such an action
which appears to be in the nature of a strike
suit or otherwise lacks apparent merit * * * [plaintiffs]
are bound to bear in mind that matters depending
on business judgment are not actionable. (Cf.
Steinberg v Carey, 285 App Div 1131.) They are
required to set forth something more than vague
general charges of wrongdoing; their charges must
be supported by factual assertions of specific
wrongdoing; conclusory allegations of breaches
of fiduciary duty are not enough."
In
this case it clearly appears that the plaintiffs
have failed as a matter of law to make out an
actionable claim. Accordingly, the motion by the
defendants for summary judgment and dismissal
of the complaint is granted.
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