(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for
the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
Argued April 29, l996 -- Decided October 23, 1996
O'Hern, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
In this opinion, the Court addresses the share-value rights of certain minority shareholders of
Wheaton, Inc., a closely held corporation. The appeal is procedurally complex, involving two separate law
suits.
The first action (Wheaton, Inc. v. Smith) involves the appraisal of the fair value for stock belonging
to a minority of shareholders who dissented from Wheaton's l99l plan for corporate restructuring.
Specifically, a majority of the shareholders had voted to transfer the assets of Wheaton to three newly-formed, wholly-owned subsidiaries in exchange for all the capital stock of each of the subsidiaries. Wheaton
then advised shareholders who did not approve of the restructuring of their right to dissent from the
corporate action and to demand payment of fair value for their shares under the New Jersey Business
Corporation Act (BCA). Twenty-six shareholders dissented and submitted written notice of their intent to
demand payment of fair value.
Thereafter, Wheaton sent to each of its shareholders written notice that December 30, l99l was the
effective date of the restructuring. The dissenting shareholders made a written demand for payment of fair
value for their shares. In response, Wheaton offered to pay the dissenting shareholders $41.50 per share.
The dissenting shareholders rejected that offer and demanded instead that Wheaton commence an action in
Superior Court to determine the fair value of the stock. Several months later, Wheaton began the appraisal
action.
Three years later, in June l995, Wheaton's board of directors voted to rescind the restructuring.
To avoid the financial ramifications of a fair value payment, Wheaton filed a motion to dismiss the appraisal
action (the rescission motion). The trial court denied Wheaton's motion, holding that rescission of a
triggering corporate action after its effective date could not terminate appraisal rights that had already
vested. In August l995, the Appellate Division denied Wheaton's motion for leave to appeal that decision.
Four months later, on December l5, l995, the Legislature amended the applicable provisions of the
BCA . Under one of the amendments, a corporate restructuring that takes the form of that undertaken by
Wheaton no longer triggered dissent and appraisal rights. Wheaton thereafter renewed its request that the
trial court dismiss the appraisal action, contending that the amendments clarified the impact of the prior law
and that the amendments applied retroactively, thereby terminating the dissenting shareholders' rights to the
fair value of their stock (the retroactivity motion). The trial court denied that motion.
The second case (Strasenburgh v. Straubmuller)was brought by twenty of the twenty-six dissenting shareholders against individual directors of Wheaton (the North Jersey action). That complaint alleged that company directors had engaged in fraud, misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty, waste and violations of state and federal RICO laws. The minority shareholders filing that action consisted of younger-generation shareholders who claimed that Wheaton's directors had misused their positions to manipulate assets and
deflate the value of Wheaton stock to their detriment and to the benefit of older-generation shareholders in
management positions, who would receive favorable estate tax planning treatment by the corporate
restructure.
The trial court granted the directors' motion to dismiss that action, determining the fraud and
misrepresentation claims to be vague and conclusory and the breach of fiduciary duty and waste claims to
be derivative, that is, actions that had to be brought by the corporation and not individual shareholders.
On appeal, the Appellate Division affirmed the dismissal of the claim for waste but remanded the remaining
claims, holding that the shareholders' theory of a disparate impact between the older and younger
generations stated an individual cause of action.
The Supreme Court granted the directors' petition for certification in the Strasenburgh matter. In
addition, in the appraisal action, the Supreme Court granted Wheaton's motion for leave to appeal the
denial of the rescission motion and subsequently granted Wheaton's motion for direct review of the
retroactivity motion. The appeals were argued before the Supreme Court on April 29, l996.
Two days after oral argument in the matters, Wheaton announced an acquisition merger with
Alusuisse-Lonza Holding Ltd.., a Swiss holding company. Under the provisions of that merger, effective
April 29, l996, Wheaton shareholders received $63.00 per share from Alusuisse. Alusuisse requested that
Wheaton withdraw its appeals in the appraisal matter, presumably because it believes the fair value of the
shares when surrendered in l99l was lower than the l996 acquisition price of $63.00.
The dissenting shareholders opposed the withdrawal of the appeals, arguing that their rights would
be prejudiced . Instead, they asked the Court to dismiss Wheaton's motions to withdraw its appeals, affirm
the rulings on appeal, and remand to the trial court for determination of the fair value of their stock as of
l99l.
HELD: A corporation may rescind its corporate action after appraisal rights have vested only within a
reasonable time after the effective date of the corporate action. Amendments to the BCA that deny
appraisal rights in transfers to wholly-owned subsidiaries may be applied retroactively only upon a
careful factual analysis that establishes both that it was the Legislature's intent to apply the statute
retroactively and that retroactive application of the statute will not result in either an
unconstitutional interference with vested rights or a manifest injustice to the party adversely affected
by such application. Election of the appraisal remedy is exclusive only if that remedy will provide
the aggrieved parties with a sufficient recovery of the value of their shares. The essential nature of
the injuries claimed by the dissenting shareholders consists of a diminution in share value, which was
an injury suffered by all shareholders and is, therefore, derivative.
1. Although the BCA places no time restraints on a corporation's ability to rescind and terminate appraisal
rights, principles of logic and statutory interpretation require the action to be rescinded within a reasonable
period of time. In assessing a passage that is both reasonable and equitable to the parties involved, a court
must consider the corporation's financial position and the consequences of forcing payment of fair value, as
well as the prejudice to the dissenting shareholders by allowing rescission. (pp.17-19)
2. Statutes affecting substantive rights generally should be given prospective application in order to avoid
unfair results . The circumstances that will justify retroactive application of a statute are as set forth in
Gibbons v. Gibbons and include legislative declaration of an intent to retroactively apply the statute, whether
the statute is curative in nature and whether the expectations of the parties warrant retroactive application.
