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Douglas K. Moixt
ABSTRACT
Table of Contents
Introduction
C. Measuring Oppression th
Expectations"
1. Context Matters
2. Statutory Language
C. Summary
A. Current Framework..
2. Nonelection Cases
C. Plaintiffs
Oppression"
Conclusion
Introduction
1. See, e.g., Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype Co., 328 N.E.2d 505, 514 (Mass. 1975) ("In a
large public corporation, the oppressed or dissident minority stockholder could sell his stock in
order to extricate some of his invested capital. By definition, this market is not available for
shares in the close corporation."); infra notes 31-32 and accompanying text (noting that close
corporation stock lacks a market).
2. See, e.g., Bonavita v. Corbo, 692 A.2d 119, 124 (NJ. Super. Ct. Ch. Div. 1996) (noting
that the "thrust" of the oppression-triggered dissolution statute "is protection from the abusive
exercise of power"); id. at 128 ("[I]t is the 'wielding of ... power' in a manner which 'destroy [s]
a stockholder's vital interest and expectations' that constitutes oppression." (alteration and
omission in original) (quoting In re Kemp & Beatley, Inc., 473 N.E.2d 1173, 1179 (N.Y. 1984));
see also infra Part I (describing the shareholder oppression doctrine).
The terms "majority" and "minority" are used in this Article to "distinguish those
shareholders who possess the actual power to control the operations of the firm from those who
do not." J.A.C. Hetherington & Michael P. Dooley, Illiquidity and Exploitation: A Proposed
Statutory Solution to the Remaining Close Corporation Problem, 63 VA. L. Rev. 1, 5 n.7 (1977).
Such power is "most often determined by the size of the shareholdings." Id.
3. See infra Part I.D (describing the buyout remedy for oppression).
10. See infra Part II.A (discussing the meaning of "fair value").
11. See Follett, 615 N.W.2d at 288-89 (noting that the trial court "found the fair value of
[the oppressed investor's] shares to be one-third of the majority's appraised value of $1,426,143
of [the company] as an enterprise, or $475,381").
To be fair, the difference between the expert's $46,665 valuation of the oppressed
investor's one-third ownership interest and the trial court's $475,381 valuation of the same
interest, see id., does not result solely from the ambiguity in the meaning of fair value and the
corresponding disagreement over discounts. Even if the expert and the trial court had both used
an "enterprise value" approach to fair value, there would still have been a sizable differential, as
the expert valued the company at $875,000, whereas the trial court adopted a company
valuation of $1,426,143. See id. at 288. Thus, even under the same enterprise value standard, the
expert would have valued a one-third ownership interest at $291,667, whereas the trial court
would have valued it at $475,381. To truly compare the effect of discounts, the same company
value must be used. If the expert's 75 percent minority discount and 35 percent marketability
discount had been applied to the trial court's $1,426,143 company valuation, see supra note 9
and accompanying text, the expert would have valued the oppressed investor's one-third stake
at approximately $77,249 ($1,426,143 / 3 x .25 x .65). See infra note 97 (describing how discounts
are applied in a valuation calculation). In that case, the trial court's enterprise value assessment
of $475,381 for the oppressed investor's one-third interest would have been more than six times
the expert's fair market value assessment of $77,249.
12. See infra note 97 and accompanying text (describing the cumulative effect of discounts).
13. See, e.g., Balsamides v. Protameen Chems., Inc., 734 A.2d 721, 734 (N.J. 1999) (noting
that, in dissenters' rights cases, "there is no clear consensus on whether a marketability discount
should be applied," and stating that "[t]here is even less consensus about whether discounts
should be applied in oppressed shareholder actions").
14. See Torres v. Schripps, Inc., 776 A.2d 915, 918-19, 922 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2001)
(noting one expert's conclusion that the value of a close corporation had declined from $222,400
on February 28, 1997 (the date when the plaintiff minority was terminated from employment
with the company) to $64,000 on September 29, 1997 (the date when the company was sold)).
15. See, e.g., Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype Co., 328 N.E.2d 505, 511 (
(describing close corporations); Daniel S. Kleinberger, Why Not Good Faith?
Fairness in the Law of Close Corporations, 16 WM. MITCHELL L. REV. 1143
("Close corporations have a limited number of shareholders, and most, if n
shareholders are active in the corporation's day-to-day business.").
There is some variation in the definition of a close corporation. See ME
Eisenberg, Corporations and Other Business Organizations 338 (8th unabr. ed.
2000) ("[W]hat constitutes a close corporation is a matter of theoretical dispute. Some
authorities emphasize the number of shareholders, some emphasize the presence of owner-
management, some emphasize the lack of a market for the corporation's stock, and some
emphasize the existence of formal restrictions on the transferability of ... shares."); 1 F. HODGE
O'Neal & Robert B. Thompson, O'Neal's Close Corporations § 1.02, at 1-4 to 1-7 (3d
ed. 2002) [hereinafter CLOSE CORPORATIONS] (noting the following possible definitions of a
"close corporation": a corporation with relatively few shareholders, a corporation whose shares
are not generally traded in the securities markets, a corporation in which the participants
consider themselves partners inter se, a corporation in which management and ownership are
substantially identical, and any corporation that elects to place itself in a close corporation
grouping). Nevertheless, the typical close corporation possesses most, if not all, of the attributes
described in these various definitions.
16. See 1 CLOSE CORPORATIONS, supra note 15, § 1.08, at 1-31 to 1-32 (describing the
passive investor).
17. Robert B. Thompson, The Shareholder's Cause of Action for Oppression, 48 BUS. LAW.
699, 702 (1993).
18. Id.; see, e.g., Pedro v. Pedro, 463 N.W.2d 285, 289 (Minn. Ct. App. 1990) ("[T]he
primary expectations of minority shareholders include an active voice in management of the
corporation and input as an employee."); 1 CLOSE CORPORATIONS, supra note 15, § 7.02, at 7-4
("Ownership and management frequently coalesce in closely held corporations, where not
uncommonly all the principal shareholders devote full time to corporate affairs. Even where one
or two shareholders may be inactive, the business is normally conducted by the others without
aid from nonshareholder managers.").
19. See, e.g., Robert B. Thompson, Corporate Dissolution and Shareholders' Reasonable
Expectations, 66 WASH. U. L.Q. 193, 196 (1988) (discussing relationships among close
corporation participants); see also Bostock v. High Tech Elevator Indus., Inc., 616 A.2d 1314,
1320-21 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1992) ("[A] close[] corporation frequently originates in the
context of personal relationships. Often such business entities are formed by family members or
friends." (citation omitted)).
20. See 1 F. HODGE O'NEAL & ROBERT B. THOMPSON, O'NEAL'S OPPRESSION OF
Minority Shareholders § 1:02, at 1-3 to 1-4 (2d ed. 1985) [hereinafter Oppression]
(characterizing majority rule and centralized management as the "traditional pattern of
corporate] management," and noting the dangers that this management pattern presents to
close corporation minority shareholders); Thompson, supra note 17, at 702-03 ("In a closed
setting, the corporate norms of centralized control and majority rule easily can become
instruments of oppression.").
21. See MODEL BUS. CORP. ACT § 8.01(b) (2002) ("All corporate powers shall be exercised
by or under the authority of, and the business and affairs of the corporation managed by or
under the direction of, its board of directors
22. Kleinberger, supra note 15, at 1151-52; see, e.g., 1 OPPRESSION, supra note 20, § 1:
1-3 ("Indeed, in most closely held corporations, majority shareholders elect themselves
their relatives to all or most of the positions on the board.").
23. See, e.g., Bostock, 616 A.2d at 1320 ("[B]ased upon its voting power, 'the major
able to dictate to the minority the manner in which the [close] corporation is run.'" (qu
Orchard v. Covelli, 590 F. Supp. 1548, 1557 (W.D. Pa. 1984), dismissed, 791 F.2d 920 (3
1986))); Meiselman v. Meiselman, 307 S.E.2d 551, 558 (N.C. 1983) ("[W]hen the per
relationships among the participants break down, the majority shareholder, because of
greater voting power, is in a position to terminate the minority shareholder's employment
to exclude him from participation in management decisions."); Kiriakides v. Atlas Food S
Servs., Inc., 541 S.E.2d 257, 267 (S.C. 2001) ("This unequal balance of power often lead
'squeeze out' or 'freeze out' of the minority by the majority shareholders." (footnote omi
see also Fix v. Fix Material Co., 538 S.W.2d 351, 358 (Mo. Ct. App. 1976) ("In the instant c
group of four shareholders], acting in concert, control a majority of the outstanding
though no single shareholder owns 51%."); id. ("Because this control carries the pow
destroy or impair the interests of minority owners, the law imposes equitable limitations o
rights of dominant shareholders to act in their own self-interest.").
24. See 1 OPPRESSION, supra note 20, § 1:01, at 1-3 n.2 ("The term 'freeze-out' is often
as a synonym for 'squeeze-out.'"). Professors O'Neal and Thompson note that the
"squeeze-out" means "the use by some of the owners or participants in a business enterpr
strategic position, inside information, or powers of control, or the utilization of some
device or technique, to eliminate from the enterprise one or more of its owners or particip
1 id. at 1-1. Similarly, a "partial squeeze-out" is defined as "action which reduces t
participation or powers of a group of participants in the enterprise, diminishes their claim
earnings or assets, or otherwise deprives them of business income or advantages to which
are entitled." 1 id. at 1-1 to 1-2. See generally 1 id. §§ 4:01-4:08, at 4-1 to 4-61; 5:01-5:39, at
5-313; 2 id. §§ 6:01-6:17, at 6-1 to 6-97 (discussing various squeeze-out techniques).
25. See infra notes 43-45 and accompanying text (describing judicial definition
"oppression").
26. See 1 OPPRESSION, supra note 20, §§ 3:04, 3:06, 3:07, at 3-13 to 3-20, 3-37 to 3-58
(discussing freeze-outs); see also Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype Co., 328 N.E.2d 505, 513 (Mass.
1975) (noting some of the possible freeze-out techniques).
Over the years, state legislatures and courts have developed two
significant avenues of relief for the oppressed close corporation
shareholder. First, many state legislatures have amended their
corporate dissolution statutes to include oppression by the controlling
shareholder as a ground for involuntary dissolution of a corporation.33
When oppressive conduct occurs, however, actual dissolution is not
the only remedy at a court's disposal. Both state statutes and judicial
precedents have authorized alternative remedies for oppression that
are less drastic than dissolution - for example, buyouts and
provisional directors.34 As the alternative forms of relief have
powers which they lose"); Thompson, supra note 17, at 703-04 (observing that in a classic
freeze-out "the majority first denies the minority shareholder any return and then proposes to
buy the shares at a very low price").
31. See, e.g., Donahue, 328 N.E.2d at 514 ("In a large public corporation, the oppressed or
dissident minority stockholder could sell his stock in order to extricate some of his invested
capital. By definition, this market is not available for shares in the close corporation."); Brenner
v. Berkowitz, 634 A.2d 1019, 1027 (NJ. 1993) ("[U]nlike shareholders in larger corporations,
minority shareholders in a close corporation cannot readily sell their shares when they become
dissatisfied with the management of the corporation."); Bostock v. High Tech Elevator Indus.,
Inc., 616 A.2d 1314, 1320 (NJ. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1992) ("[A] minority interest in a close[]
corporation is difficult to value because the shares are not publicly traded and a fair market is
often not available."); 2 CLOSE CORPORATIONS, supra note 15, § 9.02, at 9-4 to 9-5 ("[A]
shareholder in a close corporation does not have the exit option available to a shareholder in a
publicly held corporation, who can sell [his] shares in a securities market if [he is] dissatisfied
with the way the corporation is being operated."); Thompson, supra note 17, at 702 ("[T]he
economic reality of no public market deprives investors in close corporations of the same
liquidity and ability to adapt available to investors in public corporations.").
32. Kleinberger, supra note 15, at 1149; cf. Walensky v. Jonathan Royce Int'l, Inc., 624
A.2d 613, 615 (NJ. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1993) ("The interest owned by a minority shareholder
in a closely held corporation is often a precarious one. In fact, it has been characterized by this
court as being one of 'acute vulnerability.'").
33. See Thompson, supra note 17, at 708 (describing the dissolution statutes). See generally
Murdock, supra note 29, at 452-61 (describing the development of oppression as a ground for
dissolution).
34. See infra notes 54-55 and accompanying text (discussing alternative remedies).
35. Thompson, supra note 17, at 708; cf Harry J. Haynsworth, The Effectiveness of
Involuntary Dissolution Suits as a Remedy for Close Corporation Dissension, 35 CLEV. St. L.
Rev. 25, 53 (1986) (finding that courts ordered remedies other than dissolution in the majority
of thirty-seven involuntary dissolution cases studied). See generally Murdock, supra note 29, at
461-64 (discussing the development of alternative remedies).
