Stein v. Capital Outdoor Advertising, Inc.

159 S.E.2d 351 | N.C. | 1968

159 S.E.2d 351 (1968)
273 N.C. 77

Howard L. STEIN, Petitioner,
v.
CAPITAL OUTDOOR ADVERTISING, INC., and James A. Bridger and Clawson A. Hicks, Respondents.

No. 525.

Supreme Court of North Carolina.

February 28, 1968.

*354 Jordan, Morris & Hoke, Raleigh, for respondent Clawson A. Hicks.

Teague, Johnson, Patterson, Dilthey & Clay, by Robert M. Clay and Bob W. Bowers, Raleigh, for appellee Howard L. Stein.

LAKE, Justice.

The documents entitled "Agreement" and "Stock Voting Proxy" were executed contemporaneously as part of a single agreement or plan. They must, therefore, be construed together in order to determine what that agreement or plan contemplated. Apparently, the purpose of the paper designated "Stock Voting Proxy" was to make the one entitled "Agreement" effective, the parties seemingly being of the opinion that without the "Stock Voting Proxy" Hicks would have no authority to *355 vote the stock then standing in the name of Hannon.

G.S. § 55-68(b) provides:

"(b) A proxy is not valid after the expiration of eleven months from the date of its execution unless the person executing it specifies therein the length of time for which it is to continue in force, or limits its use to a particular meeting, but no proxy, whether or not coupled with an interest or otherwise irrevocable by law, shall be valid after ten years from the date of its execution unless renewed or extended at any time for not more than ten years from the date of such renewal or extension."

The "Stock Voting Proxy" executed by Hannon on 20 April 1966 does not specify the length of time for which it was to continue in force. It is not limited to a particular meeting. Thus, by the terms of the statute, it automatically expired eleven months from 20 April 1966 and, therefore, could not affect the right of anyone to vote the shares to which it applied at the meeting held on 5 April 1967. We need not determine whether the provision in this document that Hannon retained the right to withdraw or terminate it if he and Hicks agreed to cancel the other document entitled "Agreement" would have prevented him from revoking it within its life span of eleven months. It could not extend the life of the proxy beyond that period since this provision is not a specification of the length of time for which the proxy was to continue.

The document entitled "Agreement" likewise contains no provision as to its intended duration. It recites the receipt by Hannon of $5.00 in consideration for its execution, but the testimony of Hicks is that he actually paid nothing. The document recites that it was executed because of Hannon's special confidence that Hicks had the ability and integrity to operate the business of the corporation and to vote the stock of Hannon to the best interest of Hannon. We note with interest that the only recorded use of the alleged power by Hicks was in his effort to remove Hannon as a director of the corporation and substitute his own nominee. The agreement recites that Hannon "transfers and assigns" to Hicks, for an unspecified time, the right to vote all of the shares then owned by Hannon, which would include the 600 shares subsequently transferred by him to Stein. In return, Hicks agreed to vote the stock "to the best interest of the business of the corporation and said first party," i. e., Hannon.

Obviously, this document does not create a voting trust, so the provisions of G.S. § 55-72 do not apply to it. The shares issued to Hannon were not transferred, or intended to be transferred, to Hicks, and the other requirements for a voting trust specified in G.S. § 55-72(a) are not present.

G.S. § 55-73(a) provides:

"(a) An otherwise valid contract between two or more shareholders that the shares held by them shall be voted as a unit for the election of directors shall, if in writing and signed by the parties thereto, be valid and enforceable as between the parties thereto, but for not longer than ten years from the date of its execution."

This statute does not apply to the agreement in question. First, the agreement is not limited to the election of directors but applies to all corporate business to be transacted at meetings of the stockholders. Second, the agreement does not provide that the shares standing in the name of Hicks shall be voted as a unit with the shares standing in the name of Hannon. There is nothing in this agreement which purports to restrict the right of Hicks to sell all or any part of his shares as he may from time to time see fit to do. There is nothing in the agreement which purports to restrict a transferee of any shares originally issued to Hicks in the voting of such *356 shares purchased by the transferee from Hicks.