However, even if these circumstances justify retroactive application, such application must not result in the
unconstitutional interference with vested rights or a manifest injustice. (pp. 19-21)
3. Although the appraisal remedy is considered exclusive under the BCA, the theme that runs through the
exclusivity and appraisal provisions is whether the appraisal remedy will provide all the relief that is necessary
to the aggrieved parties. That determination will depend on a factual analysis of the claims asserted in the
individual action, which analysis is also relative to determining whether the claims are derivative. (pp. 24-27)
4. The prevailing American rule is that when an injury to corporate stock falls equally upon all stockholders,
then an individual stockholder may not recover for the injury to his stock alone, but must seek recovery
derivatively in behalf of the corporation. A special injury exception to that rule exists where there is a
wrong suffered by a plaintiff that was not suffered by all stockholders generally. To determine whether a
complaint states a derivative or an individual cause of action, courts examine the nature of the wrongs
alleged in the body of the complaint, not the plaintiff's designation or stated intention. (pp. 27-33)
5. The claimed actions of misconduct on the part of the Wheaton directors, if they resulted in an injury,
resulted in an injury to all shareholders and not to individual classes of shareholders. Any injury from self-dealing on the part of the directors can be considered in the appraisal action. (pp. 34-36)
The orders of the Chancery Division in the Wheaton matter denying the motions to dismiss the
appraisal action are AFFIRMED. The matter is REMANDED to the Chancery Division for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The judgment of the Appellate Division in the Strasenburgh matter is REVERSED. The judgment
of the Law Division dismissing plaintiffs' complaint is REINSTATED.
The motion of the Smith defendants to intervene is DENIED.
JUSTICES HANDLER, POLLOCK, GARIBALDI, STEIN and COLEMAN join in JUSTICE
O'HERN's opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-137/159/
169 September Term 1995
JOHN GRIFFIN STRASENBURGH; JOHN B.
STRASENBURGH, individually and as
trustee for Blair Baldwin
Strasenburgh, JOHN GRIFFIN
STRASENBURGH, JR., GEORGE GUTHRIE
APPLEGATE, OLIVER JAMES
STRASENBURGH, TOBY E.A.
STRASENBURGH, SARAH HOUGHTON
STRASENBURGH, ALLISON WEBB
STRASENBURGH, AMOS EIGHMY
APPLEGATE, and SAMUEL CHURCH
APPLEGATE; SALLY STRASENBURGH
APPLEGATE LANE, f/k/a SALLY
STRASENBURGH APPLEGATE; SUSAN
HUFFARD BALL, a/k/a FRANCES SUSAN
WHEATON HUFFARD; COURTNEY MONTAGU
HUFFARD; PAUL PHILLIPPI HUFFARD,
IV; TREVOR LANSING HUFFARD; WHITNEY
LANCASTER HUFFARD; ADA A.
STRASENBURGH; LOUISE HOUGHTON
STRASENBURGH and JAMES A.
STRASENBURGH,
Plaintiffs-Respondents,
v.
GEORGE J. STRAUBMULLER, III; ROBERT
I. VEGHTE; EDWARD C. WHEATON;
EDWARD SCOTT WHEATON; JOHN THOMAS
WHEATON; W. GLENN GIES and MICHAEL
T. ZEE,
Defendants-Appellants.
WHEATON INC., formerly known as
WHEATON INDUSTRIES,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
DOUGLAS FREDERICK SMITH, a/k/a
DOUGLAS F. SMITH, and ANTHONY D.
SMITH, TRUSTEE FOR DOUGLAS
FREDERICK SMITH,
Defendants,
and
SUSAN HUFFARD BALL, P. PHILLIPPI
HUFFARD, IV, TREVOR LANSING
HUFFARD, WHITNEY LANCASTER HUFFARD,
COURTNEY MONTAGU HUFFARD, ROBERT D.
ROBERTSON, a/k/a ROBERT SHAW, FRANK
H. WHEATON, III, CUSTODIAN FOR
AMANDA ELIZABETH WHEATON, FRANK H.
WHEATON, III, a/k/a FRANK H.
WHEATON, III, FRANK H. WHEATON,
III, CUSTODIAN FOR CHRISTOPHER
BAINBRIDGE WHEATON, ADA A.
STRASENBURGH, JAMES A.
STRASENBURGH, JOHN B. STRASENBURGH,
JOHN GRIFFIN STRASENBURGH, JOHN B.
STRASENBURGH, TRUSTEE FOR JOHN
GRIFFIN STRASENBURGH, JR.; JOHN B.
STRASENBURGH, TRUSTEE FOR BLAIR
BALDWIN STRASENBURGH, LOUISE
HOUGHTON STRASENBURGH, JOHN B.
STRASENBURGH, TRUSTEE FOR SARAH
HOUGHTON STRASENBURGH, JOHN B.
STRASENBURGH, TRUSTEE FOR TOBY E.
A. STRASENBURGH, SALLY STRASENBURGH
APPLEGATE LANE, JOHN B.
STRASENBURGH, TRUSTEE FOR SAMUEL
CHURCH APPLEGATE, JOHN B.
STRASENBURGH, TRUSTEE FOR AMOS
EIGHMY APPLEGATE, JOHN B.
STRASENBURGH, TRUSTEE FOR GEORGE
GUTHRIE APPLEGATE, JOHN B.
STRASENBURGH, TRUSTEE FOR ALLISON
WEBB STRASENBURGH and JOHN B.
STRASENBURGH, TRUSTEE FOR OLIVER
JAMES STRASENBURGH,
Defendants-Respondents.
Argued April 29, 1996 -- Decided October 23, 1996
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division whose opinion is reported
at
284 N.J. Super. 168 (1995) (Strasenburgh
v. Straubmuller).
On appeal from the Superior Court, Appellate
Division (Wheaton, Inc. v. Smith).
On certification to Superior Court, Chancery
Division, Cumberland County (Wheaton, Inc. v.
Smith).