36. See 2 CLOSE CORPORATIONS, supra note 15, § 9.27, at 9-159 ("The inclusion of
'oppression' and similar grounds as a basis for involuntary dissolution or alternative remedies
has opened up a much broader avenue of relief for minority shareholders caught up in a close
corporation wracked with dissension."); Thompson, supra note 17, at 708-09 ("[I]t makes more
sense to view oppression not as a ground for dissolution, but as a remedy for shareholder
dissension.").
37. See Thompson, supra note 17, at 726 (discussing the fiduciary duty that close
corporation shareholders owe one another); see also id. at 739 ("It should not be surprising that
the direct cause of action is developed particularly in states without an oppression statute . . . .");
id. (stating that the direct cause of action "provides a vehicle for relief for minority shareholders
in a close corporation where the statutory norms reflect no consideration for the special needs
of such enterprises"). See generally Murdock, supra note 29, at 433-40 (discussing the
development of the shareholder fiduciary duty).
38. 328 N.E.2d 505 (Mass. 1975).
39. Id. at 515 (citations and footnotes omitted). The Donahue duty of "utmost good faith
and loyalty," however, was later scaled back by the same court. Due to concerns that the
"untempered application of the strict good faith standard enunciated in Donahue . . . [would]
result in the imposition of limitations on legitimate action by the controlling group in a close
corporation which [would] unduly hamper its effectiveness in managing the corporation in the
best interests of all concerned," the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts suggested a
balancing test. Wilkes v. Springside Nursing Home, Inc., 353 N.E.2d 657, 663 (Mass. 1976).
Under this test, if the controlling group can demonstrate a "legitimate business purpose" for its
actions, no breach of fiduciary duty will be found unless the minority shareholder can
demonstrate "that the same legitimate objective could have been achieved through an
alternative course of action less harmful to the minority's interest." Id.
40. See, e.g., Guy v. Duff & Phelps, Inc., 672 F. Supp. 1086, 1090 (N.D. 111. 1987) (discussing
the fiduciary duty that close corporation shareholders owe one another); Orchard v. Covelli, 590
F. Supp. 1548, 1556-59 (W.D. Pa. 1984) (same); W&W Equip. Co. v. Mink, 568 N.E.2d 564, 570-
71 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991) (same); Evans v. Blesi, 345 N.W.2d 775, 779 (Minn. Ct. App. 1984)
(same); Fought v. Morris, 543 So. 2d 167, 170-71 (Miss. 1989) (same); Crosby v. Beam, 548
N.E.2d 217, 220-21 (Ohio 1989) (same); Estate of Schroer v. Stamco Supply, Inc., 482 N.E.2d
975, 979-81 (Ohio Ct. App. 1984) (same).
41. Thompson, supra note 17, at 739.
42. Id. at 700. See generally id. at 738-45 (describing the "combined cause of action for
oppression").
43. Id. at 711-12 (omission in original) (quoting Fix v. Fix Material Co., 538 S.W.2d 351,
358 (Mo. Ct. App. 1976)); see, e.g., Skierka v. Skierka Bros., 629 P.2d 214, 221 (Mont. 1981)
(quoting Fix v. Fix Material Co., 538 S.W.2d 351, 358 (Mo. Ct. App. 1976)); see also
Haynsworth, supra note 35, at 36-39 (describing judicial definitions of oppression).
52. Id.; see also Meiselman, 307 S.E.2d at 563 ("[F]or plaintiff's expectatio
reasonable, they must be known to or assumed by the other shareholders and concu
them. Privately held expectations . . . not made known to the other participant
'reasonable.' Only expectations embodied in understandings, express or implied, am
participants should be recognized
Close Corporations: The Unanswered Question of Perspective, 53 VAND. L. Rev. 749, 800-01,
813 (2000) (discussing minority misconduct or incompetence). Even if the minority has engaged
in wrongdoing, however, an excessive majority response should still result in oppression
liability. See Douglas K. Moll, Shareholder Oppression & Divided Policy in the Close
Corporation, 60 WASH. & LEE L. REV. 841, 881-88 (2003) (noting that, even if a minority
shareholder's misconduct or incompetence justifies the minority's termination from
employment, it does not necessarily follow that the minority may be excluded from the profit
distributions of the company).
54. See, e.g., MINN. STAT. Ann. § 302A.751 subd. 1-2 (West 2004) (authorizing "any
equitable relief and specifically authorizing a buyout of a shareholder's interest); N.J. STAT.
ANN. § 14A:12-7(1) (West 2003) (providing a nonexclusive list of possible relief that includes
the order of a buyout and the appointment of a provisional director or custodian).
55. The Supreme Court of Oregon, for example, listed the following "alternative remedies"
for oppressive conduct:
(a) The entry of an order requiring dissolution of the corporation at a specified future
date, to become effective only in the event that the stockholders fail to resolve their
differences prior to that date;
(b) The appointment of a receiver, not for the purposes of dissolution, but to continue
the operation of the corporation for the benefit of all the stockholders, both majority
and minority, until differences are resolved or "oppressive" conduct ceases;
(c) The appointment of a "special fiscal agent" to report to the court relating to the
continued operation of the corporation, as a protection to its minority stockholders,
and the retention of jurisdiction of the case by the court for that purpose;
(d) The retention of jurisdiction of the case by the court for the protection of the
minority stockholders without appointment of a receiver or "special fiscal agent";
(e) The ordering of an accounting by the majority in control of the corporation for
funds alleged to have been misappropriated;
(f) The issuance of an injunction to prohibit continuing acts of "oppressive" conduct
and which may include the reduction of salaries or bonus payments found to be
unjustified or excessive;
(g) The ordering of affirmative relief by the required declaration of a dividend or a
reduction and distribution of capital;
(h) The ordering of affirmative relief by the entry of an order requiring the
corporation or a majority of its stockholders to purchase the stock of the minority
stockholders at a price to be determined according to a specified formula or at a price
determined by the court to be a fair and reasonable price;
(i) The ordering of affirmative relief by the entry of an order permitting minority
stockholders to purchase additional stock under conditions specified by the court;
(j) An award of damages to minority stockholders as compensation for any injury
suffered by them as the result of "oppressive" conduct by the majority in control of
the corporation.
Baker v. Commercial Body Builders, Inc., 507 P.2d 387, 395-96 (Or. 1973) (footnotes omitted
see also Brenner v. Berkowitz, 634 A.2d 1019, 1033 (NJ. 1993) ("Importantly, courts are not
limited to the statutory remedies [for oppression], but have a wide array of equitable remedies
available to them."). But see Giannotti v. Hamway, 387 S.E.2d 725, 733 (Va. 1990) (stating th
the dissolution remedy for oppression is "exclusive" and concluding that the trial court is no
permitted "to fashion other . . . equitable remedies").
56. See 1 CLOSE CORPORATIONS, supra note 15, § 1.16, at 1-97 (noting that buyouts "are
the most common remedy for dissension within a close corporation"); Murdock, supra note 29
at 470 ("The most common form of alternative remedy is the buy-out of the minority
shareholder."); Thompson, supra note 19, at 231 ("The increased use of buyouts as a remedy . .
is the most dramatic recent change in legislative and judicial thinking on close corporation
problems.").
57. See, e.g., Robert A. Ragazzo, Toward a Delaware Common Law of Closely Held
Corporations, 77 WASH. U. L.Q. 1099, 1119 (1999) ("[The buyout] is less harsh than dissolution
and often gives both parties what they want most. The majority gets to run the business as it
sees fit, unfettered by the continued participation of the minority, while, at the same time, the
minority receives the fair value of its investment." (footnotes omitted)); Sandra L. Schlafge,
Comment, Pedro v. Pedro: Consequences for Closely Held Corporations and the At-Will
Doctrine in Minnesota, 76 MINN. L. REV. 1071, 1080 n.46 (1992) ("[T]he buyout is the preferred
remedy for shareholder disputes because it allows a return of the shareholder's capital while not
crippling the business."); id. at 1093 ("[T]he statute provides for a buyout, which the Minnesota
Legislature described as the preferred remedy because it returns the shareholder's capital while
leaving the business entity intact.").
58. See, e.g., Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 10-1816 (West 2004) (authorizing a buyout); ME.
Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 13-C, § 1434 (West Supp. 2003) (same); S.C. Code Ann. § 33-14-310(d)(4)
(Law. Co-op. 1990) (same); MODEL STATUTORY CLOSE CORP. SUPP. §§ 41, 42 (1997) (same).
59. See, e.g., ALASKA STAT. § 10.06.630 (Michie 2002) (providing an electi
Cal. Corp. Code § 2000 (West 1990) (same); Minn. Stat. Ann. § 302A.751
2004) (same); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 14A:12-7(8) (West 2003) (same); N.Y. BU
§§ 1104-a, 1118 (McKinney 2003) (same); N.D. CENT. CODE § 10-19.1-115
MODEL BUS. CORP. ACT § 14.34, at 14-144 to 14-146 (2002) (same).
60. See, e.g., Orchard v. Covelli, 590 F. Supp. 1548, 1560 (W.D. Pa. 198
buyout); Davis v. Sheerin, 754 S.W.2d 375, 380, 383 (Tex. App. 1988) (same); Th
note 17, at 720-21 ("Courts increasingly have ordered buyouts of a shareholder's i
corporation or the other shareholders even in the absence of specific statutory au
61. See MODEL Bus. Corp. Act § 14.34(a) ("In a proceeding under secti
dissolve a corporation ... the corporation may elect or, if it fails to elect,
shareholders may elect to purchase all shares owned by the petitioning shareho
value of the shares." (emphasis added)); see also MODEL STATUTORY CLOS
§ 42(b)(l) (stating that a court, if it orders a share purchase, should "determine th
the shares, considering among other relevant evidence the going-concern
corporation").
62. See Thompson, supra note 17, at 718 (noting that "[sjeveral of the large
states permit a corporation or its majority shareholders to avoid involuntary
purchasing the shares of the petitioning shareholders at their 'fair value'"); infra
statutes).
63. See, e.g., Davis, 754 S.W.2d at 381 (stating, in a jurisdiction where there is no statutory
authorization for a buyout, that "[a]n ordered 'buy-out' of stock at its fair value is an especially
appropriate remedy in a closely-held corporation").
to define fair value.64 For example, New Jersey's statute uses the term
"fair value" repeatedly, but it neither provides a definition no
furnishes any guidance on how to apply the term.65 Many courts lo
to state appraisal statutes for interpretive aid, as those statutes allo
dissenting shareholders to receive the fair value of their shares upo
the occurrence of certain fundamental corporate changes, such
mergers.66 Unfortunately, most of the appraisal statutes also lack
substantive definitions of fair value.67
As a result of this lack of guidance, two conflicting positions have
developed on the meaning of fair value. The first position equates fa
value with "fair market value" and incorporates the discounts that
fair market value analysis would apply.68 A fair market value analys
determines the value of close corporation shares by asking wh
someone would hypothetically pay for those shares. More precisely
fair market value is defined as "the price at which property would
change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller when
neither party is under an obligation to act."69 A willing an
64. See, e.g., MINN. STAT. ANN. § 302A.751 subd. 2 (West 2004) (providing for a fair valu
buyout, but failing to define "fair value"); NJ. STAT. ANN. § 14A:12-7(8) (West 2003) (sam
N.Y. Bus. Corp. Law §§ 1104-a, 1118 (McKinney 2003) (same); N.D. Cent. Code § 10-19
115 (2001) (same).
65. See NJ. Stat. Ann. § 14A:12-7(8).
66. See infra note 262 (discussing appraisal in the dissenters' rights context).
67. See John D. Emory, Jr., Comment, The Role of Discounts in Determining "Fair Value
Under Wisconsin's Dissenters' Rights Statutes: The Case for Discounts, 1995 WlS. L. REV. 115
1164 & n.51 (stating that "[t]he value standards as they relate to dissenters' appraisals in closely
held corporations . . . are clearly defined in the statutes of only two jurisdictions," and citi
California's "fair market value" standard and Ohio's "fair cash value" standard); see als
ROBERT F. REILLY & ROBERT P. SCHWEIHS, HANDBOOK OF ADVANCED BUSINESS
Valuation 301 (1998) (noting that "fair value is rarely legislatively defined").
68. In the appraisal context, the Supreme Court of Colorado observed the following:
Another interpretation of fair value is to value the dissenters' specific allotment of
shares, just as one would value the ownership of a commodity. Under this view . . . the
"fair value" of [an] ownership interest is only the amount a willing buyer would pay
to acquire the shares. In effect, this interpretation reads fair value as synonymous
with fair market value. An investor who wants to buy a minority allotment of shares
in a closely-held corporation would discount the price he was otherwise willing to pay
for the shares because the shares are a minority interest in the company and are a
relatively illiquid investment. Likewise, under this interpretation, the trial court
should usually apply minority and marketability discounts.
