2 The Corporate Entity and Limited Liability Walkovsky v. Carlton
2 The Corporate Entity and Limited Liability Walkovsky v. Carlton
2 The Corporate Entity and Limited Liability Walkovsky v. Carlton
Walkovsky v. Carlton
Facts: Walkovsky sues Carlton after run down by a taxicab owned by Seon Cab
Corporation. Walkovsky alleged that Seon was one of ten cab companies of which
Carlton was a shareholder, and each of the ten only had two cabs in its name. He alleged
that the corporations were operated as a single entity with regard to financing, supplies,
repairs, employees, and garaging. Walkovsky named each corporation and its
shareholders as defendants since the multiple corporate structure constituted an unlawful
attempt to “defraud members of the general public” because each corporation only
carried the minimum auto liability insurance required by law ($10,000).
Issue: Did the complaint state a sufficient c/a to recover against each cab corporation,
Carlton, and each corporation’s shareholders?
Held: No. The court will only “pierce the corporate veil” and hold the stockholders
liable if it can be shown that the stockholder was conducting business in his individual
capacity. The corporate veil may not be disregarded just because the assets of the
corporation, together with the liability insurance, are insufficient to assure recovery.
Leave it to the legislature. Walkovsky, who also wants all corporations to be
liable, is asking for enterprise liability so all treated as one corporation.
Like PCV, but must show disrespect for corporations vis a vis the
corporations. Unlike PCV, where that is showing disrespect vis a vis
the shareholders.
Dissent: The corporations were formed by Carlton and intentionally undercapitalized for
the purpose of avoiding responsibility for acts that were bound to arise as a result of the
operations of a large taxi fleet. All income was drained out of the corporations for this
purpose, and so individual shareholders should be held liable.
FACTS: After Sea-Land (P), an ocean carrier, shipped peppers for the Pepper Source
(PS) (D), it could not collect on the substantial freight bill because PS (D) had been
dissolved. Moreover, PS (D) apparently had no assets. Unable to recover on a default
judgment against PS (D), Sea-Land (P) filed another law suit, seeking to pierce the
corporate veil and hold Marchese (D), sole shareholder of PS (D) and other corporations,
personally liable. PS (D) then took the necessary steps to be reinstated as a corporation in
Illinois. Sea-Land (P) moved for summary judgment, which the court granted. Marchese
(D) and Pepper Source (D) appealed.
ISSUE: Will the corporate veil be pierced where there is a unity of interest and ownership
between a corporation and an individual and where adherence to the fiction of a separate
corporate existence would sanction a fraud or promote injustice?
HOLDING AND DECISION: (Bauer, J.) Yes. The corporate veil will be pierced where
there is a unity of interest and ownership between a corporation and an individual and
where adherence to the fiction of a separate corporate existence would sanction a fraud or
promote injustice. There
can be no doubt that the unity of interest and ownership part of the test is met here.
Corporate records and formalities have not been maintained, funds and assets have been
commingled with abandon, PS (D) was undercapitalized, and corporate assets have been
moved and tapped and
borrowed without regard to their source. The second part of the test is more problematic,
however. An unsatisfied judgment, by itself, is not enough to show that injustice would
be promoted. On remand, Sea-Land (P) is required to show the kind of injustice
necessary to evoke the court's power to prevent injustice. Reversed and remanded.
Fraud is a crucial part of the PCV analysis. This additional injustice
must be found. If don’t PCV, look at whether promoting injustice
through fraud, unjust enrichment, etc.
Held: The Court said no claim of fraud, self-dealing, bad faith or oppressive conduct in
the complaint. This was a business decision.
The courts will not impose liability for dumb decisions. Strong
Abstention doctrine use by the Court. Even if evidence of clear self-
dealing by the four directors, the Court would toss this out since can’t
prove those 4 dominated and controlled the other directors.
§ 2 Duty of Loyalty
A. Directors and Managers
Bayer v. Beran, 49 N.Y.S.2d 2 (Sup.Ct.1944)
Facts: The Doctors Dreyfus and their families own about 135,000 shares of common
stock, the other directors about 10,000 share of a total outstanding issue of 1,376,500
shares. Some of these tother directors were originally employed by Dr. Camille Dreyfus,
the president of the company. His wife, to ho he has been married for about 12 years is
known professionally as Miss Jean Tennyson and is a singer of wide experience. All
ofher suggestions as to personnel were adopted by the advertising agency.
History: The advertising cause of action charges the directors with negligence, waste and
improvidence in embarking the corporation upon a radio advertising program beginning
in 1942 and costing about $1 million a year. IT is further charged that they were
negligent in selecting the type of program and in renewing the radio contract for a second
year. Additionally, there is a charge that the directors were motivated by a noncorporate
purpose in causing the radio program to be undertaken in expending large sums of money
therefore
Issue: Was there a breach of fiduciary duty on the part of the directors?
Rule: (1) The business judgment rule yields to the rule of undivided loyalty, to avoid the
possibility of fraud and to avoid the temptation of self-interest (2) included within the
scope of undivided loyalty is every situation in which a trustee chooses to deal with
another in such close relation with the trustee that possible advantage to such other
person might influence, consciously or unconsciously, the judgment of the trustee (3)
Personal transactions of directors with their corporations when challenged are examined
with the most scrupulous care, and if there is any evidence of improvidence or
oppression, any indication of unfairness or undue advantage, the transactions will be
voided (3) Directors’ dealings with the corporation are subjected to rigorous scrutiny and
where any of their contracts or engagement with the corporation are challenged the
burden is on the director not only to prove the good faith of the transaction but also to
show its inherent fairness form the viewpoint of the corporation and those interested
therein (4) As a general rule, directors acting separately and not collectively as a board
cannot bind the corporation
Reasoning: The radio program was not adopted on the spur of the moment or at the whim
of the directors. They acted reading studies reported to them by the advertising
department. Some care, diligence, and prudence were exercised by the directors before
they committed the company to the program. The president knew his wife might be one
of the paid artists on the program, but the other directors did not know this until they had
approved the campaign of radio ads and the general type of radio program. Evidence fails
to show that the program was designed to foster or subsidize her career as n artist or to
furnish a vehicle for her talents. Failure to follow formal requirements was not fatal when
the board was close working.
B. Corporate Opportunities
D. Ratification