David J. Novack argued the cause for
appellants George J. Straubmuller, III,
Robert I. Veghte, Edward C. Wheaton, Edward
Scott Wheaton, John Thomas Wheaton, W. Glenn
Gies and Michael T. Zee (Budd Larner Gross
Rosenbaum Greenberg & Sade, attorneys; Mr.
Novack, Carl Greenberg and William D.
Sanders, on the briefs).
Joseph H. Kenney argued the cause for
appellant Wheaton, Inc., etc. (Kenney &
Kearney, attorneys; Mr. Kenney, Mark Schwartz
and Allen A. Etish, on the briefs).
Frederick L. Whitmer argued the cause for
respondents (Pitney, Hardin, Kipp & Szuch,
attorneys for John Griffin Strasenburgh, et
al. and Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, attorneys
for respondents Frank H. Wheaton, III, and
Robert D. Robertson a/k/a Robert Shaw; Mr.
Whitmer and Andrew L. Jewel, on the brief).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
O'HERN, J.
These appeals essentially concern a dispute about the
management of a family business that began as a one-man glass
works and evolved into a multi-national corporation. Wheaton,
Inc. (Wheaton) is a large, but closely-held corporation that
manufactures glass, plastics and scientific equipment. (We use
the present tense to describe the situation at the time when we
heard this appeal.) All but one of Wheaton's shareholders are
family members descended from Dr. Theodore Corson Wheaton, who
founded the T.C. Wheaton Co. in 1888. See generally Virgil S.
Johnson, Millville Glass 81-86, 101-06 (1971). Today,
approximately 150 individual shareholders extend into the fifth
generation of Wheaton descendants. The sole non-family member
shareholder is Bowater, plc., a British company.
Over time, the shareholder-descendants of the founder began
to disagree about the company's strategy for growth. Younger
generation shareholders believed that entrenched older-generation
shareholders in management positions were impeding the company's
growth. Disagreements about strategy turned into legal disputes
among shareholders.
When the cases originally came to us they presented
important issues of first impression concerning the New Jersey
Business Corporation Act (BCA). N.J.S.A. 14A:1-1 to 16-4.
Principal issues were whether a transfer of all assets by a
corporation to wholly-owned subsidiaries triggered appraisal
rights of dissenting shareholders for redemption of their shares
at a fair value, and, if so, whether the company could later
rescind the action that had triggered appraisal rights, thereby
defeating the appraisal rights. Events, however, have overtaken
the issues. The Legislature has amended the BCA to deny
appraisal rights in transfers to wholly-owned subsidiaries. A
foreign investor has taken over the company. The company no
longer seeks to invoke its rescission of the restructuring and
now agrees that the shares should be appraised. We conclude that
all that essentially remains is a fair determination of the
share-value rights of the dissenting shareholders. We direct
that the judge conducting the appraisal proceedings take control
of the remaining matters in controversy and conclude them as
rapidly as is feasible.
analogizes the asset transfer to putting its valued assets into
three separate boxes. (Counsel used the metaphor of separating
out a chest of diamonds, pearls and emeralds into separate boxes
within the chest. The contents of the chest are worth the same
before and after the separation.) Management proposed the
actions to facilitate an initial public offering of shares that
would enable shareholders to find a market for their stock.
Wheaton advised shareholders who did not approve of the
restructuring of their right to dissent from the corporate action
and to demand payment of fair value for their shares under
N.J.S.A. 14A:11-1 to -8 of the BCA. (For convenience, we
sometimes use shorthand references to the sections and
subsections of the BCA as, for example, 11-4(2).) The relevant
provisions of the BCA allow a shareholder objecting to certain
forms of corporate action, such as a transfer of all assets, to
dissent from the action and to demand payment of fair value for
shares if the proposed corporate action is taken. Twenty-six
shareholders, owning approximately fifteen percent of Wheaton's
stock (the fair value recipients), dissented and submitted
written notice of their intent to demand payment of fair value.
The restructuring plan became effective on December 30, 1991. As
required by 11-2(2), Wheaton sent to each of its shareholders
written notice of the restructuring's effective date.
In January 1992, the twenty-six shareholders who dissented
from Wheaton's restructuring plan made a written demand for
payment of fair value for their shares, completing the definition
of their status as "dissenting shareholders" under 11-3.
Approximately the same day that the dissenting shareholders made
that demand for payment of fair value, twenty of the twenty-six
dissenting shareholders brought a separate action in the Superior
Court of Morris County against individual directors of Wheaton
(the North Jersey action). Their complaint accused the company's
directors of fraud, misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty,
waste and violations of state and federal RICO laws.See footnote 2 The
plaintiffs claimed that Wheaton's directors had misused their
positions to manipulate assets and deflate the value of Wheaton
stock. The complaint alleged that the older-generation
shareholders who held management positions benefitted (for estate
planning purposes) from the artificially deflated stock values
and that the depressed value of the shares harmed the
younger-generation shareholders. The trial court in the North
Jersey action granted the defendants' motion to dismiss the
complaint, determining that plaintiffs' claims of fraud and
misrepresentation were vague and conclusory, that the claims of
breach of fiduciary duty and waste were derivative, and that the
state RICO claims failed to plead a cause of action. The court
held that all the claims, if valid, were derivative based on the
plaintiffs' failure to show any "special injury" distinct from
that suffered by all Wheaton shareholders. The plaintiffs
appealed the trial court's decision.
Meanwhile, in the appraisal matter, Wheaton had offered to
pay the dissenting shareholders $41.50 per share in response to
their demand for payment of fair value. The dissenting
shareholders rejected this offer and demanded that, pursuant to
11-7(1), Wheaton commence an action in Superior Court to
determine the fair value of the stock. On April 23, 1992,
Wheaton commenced the appraisal action in the Chancery Division
of Superior Court for Cumberland County seeking a judicial
determination of fair value for the approximately 762,000 shares
of Wheaton stock held by the dissenting shareholders.