Pueblo Bancorporation v. Lindoe, Inc., 63 P.3d 353, 360 (Colo. 2003); see id. at 361 ("Under a
fair market value standard a marketability discount should be applied because the court is, by
definition, determining the price at which a specific allotment of shares would change hands
between a willing buyer and a willing seller.").
69. Id. at 362; see also REILLY & SCHWEIHS, supra note 67, at 302 (defining fair market
value as "[t]he amount at which the property would change hands between a willing buyer and a
76. See infra notes 110-13 and accompanying text (noting that, in the absence o
oppression, a close corporation shareholder could have maintained his investment and earne
his proportional share of the company's going-concern value).
77. As the Supreme Court of Colorado observed:
One possible interpretation ... is that fair value requires the court to value the
dissenting shares by looking at what they represent: the ownership of a certain
percentage of the corporation. In this case, the trial court found that Holding
Company, as an entity, was worth $76.1 million. Lindoe owned 5.71 percent of
Holding Company and therefore, under this view, Lindoe is entitled to 5.71 percent of
Holding Company's value, or just over $4.3 million. Because the proper measure of
value is the shareholder's proportionate interest in the value of the entity, discounts
at the shareholder level are inapplicable.
Pueblo Bancorporation, 63 P.3d at 360; see also Cavalier Oil Corp. v. Harnett, 564 A.2d 1137,
1146 (Del. 1989) (noting that one "rationale for rejection of the minority discount is that th
valuation focus is limited to the company level and does not involve the size of a particular
shareholder's interest").
78. See supra note 77 and accompanying text (describing the enterprise value approach).
79. Value as a "going concern" is defined as "[v]alue in continued use, as a mass
assemblage of income producing assets, and as a going-concern business enterprise." SHANNO
P. Pratt et al., Valuing a Business: The Analysis and Appraisal of Closely Held
COMPANIES 29 (3d ed. 1996); see also Edwin T. Hood et al., Valuation of Closely Held Business
Interests, 65 UMKC L. Rev. 399, 411 (1997) (describing going-concern value as when "the assets
[are] valued as an operating unit").
80. See infra Part II.B (describing the minority discount).
notes that the possibility of selling the company as a going concern should also be taken int
account. See Cal. Corp. Code § 2000(a) (West 1990) ("The fair value shall be determined on
the basis of the liquidation value as of the valuation date but taking into account the possibility,
if any, of sale of the entire business as a going concern in a liquidation."). On the other hand
the Model Statutory Close Corporation Supplement defines fair value with reference to going
concern value. See, e.g., MODEL Stat. Close CORP. Supp. §42(b)(l) (1997) (stating that
court, if it orders a share purchase, should "determine the fair value of the shares, considering
among other relevant evidence the going concern value of the corporation").
By and large, courts now generally agree that fair value is to be measured on a going-
concern basis so long as the close corporation at issue is not dissolving. See, e.g., Advance
Communication Design, Inc. v. Follett, 615 N.W.2d 285, 290 (Minn. 2000) ("We conclude that
fair value, in ordering a buy-out under the Minnesota Business Corporations Act, means the pro
rata share of the value of the corporation as a going concern."); Blake v. Blake Agency, Inc.
486 N.Y.S.2d 341, 347 (App. Div. 1985) ("The [fair] value of the corporation should be
determined on the basis of what a willing purchaser, in an arm's length transaction, would offe
for the corporation as an operating business, rather than as a business in the process o
liquidation . . . ."); see also James H. Eggart, Note, Replacing the Sword with a Scalpel: The Ca
for a Bright-Line Rule Disallowing the Application of Lack of Marketability Discounts in
Shareholder Oppression Cases, 44 ARIZ. L. REV. 213, 219 (2002) (noting that "there is genera
consensus that 'fair value' is the value of the oppressed shareholder's proportionate interest i
the corporation as a going concern, rather than its liquidation value"). Moreover, of the various
going-concern valuation techniques, the fair value of a close corporation is most commonly
derived by calculating investment value - a calculation that is usually based upon the earnings of
the corporation. See Thompson, supra note 19, at 233 ("The most common method for
determining fair value is to calculate investment value, usually based on the company'
earnings."); id. ("[T]he most commonly utilized formula [for calculating investment value] treats
company earnings as determinant of investment value."). Net asset value and market value "ar
of little use in determining the fair value of an interest in an ongoing close corporation; net asse
value is generally used when an enterprise is liquidating, and market value is not availab
because a close corporation by definition lacks a market for its shares." 2 CLOSE
CORPORATIONS, supra note 15, § 9.32, at 9-190; see, e.g., Taines v. Gene Barry One Hour Phot
Process, Inc., 474 N.Y.S.2d 362, 366-67 (Sup. Ct. 1983) (rejecting net asset value and marke
value as methods for close corporation valuation proceedings).
87. See, e.g., Emory, supra note 67, at 1160 ("Minority interests lack the power o
controlling interests to dictate corporate management and policies."); Hetherington & Dooley
supra note 2, at 5 n.7 (defining a "minority" shareholder as a shareholder "who [does no
possess the actual power to control the operations of the firm").
88. Emory, supra note 67, at 1160; see, e.g., Pratt et AL., su
"a minority interest discount reflects a value decrement due
(observing that a minority discount is based on a lack of contro
89. Steven C. Bahls, Resolving Shareholder Dissension: S
Equitable Remedy, 15 J. CORP. L. 285, 301 (1990); see also Harry
Business Interests, 33 MERCER L. REV. 457, 492-93 (1982) ("A
held corporation is willing to pay more for a majority interest i
interest because of the ability to maintain voting control
directors.").
90. Emory, supra note 67, at 1161; see SHANNON P. PRATT ET AL., VALUING SMALL
Businesses and Professional Practices 438 (3d ed. 1998) (citing empirical data from 1980
to 1996 indicating that minority discounts average between 26 and 33 percent).
91. See supra notes 31-32 and accompanying text (discussing the lack of a market for close
corporation shares).
92. See, e.g., Emory, supra note 67, at 1161 ("It is much more difficult to liquidate (quickly
sell for cash) a minority interest in a closely held corporation than a minority interest in a
publicly traded corporation."); infra notes 93-95 and accompanying text (discussing the
difficulties associated with selling close corporation stock).
93. As commentators observe:
In the U.S. public markets, a security holder is able to sell a security over the
telephone in seconds, usually at or within a small fraction of a percent of the last price
at which the security traded, with a very small commission cost, and receive the cash
proceeds within three working days.
By contrast, the universe of realistically potential buyers for most closely held
minority ownership securities is an infinitesimally small fraction of the universe of
potential buyers for publicly traded securities. In any case, it is illegal for a person or
company to sell privately held securities to the general public without a registration
with either the SEC or the state corporation commission, an expensive and time-
consuming process. Furthermore, a minority stockholder cannot register stock for
public trading; only the company can register its stock for public trading.
The market for securities in the United States is the most liquid
market for any kind of property anywhere in the world. This is one
of the major reasons companies are able to raise investment capital
from both institutional and individual investors: the ability to
liquidate the investment immediately, at little cost, and with virtual
certainty as to realization of the widely publicized market price.
Empirical evidence demonstrates that investors are willing to pay a
high premium for this level of liquidity, or, conversely, extract a high
discount relative to actively traded securities for stocks or other
investment interests that lack this high degree of liquidity.95
Besides the problems of actually trying to sell the stock (and because of them), the
liquidity of closely held stock is further impaired by banks and other lending
institutions' unwillingness to accept it as loan collateral - as they would accept public
stock.
note 89, at 490 ("[S]ome authorities have advocated that discounts of as high as fifty to seventy-
five percent for lack of marketability in closely held companies should be accepted.").
97. See, e.g., Emory, supra note 67, at 1162 ("Taken together, marketability and minority
discounts often reduce the fair market value of minority shares to well under half the value of
controlling shares in the same corporation."); Murdock, supra note 29, at 479 ("The cumulative
effect of these [minority and marketability] discounts can reduce the value of the minority
shares by fifty percent or more."); id. at 489 (observing that minority and marketability
discounts "can have a dramatic and devastating impact on the value of minority interests").
When both minority and marketability discounts are at issue, it is important to note that
the discounts are applied in a sequential, nonadditive manner. See Pratt et al., supra note 79,
at 314 (providing an illustration of how multiple discounts affect a valuation). Assuming a
$2,500,000 proportionate ownership stake in a company, a 40 percent minority discount, and a
40 percent marketability discount, a court should apply the minority discount first. This would
reduce the buyout award to $1,500,000 (.6 x 2,500,000). A court should then apply the 40
percent marketability discount to this net amount, further reducing the buyout award to
$900,000 (.6 x 1,500,000). As commentators explain:
[T]his discounting from control value usually is done as a two-step process, first for
minority interest, then for marketability
98. See, e.g., MODEL Bus. CORP. ACT § 13.01 cmt. 2 (2002) ("[Different transactions and
different contexts may warrant different valuation methodologies."); 2 Am. Law Inst.,
Principles of Corp. Governance: Analysis and Recommendations § 7.22(a) (1994)
(stating that fair value "should be determined ... in the context of the transaction giving rise to
appraisal"); PRATT ET AL., supra note 79, at 22 ("No single valuation method is universally
applicable to all appraisal purposes. The context in which the appraisal is to be used is a critical
factor."); id. at 23 ("The word value means different things to different people. Even to the
same person, value means different things in different contexts . . . ."); id. at 27 ("To understand
what the expression fair value means, you have to know the context of its use."); Richard A.
Booth, Minority Discounts and Control Premiums in Appraisal Proceedings, 57 BUS. LAW. 127,
156 (2001) (noting that "the standard of value in an appraisal proceeding should reflect the
actual transaction under review"); see also PRATT ET AL., supra note 79, at 15 ("Many people
hold the mistaken notion that there can be only one 'value.' . . . [T]here are many definitions of
value, and the purpose of the appraisal usually determines the appropriate definition of
value."); id. at 22 ("Many business appraisals fail to reach a number representing the
appropriate definition of value because the appraiser failed to match the valuation methods to
the purpose for which it was being performed." (emphasis removed)); id. at 23 ("The purpose of
the valuation often determines the applicable standard of value - that is, the definition of value
being sought - and almost always influences it.").
99. Cf. Assocs. Commercial Corp. v. Rash, 520 U.S. 953, 960-65 (1997) (holding that the
Bankruptcy Code mandates valuing a truck at replacement value rather than foreclosure value).
100. See supra note 69 and accompanying text (defining fair market value).
106. See, e.g., N.Y. BUS. CORP. LAW § 1118(a) (McKinney 2003) ("An election pursua
this section shall be irrevocable unless the court, in its discretion, for just and equ
considerations, determines that such election be revocable."); MOD. BUS. CORP. ACT § 14
(2002) ("An election pursuant to this section shall be irrevocable unless the court deter
that it is equitable to set aside or modify the election.").
107. See, e.g., In re Seagroatt Floral Co., 583 N.E.2d 287, 289-90 (N.Y. 1991) (noting th
purpose of the buyout election statute was to provide shareholders with the ability to cont
the business and to avoid any risk of dissolution); see also infra notes 283-85 and accompany
text (discussing the purpose of buyout election statutes and noting that the statutes e
shareholders to continue a company as a going concern).
108. See, e.g., McKesson Corp. v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 116 F. Supp. 2d 13, 37 (D
2000) ("[I]n a forced sale, discounts are inherently unfair to the forced-out shareholder who
not pick the timing of the transaction and thus is not in the position of a willing seller."),
sub nom. McKesson HBOC, Inc. v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 271 F.3d 1101 (D.C. Cir. 2
Hendley v. Lee, 676 F. Supp. 1317, 1330 (D.S.C. 1987) ("Discounts properly apply to the t
value of the company in a 'willing buyer/willing seller' context, but do not apply at all
neither party is willing and the transaction is between insiders."); Pooley v. Mankato I
Metal, Inc., 513 N.W.2d 834, 838 (Minn. Ct. App. 1994) ("[B]ecause appellant [an opp
minority shareholder] is an unwilling vendor of his shares in [the close corporation,] we ho
trial court properly exercised its discretion in not reducing appellant's shares' valu
minority discount."); Hansen v. 75 Ranch Co., 957 P.2d 32, 41 (Mont. 1998) ("[Discounts
shareholder level are inherently unfair to the minority shareholder who did not pick the t
of the transaction and is not in the position of a willing seller."); Chiles v. Robertson, 76
903, 926 (Or. Ct. App. 1989) ("This is not a sale by a willing seller to a willing buyer
defendants should not benefit from reductions in value that are based on such a sale."); id.
