The relief which the plaintiffs sought and obtained in the court below arises out of a corporate "freeze-out” by a shareholder majority, a phenomenon described in
Donahue
v.
Rodd Electrotype Co.,
We summarize the findings of the trial judge, which neither side challenges. The plaintiffs Paul J. Hallaban and G. Peter Hallaban, brothers, joined forces with the defendants Charles M. Thompson and Errol M. Thompson, also brothers, to launch a drinking and eating establishment in Hyannis known as the Quarter Deck Lounge. For two weeks before opening for business in late June, *69 1975, David Thompson, who was a cousin of the Thompson brothers and a carpenter by trade, helped the four joint venturers make renovations of the premises which the Quarter Deck Lounge occupied. After opening, the joint venturers, i.e. the brothers Hallaban and the brothers Thompson, decided to incorporate their venture, intending that there be four equal shareholders. On July 29, 1975, they filed articles of organization which established Haltom Corp. (Haltom), of which Charles Thompson was the president, Errol Thompson, the treasurer, and Paul Hallaban, the clerk. These three were also directors. Haltom issued one hundred shares of stock, 23% shares to each of Paul Hallaban, Peter Hallaban, Charles Thompson and Errol Thompson and five shares to David Thompson as partial payment for the carpentry work he performed in June. Paul Hallaban understood that the power among the shareholders remained equally divided between the Thompson brothers and the Hallaban brothers. The four venturers agreed that David Thompson would not actively participate in the business. After incorporation, but before he received his shares of stock, David Thompson signed a proxy in favor of Charles Thompson which was neither dated nor limited in time.
The directors of Haltom voted to petition the board of selectmen of the town of Barnstable (the local licensing authority) for transfer of the Quarter Deck alcoholic beverages license from Paul Hallaban and Errol Thompson to Haltom. That petition was granted and approved by the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission on November 4,1975, whereupon the transfer became effective. At this juncture the Hallaban and Thompson fraternities fell out. Charles and Errol Thompson called a stockholders’ meeting at Paul Hallahan’s home, without notice of the business to be transacted at the meeting. When the meeting convened the Thompsons said they had received complaints about the Hallahans’ performance as bartenders. On those grounds, voting their shares and those of David Thompson, the Thompson brothers fired the *70 Hallahans as employees of the corporation. The Hallahans had not received any complaints from customers or from the Thompsons prior to the meeting.
The trial judge ordered David Thompson to return his five shares of stock to the corporation in exchange for $500, and from this judgment David Thompson has appealed.
The findings we have summarized describe a close corporation as defined in
Donahue
v.
Rodd Electrotype Co.,
A partner who judges himself oppressed has the option under G. L. c. 108A, § 31(l)(t>), to cause dissolution by his express will when no definite term for the partnership or other particular undertaking is specified. As the
Donahue
case calls to attention (at 592), it is the plight of the minority stockholder that he "must own at least fifty percent of the shares” to file a petition for dissolution under G. L. c. 156B, § 99(a). It was in order to place the "partners” in that position that the trial judge ordered that David Thompson’s five shares be returned to the corporation as treasury stock in exchange for $500, which reflected the value of $100 a share for repurchase of stock established in the articles of organization of Haltom. This restored the balance of control among the Hallahans and the Thompsons which the trial judge found the parties had envisioned and which they had a fiduciary duty to each other to maintain. The action of the trial judge was consistent with the generic similarity of the duties of stockholders in a close corporation to each other and partners in a partnership which the
Donahue
and
Springside Nursing Home
decisions have defined. A court exercising traditional equity powers has power to remedy the wrong complained of and to make the decree effective.
Nigro
v.
Conti,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The trial judge found that Haltom’s net income at the end of its first full year of operation was $7.00.