Three years later, on June 14, 1995, Wheaton's board of
directors voted to rescind the 1991 corporate restructuring that
had triggered the dissenting shareholders' appraisal rights. The
company sought to avoid the financial ramifications of a fair
value payment because it then appeared to management that the
company's fortunes had declined. Invoking 11-4(1)(e), which
provides for termination of a shareholder's appraisal rights if
"the proposed corporate action is abandoned or rescinded,"
Wheaton sought to dismiss the appraisal action (the rescission
motion). The trial court denied Wheaton's application, holding
that rescission of a triggering corporate action after its
effective date could not terminate appraisal rights that had
vested. On August 2, 1995, the Appellate Division denied
Wheaton's motion for leave to appeal that decision.
On August 8, 1995, the Appellate Division rendered its
decision in the Strasenburgh matter. The court affirmed the
dismissal of the claim for waste but remanded the remaining
claims, holding that plaintiffs' theory of a "disparate impact"
between the older and younger generations stated an individual
cause of action. Strasenburgh v. Straubmuller,
284 N.J. Super. 168, 179 (App. Div. 1995). The court found that the alleged
manipulation by the board of the company's assets and stock
values in effect created two classes of shareholders. One class,
made up of the older shareholders who controlled the company,
benefitted from lower stock values through the potential of
reduced estate tax liabilities; while the class of younger
shareholders suffered from the depressed value of their shares.
The court held this disparate impact between the two classes of
shareholders sufficient to state individual, not derivative,
claims of breach of fiduciary duty and fraud on the part of
Wheaton's directors. On December 7, 1995, we granted the
petition for certification filed by the directors in the
Strasenburgh matter.
143 N.J. 324 (1995).
Several days later, on December 15, 1995, the Legislature
amended the applicable provisions of the BCA. Under one
amendment, the type of corporate restructuring that Wheaton
undertook, an intra-corporate transfer of assets from a parent
corporation to wholly-owned subsidiaries, no longer triggers
dissent and appraisal rights. N.J.S.A. 14A:10-11(4), 11-1(1)(b)
(as amended by L. 1995, c. 279, § 16, § 21, eff. Dec. 15, 1995).
Shortly after the new law became effective, Wheaton renewed its
request that the trial court dismiss the appraisal action. It
contended that the amendments clarified the impact of the prior
law to deny appraisal rights and that the amendments applied
retroactively, thereby terminating the dissenting shareholders'
rights to the fair value of their stock (the retroactivity
motion). The trial court denied that motion.See footnote 3
We had granted Wheaton's motion for leave to appeal the
denial of the rescission motion and subsequently granted
Wheaton's motion for direct review of the retroactivity motion.
The case was argued before us on April 29, 1996.
Still new circumstances have arisen since the oral argument.
On May 1, 1996, Wheaton announced "an acquisition merger" with
Alusuisse-Lonza Holding Ltd., a Swiss holding company. Under the
provisions of the merger, the effective date of which was April
29, 1996, Wheaton shareholders received $63.00 per share from
Alusuisse. Alusuisse has requested that Wheaton's counsel
withdraw its appeals in the Wheaton appraisal matter. This
decision to withdraw the appeals undoubtedly stems from
Alusuisse-Lonza's belief that the fair value of the shares when
surrendered in 1991 was lower than the 1996 acquisition price of
$63.00. Accordingly, Wheaton has again reversed its position and
now seeks to withdraw its appeal and to accept the appraisal of
the trial court. The dissenting shareholders argue that granting
the withdrawal of the appeals would prejudice their rights. They
ask the Court to dismiss Wheaton's motions, affirm the rulings on
appeal, and remand to the trial court for determination of the
fair value of their stock as of 1991.
argument to consider its poor financial condition when it appears
to have known that a merger at $63.00 a share was in the wings,
if not signed and sealed. (Of course, the merger does not
augment Wheaton's treasury.) Wheaton now argues that the
dissenting shareholders should have appraisal rights. Some of
the original dissenting shareholders no longer seek the appraisal
remedy. Nonetheless, the issues of rescission and retroactivity
may recur and we address them briefly.
terminating the shareholder's right to demand payment, may also take place after the effective date of the action. Yet, 11-4(1)(e) provides that a dissenting shareholder's right to payment of fair value for his shares may be terminated if "the proposed corporate action is abandoned or rescinded[.]" (Emphasis added.) The language of 11-4(1)(e) appears intrinsically inconsistent. Ordinarily, one does not rescind a proposed action. Moreover, if the "rights of a dissenting shareholder" do not arise until after the effective date of an action, what rights are there to terminate if the "proposed" action has never taken place? Still, the fair value recipients argue that the plain meaning of the word "proposed" in 11-4(1)(e) allows the corporation to rescind a disputed action only prior to its effective date. They rely in part on New York cases interpreting appraisal provisions of the New York Business Corporation Law (the New York Act) that held that rescission of a triggering corporate action before its effective date divests appraisal rights.See footnote 4 See N.Y. Bus. Corp. Law § 623 (McKinney 1996). None of those cases dealt with the precise issue before us, i.e., whether rescission of a corporate action after its effective date may divest appraisal rights. On the contrary, the New York cases dealt with corporate actions that had yet to be consummated and the shareholders' premature application for appraisal rights.
See, e.g., In re Valando,
323 N.Y.S.2d 608, 609 (Sup. Ct. 1971)
(holding that shareholder's right to receive payment for shares
of stock under dissent statute does not vest unless objectionable
corporate action taken); Standard Brewing Co. v. Peachey,
108 N.Y.S.2d 583, 588 (Sup. Ct. 1951) (holding that shareholders have
no right to appraisal and payment for stock under proposed
corporate action). But see In re McKinney,
117 N.E.2d 256, 259
(N.Y. 1954) (appearing to contemplate rescission after action
taken).