111. See N. Trust Co. v. Comm'r, 87 T.C. 349, 365 (1986) ("This [discounted cash flow]
valuation method is based on the assumption that the price an investor will pay for a share of
stock is the present value of the future stream of income he expects to receive from the
investment:' (emphasis added)); see also JAMES D. Cox ET AL., SECURITIES REGULATION:
CASES & MATERIALS 28-29 (3d ed. 2001) (observing that the present value of a share of stock is
based on "the future payouts of a corporation to its shareholders" (emphasis added)); Hood et
al., supra note 79, at 417-18 (noting that the discounted cash flow method of valuation is based
on "the actual cash produced by a business and returned to the investor" (emphasis added));
supra note 109 (indicating that when a shareholder relinquishes his ownership stake, he is giving
up a proportionate interest in a going concern).
112. Cf. Emory, supra note 67, at 1171-72 (noting, in the appraisal context, that "[a]dvocates
of discounts . . . point to the fact that ordinarily the only way for minority shareholders to realize
the value of their shares is to sell them at market prices").
113. Cf. Murdock, supra note 29, at 487 ("Were the minority shareholder not being
squeezed-out or frozen-out, he or she would have the right to continue to enjoy the perquisites
of employment, which as previously discussed are most valuable, or to await a more beneficial
price from a third party." (footnote omitted)).
114. This same argument can be made in a slightly different manner. Broadly speaking, an
investor has two options as a shareholder in a close corporation. First, assuming compliance
with any stock transfer restrictions, the investor may attempt to sell his holdings at any time. In
the absence of exigent circumstances, the investor would presumably sell only when conditions
were advantageous (e.g., when the company's future prospects were favorable). Second, the
investor can maintain his holdings and share in the going-concern value of the venture through
dividends, salary, or the possible sale of the company. Significantly, the investor retains
discretion to pursue either option.
Oppressive conduct by the majority shareholder, however, can force a minority investor's
hand. Indeed, oppressive conduct may make the second "hold" option an impossibility, as the
Murdock, supra note 29, at 487-88 (emphasis removed) (footnote omitted); see also Kellogg v.
Ga.-Pac. Paper Corp., 227 F. Supp. 719, 724 (W.D. Ark. 1964) (noting that minority
shareholders have an "interest in an existing business with its attendant possibilities of growth
and appreciation in value, an interest which may be worth much more than the present cash
value of the minority shares").
115. Even when the valuation focus is from the perspective of outsiders - i.e., what will a
third party pay - it is not entirely clear that discounts would be applicable. The issue turns on a
court's view of what is being paid for. If a court asks what a third party will pay for the entire
company, the inquiry is similar to an enterprise value approach. The minority shareholder will
receive a pro rata share of that company value. Alternatively, if a court asks what a third party
will pay for the minority's specific shares, the inquiry is similar to a fair market value approach,
and discounts are likely to be applied. See Barry M. Wertheimer, The Shareholders' Appraisal
Remedy and How Courts Determine Fair Value, 47 DUKE LJ. 613, 666 (1998) (contrasting the
third-party sales value of a corporation as a whole with the third-party sales value of a minority
block of stock).
from the perspective of the one being redeemed - i.e., what has
minority given up?116 In this setting, factors significant to outsider
irrelevant.117 The proper interpretation of fair value for an oppressi
buyout is the interpretation that most closely matches the
circumstances that are present in an oppression setting. Because a
buyout of the typical oppressed shareholder resembles a forced
redemption far more than it resembles a voluntary sale, the fair
market value standard should be rejected. By providing an oppressed
investor with his pro rata share of the company's overall worth, the
enterprise value standard properly focuses on what the investor has
relinquished.118 As a consequence, it is a superior approach.
116. See supra note 109 (observing that a shareholder has relinquished his proportionate
interest in a going concern); cf Cavalier Oil Corp. v. Harnett, 564 A.2d 1137, 1145 (Del. 1989)
("Where there is no objective market data available, the appraisal process is not intended to
reconstruct a pro forma sale but to assume that the shareholder was willing to maintain his
investment position, however slight, had the merger not occurred.").
117. Even if a minority shareholder bought into a company at a discount, it is still fair to
provide an undiscounted buyout award to that shareholder when oppressive conduct occurs.
The minority shareholder's entrance into the company is often part of a voluntary transaction in
which the absence of control and the lack of liquidity are relevant factors. The minority
shareholder's exit from the company, however, is not part of a voluntary transaction, as the
majority's oppressive conduct has forced a redemption of the minority's shares. Providing an
undiscounted buyout award simply allows the minority to retain the benefit of his original
bargain - i.e., the minority bought in at a discount from pro rata value and, absent oppression,
he could have received pro rata value by remaining as a shareholder in the company. Moreover,
any perceived "windfall" to a minority who bought in at a discount but received an
undiscounted buyout award is tolerable given that a discounted buyout award would encourage
a majority shareholder to engage in oppression. See infra notes 127-28 and accompanying text
(discussing the incentives created by discounts); cf Wertheimer, supra note 115, at 645 n.146
("[I]f minority shareholders receive less than their pro rata share of the value of the
corporation, those engaging in the cash-out merger would necessarily receive more than their
pro rata share. This would violate tenets of fundamental fairness, and encourage wrongful
conduct."). See generally Wertheimer, supra note 115, at 645 n.146 (arguing that discounts
should be rejected in the appraisal context even if a shareholder acquired his stock at a
discount).
118. See supra Part II. A (describing the fair market value and enterprise value approaches
to the meaning of fair value).
119. See, e.g., Hollis v. Hill, 232 F.3d 460, 462, 464 (5th Cir. 2000) (purchase by a c
shareholder); Pooley v. Mankato Iron & Metal, Inc., 513 N.W.2d 834, 836 (Minn. Ct. A
(purchase by controlling shareholders); In re Fleischer, 486 N.Y.S.2d 272, 273 (App.
(purchase by a corporation); Davis v. Sheerin, 754 S.W.2d 375, 377-78 (Tex. A
(purchase by a majority shareholder); see also MODEL STAT. CLOSE CORP. SUPP. §
(providing a court with the authority to order "the corporation or one or mo
shareholders" to purchase the oppressed investor's holdings); infra note 132 (notin
purchaser in an oppression buyout is typically the corporation or the shareholder(s) in
120. See supra notes 87-89 and accompanying text (describing the minority discou
121. See, e.g., PRATT ET AL., supra note 79, at 45 ("In most cases, a minority interest
less than a pro rata proportion of the value of the enterprise as a whole."); id. at 300 (n
the minority discount rebuts the assumption that "a partial interest is worth a pro rata
the value of the total enterprise"); supra notes 87-89 and accompanying text (desc
minority discount).
122. See supra notes 87-89 and accompanying text (describing the minority discou
123. See supra note 119 and accompanying text (noting that the purchaser in an o
buyout is almost always the majority/controlling shareholder or the corporation); supr
and accompanying text (discussing election statutes).
124. See, e.g., Hetherington & Dooley, supra note 2, at 5 n.7 (defining a "m
shareholder as a shareholder "who possess [es] the actual power to control the operation
firm").
125. Brown v. Allied Corrugated Box Co., 154 Cal. Rptr. 170, 176 (Ct. App. 1979).
also infra note 131 (providing another example of the effect of a corporation's purchase of its
own stock).
131. See, e.g., Murdock, supra note 29, at 486 ("[I]f the purchaser [of the minority's shares] is
the corporation, the effect of the purchase is to increase the control which a majority
shareholder already has."); id. ("For example, if shareholdings were split on a 60:20:20 ratio and
the corporation purchased one 20% holding, the 60% shareholder would then hold 75% and he
alone could provide the two-thirds approval necessary for some corporate action in some
states."); see also supra note 130 (providing another example of the effect of a corporation's
purchase of its own stock).
132. See, e.g., Charland v. Country View Golf Club, Inc., 588 A.2d 609, 612 (R.I. 1991)
("When a corporation elects to buy out the shares of a dissenting shareholder, the fact that the
shares are noncontrolling is irrelevant."); Murdock, supra note 29, at 486 ("In both dissenters'
rights proceedings and those involving a judicial buy-out, the purchaser of the minority shares is
either the corporation or those in control. Accordingly, the purchaser of the minority
shareholders' interest does not thereafter hold a minority interest."); Thompson, supra note 19,
at 234 ("[S]uch a [minority] discount would be inappropriate since the [buyout] purchase is by
controlling shareholders or the corporation; to apply such a discount would be to further
oppress minority shareholders aggrieved by the controlling shareholders' misconduct."); see also
Hansen v. 75 Ranch Co., 957 P.2d 32, 41 (Mont. 1998) ("[T]he majority of courts addressing the
issue of minority discounts has held that discounts should not be taken when determining fair
value of minority shares sold to another shareholder or to the corporation.").
133. See, e.g., PRATT ET AL., supra note 79, at 332 ("All other things being equal, an interest
in a business is worth more if it is readily marketable or, conversely, worth less if it is not.
Investors prefer liquidity to lack of liquidity. Interests in closely held businesses are illiquid
relative to most other investments."); id. at 46 (noting that a "discount for lack of marketability
reflects a value decrement due to lack of liquidity"); supra Part II. C (discussing the
marketability discount).
businesses, the members do not want outsiders to have ownership interests. Thus, the lack of
marketability can actually enhance the value of the stock . . . ."); see also Morrow v. Martschink,
922 F. Supp. 1093, 1105 (D.S.C. 1995) (quoting the same language from Haynsworth, supra note
89, at 489 n.92).
136. See supra note 129 and accompanying text (discussing treasury stock).
137. 475 N.Y.S.2d 324 (Sup. Ct. 1984).
138. Mat 328.
139. See supra note 134 and accompanying text (discussing the inapplicability
marketability discount when a corporation is the purchaser); see also infra note 143 (q
the rationale of the referee in Gift Pax).
140. N.Y. BUS. CORP. Law §§ 1104-a, 1118 (McKinney Supp. 2003).
146. See In re Gift Pax, 475 N.Y.S.2d at 328 (quoting N.Y. BUS. CORP. LAW § 1118
(McKinney Supp. 1992)). The Gift Pax holding, therefore, is only applicable to election cases.
147. See infra notes 283-85 and accompanying text (discussing the purpose of election
statutes).
148. N.Y. BUS. CORP. Law § 1118 (McKinney Supp. 2003).
154. One wonders, however, why the "exclusive of any element of value arising from such
filing" language is needed at all given that the language immediately preceding it in the election
statute clearly states that the valuation should be performed as of the date before a petition is
filed. See N.Y. Bus. CORP. LAW § 1118 (stating that the court shall "determine the fair value of
the petitioner's shares as of the day prior to the date on which such petition [for dissolution] was
filed, exclusive of any element of value arising from such filing"). After all, if a company is
valued as of the day before a dissolution petition is filed, the effect of the next-day filing
presumably has not yet occurred. Perhaps the "exclusive ... of value arising from such filing"
language is meant to cover the situation in which the company's value has been impacted by
some outside knowledge that a dissolution proceeding will be filed, even though the actual filing
has not yet taken place. For example, key employees in day-to-day contact with an aggrieved
shareholder may be told that dissolution litigation will soon commence. One can imagine that
employees might decide to exit the corporation at that point rather than to wait around for the
result of litigation. Such an exodus could affect a company's valuation even before the actual
filing of a dissolution petition. Alternatively, perhaps the language was simply borrowed from
the analogous statute in the appraisal context, with little thought given to its purpose in the
dissolution context. See N.Y. BUS. CORP. Law § 623(h) (McKinney Supp. 1981) (stating that
"fair value" in an appraisal should be determined "as of the close of business on the day prior to
the shareholders' authorization date, excluding any appreciation or depreciation directly or
indirectly induced by such corporate action or its proposal"). It should be noted that New
York's appraisal statute no longer contains this "excluding" language. See N.Y. BUS. CORP.
Law § 623(h) (McKinney Supp. 2003) (omitting the "excluding" clause and stating that a court's
fair value assessment may account for "all other relevant factors").
155. See supra notes 98-99 and accompanying text (noting that context is critical to
valuation).
156. See supra note 119 and accompanying text (noting that the purchaser in an oppression
buyout is frequently the majority/controlling shareholder or the corporation).
157. See supra notes 60-63 and accompanying text (discussing fair value buyouts).
158. See, e.g., Pueblo Bancorporation v. Lindoe, Inc., 63 P.3d 353, 361 (Colo. 2003) (noting
that the legislature used the term "fair value" and not "fair market value"); Devivo v. Devivo,
No. CV980581020, 2001 WL 577072, at *4 (Conn. Super. Ct. May 8, 2001) ("[T]he legislature, or
the drafters of the model business corporation act, could have employed 'fair market value' as
the standard if they meant that meaning. The fact [that] they did not is highly significant. . . .
