— In а special proceeding for the judicial dissolution of Long Island Paneling Centers, Inc., pursuant to Business Corporation Law § 1104, Arnold Osman, a 50% shareholder in Long Island Paneling Centers, Inc., appeals from an order of the Supreme Court, Nassau County (Molloy, J.), dated December 28, 1989, which, after a hеaring, granted the petition of the remaining 50% shareholder, Frank Sternberg, to dissolve Long Island Paneling Cеnters, Inc., and to appoint a permanent receiver, and which denied his cross motion, inter alia, to dismiss the dissolution petition, or, alternatively, to compel relief pursuant to Business Corporation Law §§ 1104-a and 1118.
Ordered that the order is affirmed, with costs.
We note as a threshold matter that the petitioner’s failure to comply with thе letter of the notice requirements of Business Corporation Law § 1106 was not a jurisdictional defеct (cf., Matter of Slepian v Beanstalk Rests.,
There is no merit to Arnold Osman’s suggestion that, for various reasons, the instant proceeding should be converted into a proceeding for сommon-law dissolution, or a proceeding pursuant to Business Corporation Law § 1104-a, triggering his right to buy оut the petitioner’s shares under Business Corporation Law § 1118.
The appellant’s request for a conversion is made for the first time on appeal. In any event, the remedy of common-law dissolution is available only to minority shareholders who accuse the majority shareholders and/or the corporate officers or directors of looting the corporation and violаting their
The record supports the Supreme Court’s ruling that Stern-berg adequately еstablished that Long Island Paneling Centers, Inc., should be dissolved because of deadlock and dissensiоn pursuant to Business Corporation Law § 1104, both in his affidavits (see, Matter of Garay v Langer,
Since neither party pleaded the "special circumstances” enunciated in Business Corporation Law § 1104-a, and because the evidence adduced does not support any theory under Business Corporation Law § 1104-a, the appellant may not buy out the petitionеr pursuant to Business Corporation Law § 1118. "Business Corporation Law § 1118, the buy-out provision, applies only to petitions brought pursuant to Business Corporation Law § 1104-a and therefore does not аpply to the present [proceeding] which was brought pursuant to section 1104” (Greer v Greer, supra, at 708; see also, Matter of Cristo Bros.,
The appеllant failed to carry his burden of proving that the five satellite corporations and Long Island Pаneling Centers, Inc., were a single, unified franchise, either for the purpose of piercing the corporate veil, or in order to demonstrate that Long Island Paneling Centers, Inc., could not bе dissolved without bringing about the involuntary dissolution of the remaining five corporations, or to establish that the petitioner’s share in the six-store enterprise was less than 50%, which would have disqualified him from petitioning for relief under Business Corporation Law § 1104. Indeed, although the six stores shared interlocking officers and directors to varying degrees, each satellite had its own manager and conducted its day-to-day operations essentially independently. The main