Our goal in statutory construction is to determine the
intent of the Legislature, which is ordinarily most clearly
indicated by the statutory language. Medical Soc'y v. Dep't of
Law & Pub. Safety,
120 N.J. 18, 26 (1990). However, a
"construction that will render any part of a statute inoperative,
superfluous, or meaningless, is to be avoided." State v.
Reynolds,
124 N.J. 559, 564 (1991). Interpreting the words
"abandoned" and "rescinded" in section 11-4(1)(e) to apply only
to a "proposed" corporate action would entirely nullify 11-4(1)(e) as a means for terminating a shareholder's right to
demand payment of fair value for shares because a shareholder may
only demand such payment after the effective date of the
corporate action pursuant to 11-2(3). We believe that
construction does not comport with the Legislature's intent in
drafting those provisions.
Of course, one might attribute a generic meaning to the
words "dissenting shareholders" in 11-4(1)(e) as those who have
indicated an initial intent to dissent from the proposed action.
But if that were so, there would be no reason for the provisions
of 11-4(2) that condition any termination of appraisal rights on
an award to the dissenting shareholder of "any intervening
preemptive rights . . . dividend[s] or distribution[s]." Because
the usual time cycles for dividends are at least quarterly, the
statute appears to contemplate the passage of a significant
period of time between the triggering corporate action and
termination of appraisal rights.
The legislative history of 11-4(1)(e) discloses that the
word "proposed" appears in early drafts of the act, which were
drawn from the Model Business Corporation Act (the Model Act).
See N.J.S.A. 14A:11-4 "Source or Reference." The minutes of the
New Jersey Corporation Law Revision Commission's 104th meeting
show that the BCA later moved away from the Model Act's time
sequence to its own unique sequence, based in part on the then-existing New York Act. The Commission voted that the BCA "be
amended to . . . insert a new subsection (2) [authorizing
dissent and appraisal rights] patterned after §623(b) of the New
York Business Corporation Law, except that the notice mentioned
in §623(b) should be sent after the effective date of the
[corporate] action rather than after the shareholders'
authorization date." See New Jersey Corporation Law Revision
Commission, Minutes of 104th Meeting (March 11, 1965).
Notably, the BCA's current time frame is unlike that of both
the former Model Act and the current New York Act. The BCA and
the Model Act are alike in that both require a non-consenting
shareholder to complete two steps in order to perfect the right
to be paid fair value: the shareholder must first notify the
corporation of the intention to dissent and then must serve
demand on the corporation for the payment of fair value. Under
section 74 of the Model Act, step two is accomplished by the
shareholder making written demand for payment within ten days
after the vote authorizing the proposed corporate action; thus,
the right to fair value may be perfected before the effective
date of the corporate action. In New Jersey, however, step two
takes place after the effective date. See N.J.S.A. 14A:11-2(3).
Notably, New York's current statute is both different and
similar to the BCA. New York requires that the shareholder file
a notice of election to dissent, but does not require the
shareholder to file an additional notice of demand for fair
value. See N.Y. Bus. Corp. Law § 623(c). Significantly, New
York has since amended section 623 to delete the reference to a
corporation having "rescinded" a "proposed" act.See footnote 5
The rhetorical question thus posed by the company is why
does the BCA even mention rescission rights if there is no right
to rescind after the triggering action is taken:
[S]ince [a] dissenters' right to be paid fair
value does not exist until after the
completion of corporation action, New Jersey
corporations would be left with a classic
paradox and meaningless remedy, i.e., there
would be no need to rescind prior to the
completion of corporation action and no
ability to do so afterward. In effect, a
corporation could rescind only when it didn't
need to. Certainly the Legislature never
intended such a Catch 22 type result.
"It is a venerable principle that a law will not be
interpreted to produce absurd results." K-Mart Corp. v. Cartier,
Inc.,
486 U.S. 281, 325 n.2,
108 S. Ct. 1811, 1835 n.2,
100 L.
Ed.2d 313, 345 n.2 (1988) (Scalia, J., concurring in part and
dissenting in part). Thus, our function is to make sense of a
statute. In re Executive Comm'n on Ethical Standards Re:
Appearance of Rutgers Att'ys,
116 N.J. 216, 221 (1989). It would
make little sense to provide for termination of appraisal rights
but only if appraisal rights have not arisen. On balance, we
believe that the Legislature intended that a corporation be given
a reasonable right to rescind corporate action that has triggered
appraisal rights. After all, the shareholders' preliminary
notice of intent to dissent (provided in 11-4) is just that.
Appraisal rights do not vest unless there is a demand under 11-2(3). It is one thing to forge ahead with the restructuring of a
corporation if 2" of shareholders demand appraisal rights and
quite another to be locked into an action if 49" of shareholders
actually demand these rights. This is the common sense of the
situation and the interpretation that we believe our Legislature
intended.
We cannot accept, however, Wheaton's argument that the
Legislature intended to allow rescission of a corporate action
any time after its effective date. Wheaton made its decision to
rescind the 1991 restructuring some three and one-half years
after the restructuring was completed. Although 11-4(1)(e)
places no time restraint on the corporation's ability to rescind
and terminate the dissenting shareholder's appraisal rights,
principles of logic and statutory interpretation would require
the corporation to rescind its action within a reasonable time
after the effective date. See In re Hake,
136 N.Y.S.2d 817, 821
(App. Div.) (holding that "[i]f the corporate officers and
directors fail to act within a reasonable time and resolution is
not rescinded, an order for appraisal and payment for the
dissenting stockholder's stock should be made."), appeal
dismissed,
127 N.E.2d 90 (N.Y. 1955); Raymond Proffitt Foundation
v. U.S.E.P.A.,
930 F. Supp. 1088, 1100 (E.D. Pa. 1996) (holding
that when statute does not provide time for prescribed act court
must infer that Legislature intends that act be done within
reasonable time).