[F]air value ... is not synonymous with fair market value."); Royals v. Piedmont Elec. Repair
Co., No. 97 CVS 720, 1999 WL 33545516, at *12 (N.C. Super. Ct. Mar. 3, 1999):
If the Legislature had intended for the valuation to be set at "fair market value," it could
have and would have used that term. Instead, it chose to use a broader definition ["fair
value"] which gave the trial court more leeway in determining value for purposes of the
alternative relief provided by the statute.
Matthew G. Norton Co. v. Smyth, 51 P.3d 159, 163 (Wash. Ct. App. 2002) ("It is clear, however,
that our Legislature's use of the term 'fair value' was not a slip of the pen - the Legislature did
not intend to say 'fair market value,' instead."); see also Joseph W. Anthony & Karlyn Vegoe
Boraas, Betrayed, Belittled . . . But Triumphant: Claims of Shareholders in Closely Held
Corporations, 22 WM. MITCHELL L. REV. 1173, 1186 (1996) ('"Fair value' is not the same as, or
short-hand for, 'fair market value.' 'Fair value' carries with it the statutory purpose that
shareholders be fairly compensated, which may or may not equate with the market's judgment
about the stock's value." (footnote omitted)); Bobbie J. Hollis II, The Unfairness of Applying
Lack of Marketability Discounts to Determine Fair Value in Dissenters' Rights Cases, 25 J. CORP.
L. 137, 142 (1999) ("The decision by the state to use one term ['fair value'] over the other ['fair
market value'] cannot be viewed as arbitrary."). The argument is usually strengthened by
references to other statutes in which the legislature did use the "fair market value" term. See
infra note 159 and accompanying text (referencing other statutes).
159. See, e.g., Pueblo Bancorporation, 63 P.3d at 362 ("If the General Assembly intended to
create a fair market value measure for the price of a dissenter's shares, it knew how to provide
it; the phrase has been used many times in a wide variety of other statutes."); id. (citing
statutes).
160. N.Y. BUS. CORP. LAW § 1118(b) (McKinney Supp. 2003) (emphasis added); s
§ 1118(a) (stating that the corporation or its shareholders may "elect to purchase the s
owned by the petitioners at their fair value" (emphasis added)); MODEL BUS. CORP
§ 14.34(d) (2002) ("If the parties are unable to reach an agreement ... the court . . . shal
determine the fair value of the petitioner's shares
Close Corp. Supp. § 42(b)(l) (1997) (stating that a court shall "d
shares").
161. See, e.g., Emory, supra note 67, at 1169 ("By defining the entity to be valued as the
[aggrieved minority's] own shares, rather than as the entire corporation, the statute appears to
contemplate valuing the [aggrieved minority's] shares on the basis of what they are - a minority
interest [in an illiquid close corporation]."); see also Atl. States Constr. Inc. v. Beavers, 314
S.E.2d 245, 251 (Ga. Ct. App. 1984) (noting, in an appraisal case, that the "focus of the
valuation process is on the value of the stock held by the dissenting shareholders, not on the
value of some specified percentage of the corporate worth").
162. See supra Part II.A (describing the fair market value and enterprise value approaches
to the meaning of fair value).
163. See supra notes 157-59 and accompanying text (distinguishing fair value and fair
market value). One wonders, however, why state legislatures were not clearer about their
intentions. After all, if a legislature had truly intended for the statutory "fair value" term to
mean a pro rata share of enterprise value, rather than fair market value, it easily could have said
so. A statute could state, for example, that a court should determine the buyout price by
calculating the "fair value of the enterprise and by awarding the petitioner its proportional share
of that enterprise value." Alternatively, the legislature could have directed that a petitioning
shareholder be awarded his "proportional share of the fair value of the enterprise."
164. Some have argued that a legislature's choice of "fair value" over "fair market value" is
not particularly significant. Fair market value suggests a market benchmark. Yet close
corporations, by definition, lack a market for their shares. See supra notes 31-32 and
accompanying text (discussing the absence of a market for close corporation stock). The term
"fair market value," therefore, suggests a standard that is not descriptively accurate, and a
different term may be more appropriate. The choice of "fair value" over "fair market value," in
other words, may reflect considerations of style rather than substance. Emory, supra note 67, at
1170. As one commentator observes:
The terms fair value and fair market value have been used in case law to describe one
general principle: the inherent value of an asset. In cases where a ready market for
shares exists, courts have used the term fair market value. Where no market exists,
another valuation method is employed to determine the fair value of shares.
Essentially, these values are the same, only determining fair value without the aid of a
market place causes the court to adopt and recognize other methods of evaluation
which are most equitable under the facts.
Id. at 1171 (citing Pohl v. Milsco Mfg. Co., No. 89-CV-02091, slip op. at 6 (Wis. Cir. Ct. July 12,
1991)); see also Devivo v. Devivo, No. CV980581020, 2001 WL 577072, at *3 (Conn. Super. Ct.
May 8, 2001) ("The terms actual valuation, actual value, market value, fair market value,
market price and fair value are synonymous in the determination of the valuation of property
for assessment purposes, but the term 'fair value' is the preferable one." (quoting Bridgeport v.
Stratford, 216 A.2d. 439, 440 (Conn. 1966))).
165. Moll, supra note 52, at 731.
166. A 12 percent shareholder, for example, expects that his investment entitles him to 12
percent of the corporation's profits, generally received through capital appreciation or
dividends. See infra notes 167-68 and accompanying text (discussing the investment return of
the public corporation shareholder).
167. See, e.g., Exadaktilos v. Cinnaminson Realty Co., 400 A.2d 554, 560 (N.J. Super. Ct.
Law Div. 1979) ("Large corporations are usually formed as a means of attracting capital
through the sale of stock to investors, with no expectation of participation in corporate
management or employment. Profit is expected through the payment of dividends or sale of
stock at an appreciated value."); Terry A. O'Neill, Self-interest and Concern for Others in the
Corporations, supra note 15, § 1.08, at 1-32 ("Even if [close corporation] shareholders . . .
anticipate an ultimate profit from the sale of shares, they usually expect (or perhaps should
expect) to receive an immediate return in the form of salaries as officers or employees of the
corporation rather than in the form of dividends
attractive job."); Ragazzo, supra note 57, at 1110 (noting that a close corporation shareholder
"often invests for the purpose of having a job").
173. See, e.g., 1 OPPRESSION, supra note 20, § 3:07, at 3-70 n.5 (noting that "the special
prerogatives enjoyed by a majority in a close corporation not infrequently block the sale of a
close corporation because the majority has difficulty obtaining such lucrative employment
elsewhere" (citing J.C. Hetherington, Special Characteristics, Problems, and Needs of the Close
Corporation, 1969 U. ILL. L.F. 1, 20 n.72)); PRATT ET AL., supra note 79, at 121 ("It is not
uncommon to find an owner/manager of a successful closely held company earning a greater
amount in annual compensation than the amount an equivalent nonowner employee would earn
as compensation."); Ragazzo, supra note 57, at 1109 ("The shareholder may invest for the
purpose of having a job that produces higher compensation than could be garnered through
employment by third parties."); see also Bonavita, 692 A.2d at 124 ("[W]hile there is no claim
that the [close corporation] salaries are excessive, neither was there a showing that if the 'inside'
employment were terminated those family members could earn as much elsewhere."); Nelson v.
Martin, 958 S.W.2d 643, 644 (Tenn. 1997) (noting that the annual compensation of a
shareholder-employee of a commercial printing business "was in excess of $250,000"). This
assertion, of course, assumes a comparison between similar jobs in businesses at similar stages of
development.
174. See, e.g., Wilkes, 353 N.E.2d at 659-60 & n.9 (observing that all of the close corporation
participants were directors of the company and that the offices of president, treasurer, and clerk
were held by each of the participants over the years); Balvik v. Sylvester, 411 N.W.2d 383, 384
(N.D. 1987) (noting that both participants in a close corporation were directors of the company
and observing that one shareholder-employee served as the president and the other served as
the vice-president); see also 1 OPPRESSION, supra note 20, § 3:07, at 3-67 (referring to the
"prestige, privileges, and patronage that come from controlling a corporation and occupying its
principal offices"); id. § 3:06, at 3-47 ("[LJosing the prestige of a directorship may be of
considerable consequence to the shareholder."); cf. WILLIAM A. Klein & JOHN C. COFFEE, Jr.,
Business Organization and Finance: Legal and Economic Principles 174 (8th ed.
2002) ("[T]here is obvious psychic income associated with being a senior manager of a 'Fortune
500' firm or other well known corporation. ...").
175. See Ingle, 535 N.E.2d at 1319 (Hancock, J., dissenting) (noting "the challenge, the
independence, the prestige, the feeling of achievement, and the other intangible benefits of
being part of the management of a successfully run small company"); Bahls, supra note 89, at
290-91 (clarifying that close corporation ownership includes "the social status and challenge of
operating one's own company and the satisfaction of providing employment to one's children");
id. at 299 n.96 (noting that "[i]ntangible amenities include the social status of operating one's
own company, together with the associated challenges"); id. at 319 n.212 (mentioning the "loss
of satisfaction and other qualitative perks associated with operating a business"); O'Neill, supra
note 167, at 668, 671 (describing the "psychological payoffs" that an "owner-manager"
anticipates when investing in a venture, including "the pleasure of being one's own boss, the
feeling of satisfaction in creating a viable enterprise and even the excitement of taking a
substantial risk"); Ragazzo, supra note 57, at 1110 ("Additionally, the employee may simply
derive satisfaction from working in a business that he himself takes a substantial part in
managing."); see also Bonavita, 692 A.2d at 124 ("[A] job in the family business probably
provides considerably more security than one might find in other employment.").
In addition to compensation lost in the past, plaintiffs often seek future damages, or
front pay, for some period of time beyond the date of the trial. The duty to mitigate
means that, if the court permits awards of front pay, they can go only to those
plaintiffs who have not been able to find other comparable employment after their
discharge; in many future damages cases, however, the employee has another job that
pays less than the former employment and argues that the defendant should have to
compensate him or her for the lifetime earnings differential.
M§ 9.24, at 583.
For example, assume that a terminated shareholder-employee was earning a "true" salary
of $90,000. Despite the best efforts of the shareholder-employee, comparable alternativ
employment can only be obtained at a $60,000 salary. The termination, therefore, robbed th
shareholder-employee of the ability to earn an additional $30,000 in salary in a comparable
position. See supra note 173 (noting that a close corporation job is frequently associated
higher salary). If compensation for the fair value of a shareholder's investment inc
compensation for the lost job, the terminated shareholder would presumably receive $3
per year in back pay from the time of termination until the time of trial and, potenti
properly discounted front pay award representing the lost $30,000 per year for some speci
period of time into the future.
181. After all, back-pay and front-pay awards may not make a terminated shareh
completely "whole." Such awards do not compensate the shareholder for any loss of pr
caused by removal from a management position (except to the extent that the prestige
position was represented by a higher salary). Furthermore, such awards do not compensa
shareholder for any loss of intangible "be your own boss" value. See supra notes 173-75
accompanying text (describing the benefits of close corporation employment). These loss
of course, difficult to quantify, and assessing damages for them would be speculative a
See, e.g., Bahls, supra note 89, at 298-99 (discussing "the loss of an expectation of a voi
management," and observing that "[p]roblems inherent in quantifying the value o
expectation to intangible amenities often preclude the court from awarding any value for
the expectation").
182. See, e.g., Murdock, supra note 29, at 472 (calculating the losses of a shareho
employee earning $250,000 per year in salary before termination and $100,000 per year in
after termination, and implying that a standard buyout is not entirely satisfactory bec
does not compensate for this loss); cf. Bahls, supra note 89, at 296 ("Although dissolution of
corporation may enable the shareholder to generate income by reinvesting the proceeds
liquidation, it does not enable the shareholder to realize expectations of continuing employm
or participation in management."); id. at 298-99 (observing that "[a]warding the fair m
value of a shareholder's interest does not compensate for the loss of an expectation of a vo
management" because "[problems inherent in quantifying the value of this expectat
intangible amenities often preclude the court from awarding any value for loss o
expectation"). See generally PRATT ET AL., supra note 79, at 149-297 (discussing se
valuation methods - including discounted economic income, guideline company, merge
acquisition, asset-based valuations, and excess earnings - with no mention of adjustment
the value of a lost job or a lost management position); id. at 23-30 (discussing fair market v
investment value, intrinsic value, fair value, going-concern value, and liquidation value wit
mention of adjustments for the value of a lost job or lost management position).
183. See, e.g., Wilkes v. Springside Nursing Home, Inc., 353 N.E.2d 657, 661 (Mass.
(involving a minority shareholder who was terminated from employment and removed fro
management position); In re Topper, 433 N.Y.S.2d 359, 362 (Sup. Ct. 1980) (same); Bal
Sylvester, 411 N.W.2d 383, 384-85 (N.D. 1987) (same).