G.S. § 55-73(b) provides:

"(b) * * * [N]o written agreement to which all of the shareholders have actually assented, whether embodied in the charter or bylaws or in any side agreement in writing and signed by all the parties thereto, and which relates to any phase of the affairs of the corporation, whether to the management of its business or division of its profits or otherwise, shall be invalid as between the parties thereto, on the ground that it is an attempt by the parties thereto to treat the corporation as if it were a partnership or to arrange their relationships in a manner that would be appropriate only between partners. * * * A transferee of shares covered by such agreement who acquires them with knowledge thereof is bound by its provisions." (Emphasis added.)

This statute does not apply to the agreement in question because this agreement was not assented to by all of the shareholders as of the time it was executed, Stein having had no knowledge of it until ten months later and, obviously, was not a party to it. There is no showing that he ever "actually assented" to the agreement between Hannon and Hicks.

G.S. § 55-73(c) provides:

"(c) An agreement between all or less than all of the shareholders, whether solely between themselves or between one or more of them and a party who is not a shareholder, is not invalid, as between the parties thereto, on the ground that it so relates to the conduct of the affairs of the corporation as to interfere with the discretion of the board of directors * * *" (Emphasis added.)

In Wilson v. McClenny, 262 N.C. 121, 136 S.E.2d 569, this Court held an agreement by promoters that, after they became stockholders, they would use their voting power to procure and continue the employment of an individual by the corporation as its president for a fixed period at a specified salary could not be deemed void as against public policy, nothing else appearing. Speaking through Sharp, J., the Court there said:

"Thus, the Business Corporation Act clearly aligns North Carolina with the majority of jurisdictions which hold that a contract entered into between corporate stockholders by which they agree to vote their stock in a specified manner—including agreements for the election of directors and corporate officers—is not invalid unless it is inspired by fraud or will prejudice the other stockholders." (Emphasis added.)

In the McClenny case, supra, there was nothing to indicate that, at the time the contract was made, the person to be so employed by the corporation as its president was not then competent to act in that capacity or that the specified salary was excessive. There was nothing to indicate any purpose of the contract other than to assure that the then nonexistent corporation would, upon coming into existence, have for the specified period the services of a capable executive officer. As this Court there held, under the provisions of G.S. § 55-73(c), such a contract, treated as a contract between shareholders, is not subject to attack on the ground that it interferes with the discretion of the board of directors. However, all that G.S. § 55-73(c) does is to remove an agreement between stockholders from that specific objection to its validity.

G.S. § 55-73(c) does not apply to the agreement involved here. This agreement is unlimited as to the matters upon which it purports to authorize Hicks to vote the shares held by Hannon in a stockholders' meeting, but it has no relation to and does not purport to interfere with or affect any exercise of a power vested in the board of directors. This, together with the recitals in the agreement of the confidence had by Hannon in the integrity of *357 Hicks to vote the shares to the best interest of Hannon, leads us to construe this agreement as a mere continuing proxy, the duration of which is not specified therein. As such, it terminated eleven months after the date of its execution by virtue of G.S. § 55-68(b) quoted above. It, therefore, could have no bearing upon the right of Hicks to vote the shares owned by Hannon and to which the agreement relates, including the 600 shares sold by Hannon to Stein.

These things being true, it is unnecessary for us to determine the effect upon the agreement of Hannon's attempt to revoke it or the effect, as to the 600 shares, of Hannon's subsequent sale of those shares to Stein. The agreement having expired by the passage of time and the force of the statute, there was no error in the conclusion of the trial judge that Stein, the record owner, was entitled to vote the 600 shares at the meeting of the stockholders on 5 April 1967.

Affirmed.

HUSKINS, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.

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