Were it otherwise, the interminable termination right would
become a one-way street for a corporation to play the market. If
the fair value of the company's shares goes up between demand and
valuation, a dissenting shareholder may not, without consent of a
company, withdraw a demand for fair value, 11-5(1), and take the
higher current value. On the other hand, if the company's
fortunes wane and share values go down, the company might, at any
time, rescind the action and saddle dissenting shareholders with
the lower current values. This is simply not fair. Once
shareholders make a demand for payment, they surrender all rights
as shareholders. N.J.S.A. 14A:11-3(2). They are outsiders
without a voice in company affairs. In addition, they will have
wasted time, money and emotional resources in the appraisal
contest.
In assessing a passage of time that is both reasonable and
equitable to the parties involved, a court must consider the
corporation's financial position and the consequences of forcing
payment of fair value, as well as the prejudice to the dissenting
shareholders by allowing rescission. In this case, we need not
debate what is a fair balance of the factors because both parties
now seek the appraisal remedy.
Gibbons v. Gibbons,
86 N.J. 515, 521,
432 A.2d 80 (1981). "It is a fundamental
principle of jurisprudence that retroactive
application of new laws involves a high risk
of being unfair." Gibbons, supra, 86 N.J. at
522,
432 A.2d 80. It is "presumed that
provisions added by the amendment affecting
substantive rights are intended to operate
prospectively." Schiavo v. John F. Kennedy
Hosp.,
258 N.J. Super. 380, 385,
609 A.2d 781
(App. Div. 1992), aff'd,
131 N.J. 400,
620 A.2d 1050 (1993). We apply "a two-part test
to determine whether a statute could be
applied retroactively." Phillips v. Curiale,
128 N.J. 608, 617,
608 A.2d 895 (1992). The
first part questions "whether the Legislature
intended to give the statute retroactive
application." Ibid. The second part
involves "whether retroactive application of
that statute will result in either an
unconstitutional interference with `vested
rights' or a `manifest injustice.'" Ibid.
In applying this test generally, there are
three circumstances that will justify a
retroactive application of a statute: (1)
where the Legislature has declared such an
intent, either explicitly or implicitly; (2)
where the statute is curative; and (3) where
the expectations of the parties warrant
retroactive application. Gibbons, supra, at
522-23,
432 A.2d 80; see Savarese v. New
Jersey Auto. Full Ins. Underwriting Assoc.,
235 N.J. Super. 298, 308,
562 A.2d 239 (1989)
(finding an expressed intent to apply statute
retroactively). However, even if a statute
is found to apply retroactively based on
those factors, under the second prong of the
basic test, retroactive application must not
"result in `manifest injustice' to a party
adversely affected by such application."
Gibbons, supra, 86 N.J. at 523,
432 A.2d 80.
"The `curative' exception comes into
play when a statute amends a previous law
which is unclear or which does not effectuate
the actual intent of the Legislature in
adopting the original act." Schiavo, supra,
258 N.J. Super. at 386,
609 A.2d 781. The
purpose of a curative amendment is merely to
"remedy a perceived imperfection in or
misapplication of a statute." Ibid.
[In re D.C.,
146 N.J. 31, 50-51 (1996).]
It is arguable that the act is intended to remedy a
perceived imperfection or misapplication of the BCA. The company
points out that the twenty-one of twenty-two jurisdictions that
permit appraisal rights on the sale of assets do not permit
appraisal rights on the transfer of assets to wholly-owned
subsidiaries.
The more difficult task is to apply the second prong of the
test--whether retroactive application of the statute results in
either an unconstitutional interference with vested rights or a
manifest injustice.
In Phillips v. Curiale, supra, 128 N.J. at 625, we explained
that traditionally, "inchoate tort claims have not been regarded
as vested rights of sufficient status to withstand" legislative
intent to apply statutes retroactively. Of course, these are not
tort claims. Because the appraisal rights were statutorily
created, it is unlikely that they would have sufficient status to
withstand a legislative intent that the amendments be
retroactive. The remaining question is whether retroactive
application of the amendments would result in a manifest
injustice. "[R]etroactive application of civil legislation
generally does not violate due process unless the consequences
are particularly harsh and oppressive." Id. at 622.
The company argued before us that shareholders would suffer
no injustice because they would be fully restored to their status
as shareholders. On the other hand, the shareholders argue that
they cannot be returned to their earlier status. They have
invested considerable sums of money in pursuing the momentous
election to redeem their shares, a decision that they were forced
to make within a matter of days over the 1991 holiday season. In
addition, they assert that they have unalterably changed their
lives in separating themselves from the family corporation.
Again, because both parties now seek the appraisal remedy, the
Court need not resolve the factual question whether it would be
manifestly unjust to apply the statute retroactively in these
circumstances. Should there be other business corporations
similarly situated (having rescinded a triggering action taken
before the amendments), a careful factual analysis would have to
be made before the statute could be applied retroactively.
Because, then, Wheaton's motion to dismiss its appeal and
the fair value recipients' request to affirm the rulings below
reach the same result, we affirm the rulings of the trial court
on the rescission motion and the retroactivity motion.
We direct, however, that the trial court be permitted in its
discretion to reopen the record in the appraisal proceedings for
consideration of events that have transpired since the hearing
closed. Specifically, the trial court may take into account the
position of Wheaton's directors in the North Jersey litigation
that the court in the appraisal proceeding may consider whether
the conduct of the directors had artificially depressed the value
of the stock. See infra at 8 (slip op. at ___). The court may
also consider the company's recent merger in making a just and
equitable determination of the appraisal value as of 1991.