184. See, e.g., supra Part II. A (describing the fair market value and enterprise value
approaches to the meaning of fair value).
185. Admittedly, any overcompensation provided by the lack of discounts is unlikely to be a
perfect dollar-for-dollar offset of the undercompensation caused by the buyout's failure to
account for employment and management harm. Depending on the numbers, "lost job" and
"lost management position" damages may be higher or lower than the dollar amount of the
discounts. Alternatively, a court may not be able to calculate such damages at all. The loss of
prestige and independence that potentially results from a termination of employment and a
removal from management may be difficult, if not impossible, to quantify. See supra notes 175,
181 and accompanying text (discussing damages for "lost prestige" and "lost ability to work for
oneself). Nevertheless, there is no doubt that such harm is frequently suffered by a frozen-out
minority shareholder and that the standard buyout award fails to compensate for it. See supra
notes 181-83 and accompanying text (noting the harms that a frozen-out shareholder typically
faces and the incompleteness of a buyout award). In many oppression disputes, therefore, the
undercompensation argument can, at the very least, serve as a justification for reducing
discounts, even if it cannot "mathematically" justify their wholesale rejection.
186. See, e.g., infra notes 217, 255-62 and accompanying text (discussing the compensatory
aspect of dissolution and the punishment rationale).
187. See supra notes 33-36 and accompanying text (discussing dissolution-for-oppression
statutes).
188. See, e.g., Bahls, supra note 89, at 296 (observing that "[c]ourts historically looked
askance at dissolution as an extreme remedy"); Robert W. Hillman, The Dissatisfied Participant
in the Solvent Business Venture: A Consideration of the Relevant Permanence of Partnerships
and Close Corporations, 67 MINN. L. REV. 1, 47 n.147 (1982) (noting that "courts frequently
view corporate dissolution as a 'drastic,' 'harsh,' or 'last resort' remedy"); Murdock, supra note
29, at 440 ("The cases in which courts refer to dissolution or liquidation as a drastic remedy, if
not legion, are certainly numerous." (footnote omitted)).
189. See, e.g., Davis v. Sheerin, 754 S.W.2d 375, 378, 380 (Tex. App. 1988) (observing that
the relevant Texas statute only provided "for the appointment of a receiver, with the eventual
possibility of liquidation" as a remedy for oppressive conduct, but concluding that courts "could
order less harsh remedies" under "their general equity powers in the absence of statutory
authority"); id. at 379 ("[CJourts of other jurisdictions have recognized a 'buy-out' as an
appropriate remedy, even in the absence of express statutory or contractual authority.").
In some jurisdictions, the relevant statutes expressly grant courts the ability to award
alternative, nondissolution remedies. See, e.g., MINN. STAT. Ann. § 302A.751 subd. 1 (West
Supp. 2000) (authorizing a court to provide "any equitable relief it deems just and reasonable in
the circumstances"); NJ. STAT. ANN. § 14A:12-7 (West Supp. 1999) (providing a list of
remedies).
190. See Murdock, supra note 29, at 452 (describing dissolution as "judicially-imposed
[corporate] death" (quoting In re Radom & Neidorff, Inc., 307 N.Y. 1, 7 (1954)).
191. See supra Part I.D (discussing the buyout remedy).
192. See infra Part III.B.l.a (discussing the equal treatment aspect of dissolution).
193. See infra Part IILB.l.b (discussing the compensatory aspect of dissolution).
194. See, e.g., Brenner v. Berkowitz, 634 A.2d 1019, 1031 (NJ. 1993) ("In the case of
dissolution, a distribution results in the termination of the corporation's business, with its assets
being proportionately distributed to the stockholders."); Harry G. Henn & John R.
Alexander, Handbook of the Law of Corporations and Other Business
ENTERPRISES 992 (3d. ed. 1983) (describing the process of dissolution and notin
shareholders, subject to any applicable liquidation preferences and other
proportionately in the net assets remaining after the satisfaction of corpora
(footnote omitted)); infra note 196 and accompanying text (noting the pro r
dissolution).
195. 154 Cal. Rptr. 170 (Ct. App. 1979).
199. See, e.g., Bahls, supra note 89, at 303 ("To the extent that discounts for lack of
marketability are shared by shareholders on a pro rata basis, shareholders' expectations of equal
treatment are not violated."); cf. Balsamides, 734 A.2d at 737 (citing the testimony of a
valuation expert who stated that "whether you [applied] a marketability discount to one
hundred percent of the shares of stock, fifty percent of the shares of stock, or twenty percent of
[the] shares of stock, the marketability discount would be the same").
200. See supra notes 133-35 and accompanying text (noting that a smaller marketability
discount, or perhaps no marketability discount at all, is appropriate for the sale of a controlling
interest in a close corporation).
201. See infra note 203 and accompanying text (citing authorities for the proposition that a
buyout should provide at least as much compensation as dissolution would provide).
202. See supra note 59 and accompanying text (describing election statutes).
203. Charland v. Country View Golf Club, Inc., 588 A.2d 609, 613 (R.I. 1991) (quoting
Robert B. Heglar, Note, Rejecting the Minority Discount, 1989 DUKE L.J. 258, 269 n.63); see
Brown v. Allied Corrugated Box Co., 154 Cal. Rptr. 170, 176 (Ct. App. 1979) ("[T]he statutes
suggest that a minority shareholder who brings an action for the involuntary dissolution of a
corporation should not, by virtue of the controlling shareholder's invocation of the buy-out
remedy, receive less than he would have received had the dissolution been allowed to
proceed.").
206. Bahls, supra note 89, at 331; see also Murdock, supra note 29, at 443 n.127 (noting the
possibility that the sale of an operating business in dissolution may be "predicated upon a
distress sale situation" and that, as a result, less than going-concern value will be received); id.
("To realize going-concern value, either a competitive bidding, nondistress environment is
necessary or, with respect to a shareholder bidder, some legal constraint must be in place to
insure that a fair price is paid.").
207. See Bahls, supra note 89, at 331 (stating that "[b]uyers have no assurance that present
management of the company will continue to participate in management, even for a transition
period, after the sale," and observing that "[t]he problem is particularly acute in small
corporations in which managers tend to be independent-minded entrepreneurs not wanting to
be under the thumb of new owners").
208. As one commentator notes:
Buyers at judicial sales have little assurance that the information received about the
business is adequate to value the business or fairly reflects the financial condition of
the business
Id.
209. See id. ("Buyers at judicial sales have little assurance that the seller's management will
not compete. Selling shareholders that compete with the corporation threaten to deprive the
buyer of valuable customer relationships which jeopardizes the value of the goodwill.").
210. See id. at 331 ("Buyers at judicial sales have little assurance that the current
management of the business will operate the business normally between the date of the buyer's
assessment of the price and the date control of the business is transferred.").
Purchase prices at dissolution sales are further depressed because buyers in dissolution
proceedings "must pay the full purchase price in cash at closing or within a relatively short
period of time." Id. at 332 n.273. In private transactions outside of dissolution, the parties can
increase the purchase price by allowing for payments in installments or, alternatively, by
providing sufficient time to secure adequate financing. See id. (discussing installment sales and
financing terms). Court-supervised buyouts may have similar flexibility. See, e.g., Royals v.
Piedmont Elec. Repair Co., No. 97 CVS 720, 1999 WL 33545516, at *15 (N.C. Super. Ct. Mar. 3,
1999) (stating, in an oppression dispute, that "[a] fair and reasonable purchase procedure should
provide that the purchase price be paid 25% at closing and the balance paid in the form of a
promissory note which provides that the remaining principal be paid in three equal an
installments"); Bahls, supra note 89, at 328 n.258 ("Several state statutes permit the cour
order installment payments."); Hillman, supra note 188, at 83 (discussing the possibilit
"structuring] installment payments with a commercially reasonable rate of interest ov
extended period of time"); cf. Bonavita v. Corbo, 692 A.2d 119, 130 (N.J. Super. Ct. Ch.
1996) (appointing a "special fiscal agent" to consider the appropriate terms and conditions f
court-ordered buyout, including the interest rate, the payment schedule, and the need for
security). It is also worth noting that, if prospective purchasers know that a company's
part of an involuntary dissolution proceeding, their knowledge of the "distressed" nature o
sale may lead to lower bids.
211. See Bahls, supra note 89, at 331-32 (discussing ways to contractually reduce risk
privately negotiated transaction).
212. See id. at 332 (noting that, "as is usually the case, the majority shareholder . . . , beca
of a management position in the business, can control the risks described"). Indeed, a ma
shareholder purchasing the business can continue to operate it. The majority remains an ins
with access to the company's books, and the majority is, typically, the key manager
consequence, the majority shareholder can reduce or eliminate the risks of (1) losing th
management team (the majority, as the key manager, remains), (2) receiving inade
financial information, and (3) operating the business abnormally. Without a contr
noncompetition agreement, however, the majority is probably unable to control the risk of
former investors' establishing a competing business.
213. See id. (noting that a majority shareholder would simply buy the business at a c
supervised dissolution sale for "one dollar higher than the maximum an outside bidder w
pay"); id. at 332 n.275 ("The net result of court ordered dissolution is frequently the ma
shareholders buying the interest of the minority shareholder at a depressed price."); see als
at 332 ("The rational majority shareholder . . . would never pay the minority shareholder m
than the net cost to acquire the business at judicial sale.").
214. Professor Bahls provides an example of a company that is worth $1,000,000 on a g
concern basis outside of dissolution. See id. at 332 (assuming a $1,000,000 company value "if
corporation is sold in an arms-length transaction in which the buyer is able to elimina
substantially minimize the [various] risks"). He then assumes that the amount realized fo
company would only be $500,000 "if the business were sold at a court-supervised sale." I
these numbers, the proportionate interest of a 25 percent minority shareholder would be w
$250,000 on a going-concern basis outside of dissolution. Valued in dissolution, however,
percent interest would be worth only $125,000. Thus, even if the 25 percent interest at going-
concern value ($250,000) was discounted by 50 percent, it would nevertheless provide as much
compensation as the same interest valued in dissolution. On these numbers, a buyout at going-
concern value, even with a substantial discount, provides more compensation to the minority
shareholder than dissolution would provide. See also Grato v. Grato, 639 A.2d 390, 401 (N.J.
Super. Ct. App. Div. 1994) ("It is undisputable that a shareholder's interest in a business under
a buy-out procedure will have a higher value than in dissolution, for the 'good will' or value of
the business is not reflected in the latter.").
215. See, e.g., Hillman, supra note 188, at 47 n.147 ("There is general acceptance of the
proposition that the going concern value of an enterprise is likely to exceed its liquidation
value."); id. at 82 (noting that liquidation value is "a technique of valuation which under most
circumstances can be expected to result in a lower figure than other approaches"); see also Mart
v. Severson, 115 Cal. Rptr. 2d 717, 721, 723 (Ct. App. 2002) (stating that appraisers calculated a
$1.48 million liquidation value and a $5.6 million going-concern value for the same company);
Bahls, supra note 89, at 297 ("When corporations are liquidated, they usually sell their assets for
cash. . . . Auction sales are fire sales. Rather than selling the entire business as a going concern,
the business assets might be sold separately. If so, the sale does not yield the full value of a
going concern." (footnotes omitted)).
216. See, e.g., Brown v. Allied Corrugated Box Co., 154 Cal. Rptr. 170, 176 (Ct. App. 1979)
(rejecting a minority discount by noting that a "minority shareholder who brings an action for
the involuntary dissolution of a corporation should not . . . receive less than he would have
received had the dissolution been allowed to proceed," but providing no comparison with the
amount of compensation that the shareholder would have received upon the dissolution of the
company); Charland v. Country View Golf Club, Inc., 588 A.2d 609, 613 (R.I. 1991) (rejecting a
marketability discount by observing that, in a buyout proceeding in lieu of dissolution,
" [minority shareholders should not receive less than this [dissolution] value," but providing no
comparison with the amount of compensation that the shareholder would have received upon
the dissolution of the company (quoting Robert B. Heglar, Note, Rejecting the Minority
Discount, 1989 DUKE LJ. 258, 269 n.63)).
Even if courts did make such comparisons, the dissolution analogy would likely result only in the
reduction of discounts - not in their elimination. For example, assume that an investor's pro rata share
of a company would be valued at $250,000 in a buyout proceeding at going-concern value, and at
$125,000 in a dissolution setting. See supra note 214 (providing a similar example). Discounts totaling
$125,000 or less would be permitted in the buyout proceeding, as a buyout award in such circumstances
would be equal to or better than a recovery in dissolution. Discounts totaling in excess of $125,000
would presumably be scaled back to $125,000, rather than eliminated in their entirety.
