Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Reilly, Jr., J.), entered September 29, 2001 in Schenectady County, which, inter alia, dismissed petitioner’s application, in a proceeding pursuant to Business Corporation Law article 11, to direct the judicial dissolution of respondent.
Respondent is a closely held corporation with its outstanding shares of common stock equally owned by Lewis Golub, Robert Higgins and Albert Lawrence. Its sole corporate purpose was not to make a profit, but to own, operate and make available for use by its shareholders its principal asset, a 1983 Beech-craft King Air B200 airplane. To purchase this asset, the three shareholders borrowed $1,121,000 from Chase Manhattan Bank (hereinafter Chase), in their individual capacities, pledging the plane as collateral; respondent guaranteed this loan and was therefore secondarily liable.
Pursuant to a verbal shareholders’ agreement, each would pay a minimum amount of flight time per year to cover the costs of maintaining and operating the airplane; these payments were respondent’s only source of revenue. They also agreed that any additional operating expenses, as well as any liability on the Chase loan, would be paid for equally. In accordance with this agreement, all shareholders paid one third of the amount due on the Chase loan, along with the minimum usage requirement, until January 1997, one month prior to Lawrence’s filing for bankruptcy under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (11 USC). Such filing resulted in the appointment of Jeffrey Cohen as trustee of the bankruptcy estate (hereinafter trustee) who thereby became the owner of Lawrence’s shares of respondent’s stock. Thereafter, to avoid foreclosure on the airplane, Golub and Higgins paid all of Lawrence’s monthly payments; the bankruptcy estate failed to make any payments on behalf of Lawrence.
On March 9, 2000, the trustee received an offer from Equinox Air L.L.C. to purchase his share of respondent’s stock. On the same day, Golub and Higgins called a shareholders meeting
On March 13, 2000, the trustee made a motion in the bankruptcy proceeding to have the sale of his shares approved. On the same day, Golub and Higgins noticed another shareholders meeting to consider having respondent execute notes payable to themselves as reimbursement for the moneys paid on behalf of Lawrence. On March 16, 2000, the trustee successfully acquired a temporary restraining order from the Bankruptcy Court to enjoin the shareholders meeting by contending, inter alia, that respondent’s increased debt would destroy the outstanding offer to purchase respondent’s stock. Respondent, Golub and Higgins consented to a continuation of the temporary restraining order until a hearing set for April 6, 2000. At the same time, Golub and Higgins filed an administrative expense claim in the bankruptcy proceeding seeking to recover, as costs of preserving the estate, certain funds that they advanced to respondent on Lawrence’s behalf. Prior to the decision on the administrative expense claim, respondent, Golub and Higgins withdrew their voluntary consent to a continuation of any restraint preventing respondent and its Board of Directors from taking corporate action. On December 13, 2000, the Bankruptcy Court denied the administrative expense claim.
By order dated January 17, 2001, Bankruptcy Court permitted Equinox to withdraw its offer of purchase. On January 18, 2001, after the expiration of the March 16, 2000 temporary restraining order and just prior to the expiration of a second restraining order, the trustee filed an unsuccessful motion to extend the injunction to prevent the issuance of corporate promissory notes to Golub and Higgins. Golub and Higgins then convened a shareholders meeting of respondent on January 26, 2001 which authorized the issuance of promissory notes to themselves, which were to be satisfied by the issuance of additional shares of common stock. It further authorized the offer of an option to the trustee to repay the notes on the shareholder loans, thereby extinguishing Golub’s and Higgins’s equity conversion rights.
Based on these actions, the trustee commenced this proceeding to bring about a corporate dissolution of respondent.
It is well settled that a court, in its discretion (see Matter of Kemp & Beatley [Gardstein],
Addressing first petitioner’s contention that the refinancing of the Chase loan was improper because primary responsibility for the loan was shifted from the shareholders individually to respondent, we find the issue not properly preserved for our
Nor do we find error in Supreme Court’s conclusion that the execution of the corporate notes which reimbursed Golub and Higgins for Lawrence’s share of expenses did not warrant a dissolution under the statute. Both the loans booked by respondent and the ability to cancel such debts through the issuance of additional stock were legally permissible acts under the Business Corporation Law (see Business Corporation Law § 202 [a] [7]; § 504 [a]). As to the claim that respondent attempted to frustrate the Equinox sale, we find a lack of sufficient evidence challenging respondent’s well documented explanations supporting the stated amounts owed. With the conduct of the majority shareholders further failing to evince a palpable breach of their fiduciary duties to the remaining shareholder, there existed no common-law right to dissolution.
Finally, we can find no error in Supreme Court’s failure to hold an evidentiary hearing. With the record bereft of any request for a hearing or even a disputed issue of fact determinative to the dissolution application (see Matter of Cassata v Brewster-Allen-Wichert, Inc.,
Cardona, P.J., Mercure, Spain and Rose, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is affirmed, without costs.
Notes
Petitioner, as an assignee of the trustee’s claim, stands in the shoes of the debtor/bankrupt, here Lawrence, with the same rights and remedies (see Hirsch v Arthur Andersen & Co.,