Before us, the company argued that its financial condition had
deteriorated between 1991 and 1996. We realize that the trial
court in the appraisal action has determined to limit proofs to
the events at the time of the December 1991 valuation. We
surmise that these matters of artificial deflation of stock
values were fully canvassed in that proceeding and if the court
is satisfied to enter judgment on the record before it, it may do
so.
facilities and the company jet); (2) misleading shareholders into
approving a liquidity plan that reduced the liquidity of shares;
(3) rejecting fair offers to purchase the company; (4) creating a
voting trust in which a group of "favored" shareholders
participated to the detriment of plaintiffs; and (5) devising a
stock recapitalization plan unfair to shareholders seeking
liquidity.
fraudulent as to such dissenting shareholder."). The New York
language is similar. See N.Y. Bus. Corp. Law § 623(k) ("The
enforcement by a shareholder [of appraisal rights] shall exclude
the enforcement by such shareholder of any other right to which
[the shareholder] might otherwise be entitled . . . except that
this section shall not exclude the right of such shareholder to
bring or maintain an appropriate action to obtain relief on the
ground that such corporate action will be or is unlawful or
fraudulent as to [the shareholder]."). In contrast, the 1960
Model Act provides no exceptions for bringing suit once a
shareholder has dissented. See Model Act § 74 (1960) ("Any
shareholder making [a demand for appraisal rights] shall
thereafter be entitled only to payment as in this section
provided . . . ."). The statutes in both New Jersey and New York
appear to limit the exclusivity of the appraisal remedy to the
triggering corporate action.
However, a theme that runs through the exclusivity and
appraisal provisions is whether the appraisal remedy will provide
all the relief to the aggrieved parties that is required. The
New York Court of Appeals has taken a narrow view of this
interplay, but has allowed the possibility of some equitable
relief. In Breed v. Barton,
429 N.E.2d 128, 129 (N.Y. 1981), the
court stated that in choosing the appraisal remedy, the
dissenting shareholders abandoned their alternative rights as
shareholders. In Breed, even though there were allegations of
fraud, the court held that allowing a cause of action in addition
to the appraisal proceeding would be duplicative, in that the
appraisal proceeding will provide dissenting shareholders with a
sufficient recovery of the value of their shares. Id. at 130.
In contrast, in Kademian v. Ladish Co.,
792 F.2d 614 (7th Cir.
1986), the court allowed minority shareholder claims against
directors who had allegedly induced a merger at below market
value. The Seventh Circuit allowed the state claims of fraud and
misrepresentation to proceed over the objection that the
Wisconsin appraisal remedy was exclusive. The decision, however,
contains no discussion of whether the majority shareholders had
pursued the appraisal remedy or whether that remedy would fully
compensate the shareholders for their losses. The court did note
that some of the complainants had sold their shares before the
triggering merger that would give rise to appraisal rights.
The argument of defendant directors for exclusivity of the
appraisal remedy would have been more persuasive had not the same
directors pressed corporate counsel to oppose the appraisal
rights of the dissenting shareholders on the ground that the
format of the 1991 restructuring did not trigger dissent and
appraisal rights. Had the directors' arguments been accepted in
each of the courts, the shareholders would have no remedy for the
misconduct.
We believe that the Breed analysis is more persuasive.
Whether the claimed damages will be fully recoverable
in the appraisal action depends on further analysis
of the claims, which analysis is also relative to
determining whether the claims are derivative.
investment in faulty technology. The distinction between the two
types of action is crucial. See Ralph C. Ferrara, et al.,
Shareholder Derivative Litigation § 1.02 (1996).
A corporation is regarded as an entity separate and distinct
from its shareholders. Dep't of Labor v. Berlanti,
196 N.J.
Super. 122 (App. Div.), certif. granted,
99 N.J. 151 (1984), and
appeal dismissed,
101 N.J. 568 (1985). It is a principle of
corporation law that "[r]egard for the corporate personality
demands that suits to redress corporate injuries which
secondarily harm all shareholders alike are brought only by the
corporation." Note, Distinguishing Between Direct and Derivative
Shareholders' Suits,
110 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1147, 1148 (1962) (citing
Smith v. Hurd,
53 Mass. 371, 384-85 (1847)) (hereinafter
Distinguishing). Reasons of policy and practicality more than
abstractions about the nature of a corporation underlie the
principle. The policy reasons include maintaining the investment
resources of the corporation, avoiding a multiplicity of suits,
providing equal benefit for all shareholders and avoiding
partial dividends or partial liquidation. Distinguishing, supra,
110 U.Pa. L. Rev. at 1148. The prevailing American rule is that
"[w]hen an injury to corporate stock falls equally upon all
stockholders, then an individual stockholder may not recover for
the injury to his stock alone, but must seek recovery
derivatively in behalf of the corporation." Cowin v. Bresler,
741 F.2d 410, 414 (D.C. Cir. 1984).
New Jersey accepts the general principle. "Shareholders
cannot sue for injuries arising from the diminution in value of
their shareholdings resulting from wrongs allegedly done to their
corporations." Pepe v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.,
254 N.J.Super. 662, 666 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
130 N.J. 11
(1992). Under the BCA shareholders may not bring derivative
actions except in compliance with statutory requirements and
Rules of Court. N.J.S.A. 14A:11-7, R. 4:32-5. See In re
Prudential Ins. Co. Derivative Litigation,
282 N.J. Super. 256,
268-70 (Ch. Div. 1995) (outlining history and purposes of Rule).
The general rule that claims of diminution in share value are
derivative permits a "special injury" exception, which has yet to
be widely addressed in our courts. A special injury exists
"where there is a wrong suffered by [a] plaintiff that was not
suffered by all stockholders generally or where the wrong
involves a contractual right of the stockholders, such as the
right to vote." In re Tri-Star Pictures, Inc.,
634 A.2d 319, 330
(Del. 1993).
The statement of such principles is easy. The actual
determination of whether a suit involves derivative or individual
claims of shareholders is not. Delaware, which has a well
developed body of law on this subject, has long recognized a
sharp distinction between derivative and individual actions.
"The distinction is important because derivative actions are
deemed to belong to the subject corporation whereas individual
actions do not." Weinberger v. Lorenzo, 1
990 WL 156529 at *2
(Del. Ch. Oct. 12, 1990) (quoting DeMott, Shareholder Derivative
Actions Law and Practice § 2:01 (1987)).