217. Because a buyout award is made in lieu of dissolution, a court may be just as likely to
characterize the expected recovery in dissolution as the compensatory "ceiling" in an oppression
buyout proceeding. See, e.g., Hillman, supra note 188, at 82 ("Since the ultimate remedy which
222. See, e.g., Bahls, supra note 89, at 302 ("To require application of a minority discount in
this case would result in a windfall for majority shareholders which is inequitable particularly
when it is the majority shareholder who initially acted oppressively.'''' (emphasis added)).
223. 734 A.2d 721 (NJ. 1999).
224. See id. at 724 (listing the oppressive acts found by the court).
225. Id. at 724-25 (ordering Perle to sell his shares to Balsamides).
226. See supra note 56 and accompanying text (noting that the typical buyout is of the
oppressed investor's stockholdings).
227. Balsamides, 134 A.2d at 725.
228. Mat 726.
229. See id. (noting that the appellate division "disagreed with [a marketability
propriety in these circumstances").
230. See infra note 232 and accompanying text (explaining the rationale of th
division).
231. See supra notes 133-35 and accompanying text (discussing the relationship
controlling interest and the marketability discount).
232. Balsamides v. Perle, 712 A.2d 673, 683 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1998); see
683 & n.2 (noting that "[t]here is no question that if a minority interest in a c
corporation is sold to an outsider there is usually a marketability discount that must
to determine the fair market value of the shares," but also observing that "this
inapplicable to a transfer where the transferee will own all of the stock"); id. at 684 (
"[n]ot all jurisdictions agree that there should be no marketability discount in connec
transfer of controlling interests," but determining that the New Jersey oppression st
not warrant a departure from the sensible approach that would decline to apply a d
lack of marketability when one owner transfers his or her interests to another owne
turn becomes the corporation's sole shareholder").
233. Balsamides, 734 A.2d at 736 (reinstating the discount).
234. As the New Jersey Supreme Court stated:
The position of the Appellate Division ignores the reality that Balsamides is buyin
company that will remain illiquid because it is not publicly traded and pu
information about it is not widely disseminated. [The company] will continue to h
a small base of available purchasers. If it is resold in the future, Balsamide
receive a lower purchase price because of the company's closely-held nature. . . .
. . . [I]f Perle is not required to sell his shares at a price that reflects [
company's] lack of marketability, Balsamides will suffer the full effect of
company's] lack of marketability at the time he sells. Accordingly, we find
Balsamides should not bear the brunt of [the company's] illiquidity merely becaus
is the designated buyer. . . .
. . . The fact that the buyer is known is irrelevant. When Balsamides eventually
sells, he will suffer the full effect of any marketing difficulties.
Id. at 735-36; cf. id. at 737 (citing the testimony of a valuation expert who testified that even 100
percent ownership interests in close corporations are subject to marketability discounts).
235. See supra Part II. C (describing the marketability discount); supra notes 133-36 and
accompanying text (discussing the applicability of a marketability discount when the majority
shareholder or the corporation is the purchaser).
236. Balsamides, 734 A.2d at 736.
237. Id.; see also id. at 737 (distinguishing another New Jersey precedent that disallowed a
marketability discount on the ground that "[application of the equities in the two cases. . .
dictates opposite results"); id. at 738 ("In cases where the oppressing shareholder instigates the
problems . . . fairness dictates that the oppressing shareholder should not benefit at the expense
of the oppressed. Requiring Balsamides to pay an undiscounted price for Perle's stock penalizes
Balsamides and rewards Perle.").
238. Jeffrey D. Bauman et al., Corporations Law and Policy: Materials and
Problems 35 (4th ed. Supp. 2000); see Eggart, supra note 86, at 240 (suggesting that th
Balsamides analysis may also advocate the "lack of marketability discounts as a punitiv
measure"); id. at 241 ("Forcing Perle [] to sell his shares to Balsamides at a marketabili
discount thus did not benefit the oppressor, it penalized him."); see also 2 AM. LAW INST., supr
note 98, § 7.22, at 325 (noting that fair value in the appraisal context should not incorporate
marketability discount except in "extraordinary circumstances," which requires "more than the
absence of a trading market in the shares," and suggesting that "the court should apply th
exception only when it finds that the dissenting shareholder has held out in order to exploit t
transaction"); Hollis, supra note 158, at 159 ("[T]here is an implicit contention in the A
[Principles of Corporate Governance § 7.22] that the 'lack of marketability' discount should
used as a punitive measure."); cf. Lawson Mardon Wheaton, Inc. v. Smith, 734 A.2d 738, 748
(NJ. 1999) ("The very nature of the term 'fair value' suggests that courts must take fairness an
equity into account in deciding whether to apply a discount to the value of the dissenting
shareholders' stock in an appraisal action." (emphasis added)).
239. Evidence of Perle's blameworthy conduct led the trial court to find oppression under
the relevant New Jersey statute. See Balsamides, 734 A.2d at 723-24 ("The trial court found that
Balsamides was an oppressed shareholder . . . and was entitled to buy-out Perle's interest in [the
companies] . . . ."); id. at 724 (listing Perle's oppressive acts).
240. See supra Part II.C (defining the marketability discount).
241. The amount of the marketability discount should bear some relationship to the
expected level of "liquidation difficulty." See supra notes 133-35 and accompanying text
(arguing that the marketability discount for controlling interests should be reduced, if not
eliminated, because controlling interests are easier to sell).
242. Cf. Hollis, supra note 158, at 159 (stating that " [flair value should measure the price,
not the person").
243. A minority discount is a well-accepted valuation convention that reflects the economic
reality that purchasers of stock, whether public corporation stock or close corporation stock,
will pay less for shares that lack voting control. See supra Part II.B (defining the minority
discount). Application of the discount, therefore, should turn on whether this economic reality
is present on the facts of a case - i.e., will a buyout result in a purchaser owning a minority
position in a close corporation? If yes, a minority discount is appropriate. If no, a minority
discount is inappropriate. The minority discount's application, in other words, is meant to turn
on whether a purchaser will be left with a minority stake in a company, not on whether a
shareholder's conduct is viewed as good or bad. See supra notes 122-32 and accompanying text
(discussing the applicability of a minority discount when a majority shareholder or a corporation
is the purchaser). But see infra note 251 (discussing a possible relationship between the size of a
minority discount and the conduct of an oppressor).
244. See, e.g., Pratt ET AL., supra note 79, at 334 ("[EJmpirical evidence . . . suggests that
discounts for lack of marketability for minority interest closely held stocks tend to cluster in the
range of 35 to 50 percent from their publicly-traded counterparts."); id. at 334-48 (summarizing
the findings of "[t]wo general types of empirical studies" on the marketability discount - studies
of "[discounts on sales of restricted shares of publicly traded companies," and studies of
"[discounts on sales of closely held company shares compared to prices of subsequent initial
public offerings of the same company's shares"); id. at 357 (noting the existence of empirical
data on marketability discounts for controlling interests); see also Balsamides, 734 A.2d at 728
(citing the testimony of a valuation expert who justified his application of a 35 percent
marketability discount on the ground that, "according to studies, thirty-five percent was a mid-
range or conservative discount rate" (emphasis added)); Hall v. King, 675 N.Y.S.2d 810, 814
(Sup. Ct. 1998) ("Both of the defendant's valuation witnesses approved a lack of marketability
discount greater than 10%. Both justified their choice of a figure by reference to an accepted
range of lack of marketability discounts as set forth in various appraisers' studies of private
stock transactions.").
245. See PRATT ET AL., supra note 79, at 358 (noting that "[t]here are degrees of
marketability or lack of it, which depend on the circumstances in each case," and listing factors
that "affect the degree of marketability" and that "should guide the analyst's judgment as to
where the subject interest should fall within the reasonable range of discounts for lack of
marketability").
246. See id. (stating that "the most powerful factor that could reduce or eliminate a discount
for lack of marketability would be the existence of a 'put' right," and describing a "put" as "a
contractual right that entitles the holder, at his option, to sell the stock to a specified party at
some time or under some specified circumstances"); id. ("In other words, a put guarantees a
market under specified circumstances.").
247. See id. ("The existence of a reasonable number of potential buyers or even one strong
potential buyer (often as demonstrated by past activity in the stock) could dampen the discount
for lack of marketability.").
248. See id. at 359 ("An imminent public offering or sale of the company could decrease the
discount for lack of marketability. . . . Conversely, if a company is committed to remaining
private and in the hands of current control owners for the foreseeable future, this would tend to
exacerbate the discount for lack of marketability.").
249. See id. ("Any provision that limits the right of the holder to transfer the stock would
tend to increase the amount of the discount for lack of marketability.").
250. The oppressive shareholder's conduct may, in some instances, play a small role in the
setting of the marketability discount. For example, another factor that experts consider in
adjusting the empirical discount data is the level of dividend payments in a company, as shares
of companies paying low or no dividends are generally less marketable. See id. at 358 ("Stocks
with no or low dividends typically suffer more from lack of marketability than stocks with high
dividends. ... If the stock pays no dividend, the holder is dependent entirely on some future
ability to sell the stock to realize any return."). Similarly, an investor's ability to access company
information is a factor that affects the marketability discount. See id. at 359 ("The degree to
which information is or is not made available to minority owners and the reliability of that
information affects the discount for lack of marketability."). Because dividend suppression and
exclusion from company information are two common acts of majority shareholder oppression,
one could argue that a marketability discount is tailored, at least in part, to the "bad" conduct of
the majority (at least when these acts of oppression are present). Among different companies, in
other words, more significant instances of dividend suppression and information exclusion by
the majority should result in a higher marketability discount, all other variables being equal.
Despite this argument, it is still fair to assert that a marketability discount is not
sufficiently tailored to the conduct of an oppressive shareholder to justify the discount's
application (or the discount's denial) as a punitive device. When the majority's oppressive
conduct does not include dividend suppression and information exclusion, the factors
contributing to the size of the discount are wholly unrelated to the majority's actions. See supra
notes 244-49 and accompanying text (describing factors affecting the size of the discount); supra
notes 24-26 and accompanying text (providing examples of common acts of oppression). Even
when the majority's oppressive conduct does encompass dividend suppression and information
exclusion, the effect of these arguably tailored factors is distorted by the other factors
contributing to the size of the discount that are unrelated to the majority's behavior. See supra
notes 244-49 and accompanying text (describing factors affecting the size of the discount).
Finally, it is not entirely clear that an assessment of the dividend payments and information
access factors should include the effect of any oppressive conduct. Cf. Pratt ET al., supra note
79, at 24 (noting that, under most interpretations of fair market value, "the willing buyer and
willing seller are hypothetical persons dealing at arm's length, rather than any particular buyer
or seller," and stating that "a price would not be considered representative of fair market value
if influenced by special motivations not characteristic of a typical buyer or seller"). If a correct
assessment of such factors requires an exclusion of the effect of any oppressive conduct, then
even those factors bear no relation to the majority's "bad" behavior.
251. See, e.g., Eggart, supra note 86, at 244 ("The percentage discount applied by a court
appointed appraiser or expert witness may or may not bear any nexus to the magnitude of the
wrongs perpetrated by the oppressing shareholder."). In some disputes, the size of the
marketability discount may be loosely (although insufficiently) related to the oppressive
shareholder's conduct. See supra note 250 and accompanying text (discussing the relationship
between the size of the marketability discount and the oppressive shareholder's conduct).
Compared to the marketability discount, the minority discount is perhaps better tailored
to the "bad" conduct of the oppressor - although still not enough to justify its use (or nonuse) as
a punitive device. Valuation experts typically derive minority discounts from empirical data
comparing "control acquisition prices with pre-acquisition minority interest transaction prices."
PRATT ET al., supra note 79, at 316; id. at 314 ("[T]his discounting from control value usually is
done as a two-step process, first for minority interest, then for marketability, each step drawing
as much as possible on empirical data available to assist in quantifying the respective discounts."
(emphasis added)). The empirical data may then be adjusted for the presence or absence of
employed by him."). Finally, a court could enjoin an oppressive majority shareholder from
engaging in certain types of punishment-worthy conduct in the future. See, e.g., Patton v
Nicholas, 279 S.W.2d 848, 857 (Tex. 1955) (ordering, through a "mandatory injunction," the
immediate payment of reasonable dividends as well as future payments of reasonabl
dividends); Davis, 754 S.W.2d at 378, 388 (affirming the trial court's order that enjoined
oppressive shareholders from contributing disproportionately to a profit-sharing plan).
253. Cf. Emory, supra note 67, at 1158 n.19 ("[AJttempts to limit judicial discretion on the
issue of discounts may be relatively ineffective. Judges can arrive at desired fair values by simpl
accepting values that indirectly account for potential discounts.").