To determine whether a complaint states a derivative or an
individual cause of action, courts examine the nature of the
wrongs alleged in the body of the complaint, not the plaintiff's
designation or stated intention. Lipton v. News Int'l Plc,
514 A.2d 1075, 1078 (Del. 1986). Elster v. American Airlines, Inc.,
100 A.2d 219 (Del. Ch. 1953), held that a shareholder may
maintain an individual action against a corporation or its
directors if the shareholder sustained a "special injury." The
court defined a special injury as "a wrong inflicted upon [the
shareholder] alone or a wrong affecting any particular right
which [the plaintiff] is asserting, such as . . . pre-emptive
rights as a stockholder, rights involving the control of the
corporation, or a wrong affecting the stockholders and not the
corporation." Id. at 222.
In Moran v. Household Int'l, Inc.,
490 A.2d 1059 (Del. Ch.),
aff'd,
500 A.2d 1346 (Del. 1985), the court explained: "To set
out an individual action, the plaintiff must allege either `an
injury which is separate and distinct from that suffered by other
shareholders' or a wrong involving a contractual right of a
shareholder, such as the right to vote, or to assert majority
control, which exists independently of any right of the
corporation." Id. at 1070 (citations omitted). In Lipton, the
Delaware Supreme Court combined the Elster and Moran tests,
stating that
a plaintiff alleges a special injury and may
maintain an individual action if he complains
of an injury distinct from that suffered by
other shareholders or a wrong involving one
of his contractual rights as a shareholder.
Moreover, while Moran serves as a quite
useful guide, the case should not be
construed as establishing the only test for
determining whether a claim is derivative or
individual in nature. Rather, as was
established in Elster, we must look
ultimately to whether the plaintiff has
alleged "special" injury in whatever form.
[Lipton, supra, 514 A.
2d at 1078.]
Claims of waste (recall the example of the investment in
faulty technology) will always be derivative claims. Shearin v.
E. F. Hutton Group, Inc.,
652 A.2d 578, 591 (Del. Ch. 1994) ("A
claim for corporate waste is classically derivative."). Claims
of breach of fiduciary duty on the part of directors will also be
generally regarded as derivative claims unless the injury to
shares is distinct. See Small v. Goldman,
637 F.Supp. 1030
(D.N.J. 1986) (holding plaintiff had individual cause of action
arising out of conspiracy by directors to compel sale of
plaintiff's shares below value). If the breach of duty causes a
"special injury," shareholders may sue directly. For example,
claims against directors for the selective dissemination of
information to one group of shareholders over another are not
derivative in nature because the unfair dealing unequally affects
shareholders that were deprived of the information. Tri-Star,
supra, 634 A.
2d at 331-32; Barbieri v. Swing-N-Slide Corp., 1
996 WL 255907 (Del. Ch. May 7, 1996).
Claims of entrenchment by directors often fall into the same
category of stating either a direct or derivative claim,
depending on whether the entrenchment affects shareholders
unequally. For example, Spillyards v. Abboud,
662 N.E.2d 1358
(Ill. App. Ct. 1996), held that a breach of fiduciary duty
engaged in for the purpose of entrenchment stated an individual
claim and not a derivative claim. Spillyards involved a
challenge to a stock purchase agreement under which the
purchasers were bound to vote their shares for incumbent
directors. The court agreed with the plaintiff shareholders that
that voting restriction "had the purpose of entrenchment and
affected the other shareholders' voting rights in that the
shareholders' ability to have nominees other than the Board's
nominees elected was diluted." Id. at 1363. Claims of
entrenchment without corresponding allegation of direct harm to
shareholders' contractual rights, however, set forth derivative
claims only. Moran, supra, 490 A.
2d at 1070.
Concededly, a thin line often separates actions that are
derivative or individual. Kramer v. Western Pac. Indus., Inc.,
546 A.2d 348, 352 n.3 (Del. 1988). For example, when preferred
shareholders of Eastern Airlines complained that Frank Lorenzo
had manipulated the assets of Eastern by switching assets from
Eastern to Continental Airlines, the non-union airline under the
common control of the parent, Texas Air, the Eastern preferred
shareholders claimed that they had suffered a special injury to
their preferred status. Yet, the court held that they did not
suffer any injury distinct from that of all other Eastern Airline
shareholders. Weinberger, supra, 1
990 WL 156529 at *1.
In Yanow v. Teal Indus. Inc.,
422 A.2d 311 (Conn. 1979), the
majority had misused its powers by systematically looting assets
from one corporation to the special detriment or injury of
minority shareholders because the assets were transferred to a
corporation wholly owned by the majority interests. That did not
occur here.
A closer case is Williams v. Geier,
671 A.2d 1368 (Del.
1996). In that case, the board of directors of Cincinnati
Milacron approved a recapitalization of stock that diluted the
voting rights of non-long-term share owners (analogously younger
generation shareholders). The long-term shareholders were
afforded greater voting rights. The Geier court concluded that
the claims of the newcomer Cincinnati Milacron shareholders were
individual and not derivative.
The claims of waste in the context of derivative actions
have already been discussed. See supra at 32 (slip op. at ___).
The remaining claims in the North Jersey action, listed supra at
24 (slip op. ___), are more troubling. The "Liquidity Plan"
adopted in April 1991 granted the company a ninety-day right of
refusal before shareholders could sell shares to a non-descendant. Plaintiffs allege that, contrary to company
representations, the plan reduced liquidity and deprived them of
a substantial portion of their share value. The directors
rejected the $64.00 per share proposal Bowater made in August
1991. Plaintiffs allege that the proposal established that the company knew the true value of the company in 1991. During that same period, in fact, Bowater purchased 100,000 shares from Frank H. Wheaton, Jr. Plaintiffs allege the "voting trust" was part of a plan of misrepresentation intended to prevent shareholders from realizing the full value of the shares. Finally, under the December 1991 recapitalization plan, shareholders would have been required to exchange their common stock for one of two new classes