254. See Eggart, supra note 86, at 244 ("[L]ack of marketability discounts are too coarse a
[punishment] tool because they obscure courts' reasoning for deciding that a particular value
fair.").
255. Cf. Hendley v. Lee, 676 F. Supp. 1317, 1323 (D.S.C. 1987) ("Under generally
established equitable principles, fault is a factor to be considered by a court in fashioning
equitable relief under the statute, but in the case at bar, the court finds as a fact that both sides
contributed equally to the disharmony which precipitated this litigation.").
256. See supra note 27 and accompanying text (discussing the distribution of profit in close
corporations).
257. See supra note 53 (discussing justifiable majority conduct).
seemed to decide that the minority's fault nonetheless warranted some level of punishment
Although the minority had been excluded from ten years' worth of de facto dividends by the
time of the Gimpel opinion, the court provided no compensation to the minority for his pro rata
share of these past dividends. See id. at 1017, 1021-22 (observing that the majority must "by
some means allow [the minority] to share in the profits," but providing no compensation for
past dividends); see also supra note 259 and accompanying text (noting that dividends must be
distributed proportionately to all shareholders of the same class). Moreover, the court's
language suggests that this remedial omission was intentional. See Gimpel, 477 N.Y.S.2d at 1021
(stating that the minority's "past misdeeds provided sufficient justification for the majority's acts
to date'' and awarding only forward-looking relief (emphasis added)).
261. See, e.g., Vincent E. Gentile, New Jersey Supreme Court Rules on Marketability
Discounts in Valuation Cases, N.J. LAW., Dec. 1999, at 11 (noting that, in disputes between
shareholders, "no one is likely to be blameless, and each side is likely to have engaged in
conduct that can later be deemed unfair by a court"); cf. Pooley v. Mankato Iron & Metal, Inc.
513 N.W.2d 834, 837-38 (Minn. Ct. App. 1994) (considering the controlling shareholders'
argument that "a balancing of the equities" required a minority discount because the oppressed
minority investor had been terminated from company employment as a result of his crimina
conviction, but ultimately rejecting the discount); id. at 838 ("They [the controlling
shareholders] reason that [the minority's] criminal activities weigh against him receiving equa
value for his shares.").
262. If one believed that discounts should be tied to "fault" or "blameworthy" behavior, a
useful comparison to the appraisal context could be made. Minority shareholders in every
jurisdiction have the right to "dissent from certain corporate actions, primarily mergers and
other fundamental corporate changes, and to receive the appraised fair value of their shares.
Wertheimer, supra note 115, at 613-14 (footnote omitted); see also Emory, supra note 67, at
1163-64 ("Today, all states and the District of Columbia have statutes requiring corporations to
buy back their dissenters' shares at 'fair value' or at similar standards."). This right to relief "is
sometimes known as the dissent and appraisal remedy, dissenters' rights, or, simply, the
appraisal remedy." Wertheimer, supra note 115, at 614. Significantly, a dissenting minority
shareholder's right to a fair value appraisal can be triggered merely by the majority's benign
decision to engage in a merger or some other corporate transaction. In appraisal cases, in othe
words, the majority has not necessarily engaged in any blameworthy conduct. Nevertheless, the
prevailing view in such cases is that the statutory command to provide "fair value" to th
dissenter dictates an enterprise value approach and a corresponding absence of discounts. See,
e.g., Pueblo Bancorporation v. Lindoe, Inc., 63 P.3d 353, 363-64 (Colo. 2003) (adopting an
enterprise value approach to fair value and noting that such an interpretation is the "clear
majority view" in appraisal cases); Lawson Mardon Wheaton, Inc. v. Smith, 734 A.2d 738, 748
(N.J. 1999) ("[EJquitable considerations have led the majority of states and commentators to
conclude that marketability and minority discounts should not be applied when determining the
fair value of dissenting shareholders' stock in an appraisal action"). If fair value appraisals in
"no-fault" dissenters' rights cases avoid discounting the value of the minority's shares, it is
perverse to apply such discounts in the shareholder oppression context where the majority is
often culpable.
263. See infra note 266 and accompanying text (citing authorities and describing the liquidity
argument).
264. See, e.g., In re Pace Photographers, Ltd., 525 N.E.2d 713, 716 (N.Y. 1988) ("Prior to
1979, minority shareholders in close corporations who suffered abuse at the hands of the
majority lacked the options available to business partners and shareholders in public
corporations to extricate the value of their investments.").
265. See Murdock, supra note 29, at 484 (observing that "minority shareholders are no
longer helpless in the face of majority misconduct," and stating that "[t]he specter of being
'locked-in' but frozen out is being relegated to history"); infra note 266 and accompanying text
(describing the liquidity argument).
266. Murdock, supra note 29, at 486; see also Emory, supra note 67, at 1169 n.81 (describing
a trial court decision in which the referee "declined to apply a marketability discount under the
theory that the appraisal statute itself created a liquid market for the dissenter's shares");
Murdock, supra note 29, at 484-85 ("The development of the concept of fiduciary duties
running from those in control to minority shareholders, the restatement of oppression in terms
of the reasonable expectations of minority shareholders, and the development of a buy-out
remedy converge into a vastly changed posture for minority shareholders."); id. at 485
(describing an elected buyout case and stating that the court did not consider that "there now
was a market for the shares," and noting that "[i]t is illogical to ignore the existence of a market
in applying a discount predicated upon the lack of a market"); id. at 486 (stating that "[w]hile
the actual election to buy, or a court order mandating a buy-out, cannot occur until after suit is
filed, the legislation - or in some states, judicial decisions - creating this new market is already
existent," and observing that "[o]nce a buy-out remedy as an alternative to dissolution is in
place, the position of the minority shareholder with regard to liquidity has changed
dramatically").
267. See, e.g., Hood et. al., supra note 79, at 442 ("Although minority shareholders do have
some protection under corporate law from the oppressive acts of those in control of the
corporation, obtaining judicial relief is a long, arduous, expensive, and uncertain process.
(footnote omitted)). Even in disputes in which the need to prove oppression is obviated by a
buyout election, litigation over the fair value of the minority's shares often involve
considerable time and expense. See, e.g., Advanced Communication Design, Inc. v. Follett, 615
N.W.2d 285, 288-89 (Minn. 2000) (involving litigation that commenced in 1996 and ended, at
the state supreme court level, in 2000, and noting the testimony of the expert witnesses whom
the parties hired to present valuation evidence).
268. See, e.g., Brenner v. Berkowitz, 634 A.2d 1019, 1031 (N.J. 1993) ("Although a buy-out
may be preferable to dissolution, other remedies may be more appropriate [than] a buy-out.")
id. at 1032 (noting that "when a statutory [oppression] violation occurs, a court retains it
discretion to fashion equitable remedies"); id. at 1033 (stating that "the trial court has th
discretion to choose the appropriate remedies"); id. at 1033-34 (upholding the trial court's
reinstatement of a minority shareholder to a director position and stating that "we find that the
quantity and substantiality of the acts of misconduct committed by defendants do not warrant
any more expansive relief).
269. Pratt et al., supra note 79, at 334.
270. See supra Part II.C (discussing the difficulties associated with selling close corporation
stock).
C. Summary
Minority and marketability discount
shareholder oppression disputes. Argu
shareholder oppression context, the statut
over "fair market value," and the underco
buyout award offer strong support for re
adopting an enterprise value approach. Although arguments
premised on dissolution analogies, punishment rationales, and
liquidity assertions also seek to justify the rejection of discounts, such
arguments are of limited utility. When constructing a case against
discounts, litigants should downplay or eliminate these suspect
arguments in favor of the stronger and more credible grounds
discussed above.
271. See, e.g., In re Gift Pax, Inc., 475 N.Y.S.2d 324, 328 (Sup. Ct. 1984) (involving a referee
who rejected a marketability discount on the ground that "[the respondent corporations], by
electing to purchase the petitioner's shares . . . , became the willing and available buyers").
272. See supra Part II.C (describing the marketability discount).
273. See, e.g., Balsamides v. Protameen Chems., Inc., 734 A.2d 721, 735 (N.J. 1999)
(rejecting the notion that the presence of a designated buyer renders the marketability discount
inapplicable); id. ("Balsamides is buying a company that will remain illiquid
A. Current Framework
fair value as of the date of the commencement of the [oppression] action or such earlier o
date deemed equitable by the court"); R.I. Gen. Laws § 7-1.1-90.1 (2003) (stating,
election statute, that the court shall determine fair value "as of the close of business on th
on which the petition for dissolution was filed").
277. See, e.g., Hollis v. Hill, 232 F.3d 460, 472 & n.39 (5th Cir. 2000) (stating, i
nonelection case, that "[t]he presumptive valuation date for other states allowing b
remedies is the date of filing unless exceptional circumstances exist which require an earli
later date to be chosen," and citing in support a New Jersey decision that designated the d
filing as the presumptive valuation date in accordance with the language of the New J
election statute); supra note 276 (citing the New Jersey election statute).
278. See supra notes 275-77 and accompanying text (setting forth the date of filing
presumptive valuation date).
279. See supra note 59 and accompanying text (discussing election statutes).
280. MODEL BUS. CORP. ACT § 14.34(b).
281. Id. § 14.34(c).
282. M§14.34(d).
283. See, e.g., In re Seagroatt Floral Co., 583 N.E.2d 287, 289-90 (N.Y. 1991) (stating that,
"[i]n order to afford the other shareholders the option to continue the enterprise as a going
concern, a buy out provision was concomitantly added [to] the Business Corporation Law," and
observing that, "[u]nder that provision, those interested in maintaining the business - a class of
'prospective purchasers' explicitly limited to the other shareholders or the corporation itself -
may within 90 days of the filing of [a dissolution] petition elect to purchase the shares owned by
the petitioners"); id. at 290 ("Thus, the Business Corporation Law protects both the right of the
allegedly oppressed shareholder to liquidate an investment at fair value and the right of the
remaining shareholders to preserve an ongoing - and likely prosperous - business."); In re Gift
Pax, Inc., 475 N.Y.S.2d 324, 326 (Sup. Ct. 1984) ("[The election statute] § 1118 was enacted to
protect majority shareholders so that they may buy out a minority shareholder who seeks
dissolution under [the dissolution for oppression statute].").
284. See, e.g., In re Friedman, 661 N.E.2d 972, 976 (N.Y. 1995) ("[O]nce the corporation has
elected to buy the petitioning stockholders' shares at fair value, 'the issue of [majority
wrongdoing [is] superfluous.'" (alterations in original) (quoting In re Pace Photographers, Ltd.
525 N.E.2d 713, 717 (N.Y. 1988)); In re Seagroatt, 583 N.E.2d at 290 ("Thus, once [the
corporations] elected to buy out petitioners, the misconduct charges became irrelevant. The
issue became one of valuation.").
In the appraisal context, Professor Wertheimer observes that some courts consider
evidence of majority wrongdoing or misconduct to be relevant to the valuation inquiry. As
Professor Wertheimer states:
285. See supra notes 56-57, 284 and accompanying text (discussing the benefits of a buyout
and the no-fault nature of the election procedure). But see infra note 330 (noting that some
election statutes allow a buyout election to occur after a court has found oppression).
286. See infra Part IV.C (discussing the use of the date of oppression). But see infra note 330
(noting that some election statutes allow a buyout election to occur after a court has found
oppression).
287. See, e.g., Waller v. Am. Int'l Distrib. Corp., 706 A.2d 460, 463 (Vt. 1997) ("The
[Vermont election] statute encourages electing shareholders to calculate whether it is in their
interests to buy out the petitioner or risk entry of a dissolution order."); id. ("Once they make
an election, several results ensue, each requiring a determinable focal date, including the posting
of a bond, the commencement of interest payable to the minority on the value of the shares to
be purchased, and the loss of the minority rights as shareholders.").
288. See, e.g., MODEL Bus. CORP. ACT § 14.34(b), (d) (2002) (stating that, in general, the
valuation date shall be the date the petition for dissolution was filed, and providing a
prospective purchaser with ninety days from that date to make an election to purchase).
289. Because a prospective purchaser must generally elect to buy within ninety days of the
date on which the dissolution petition was filed, the parties can hold off on significant discovery
into liability issues until that ninety-day period has passed. See, e.g., N.Y. Bus. CORP. Law
§ 1118(a) (McKinney Supp. 2003) (allowing an election, without leave of court, for ninety days
from the date of the filing of a dissolution petition); MODEL BUS. CORP. ACT § 14.34(b) (same);
supra notes 284-85 and accompanying text (noting that an election converts an oppression
lawsuit into a mere valuation proceeding). If a prospective purchaser could elect to buy up until
the date of trial or beyond, however, discovery into liability issues could not be avoided, as the
parties would need to prepare for trial on those particular issues.
290. See, e.g., N.Y. C.P.L.R. 304 (McKinney 2000) ("An action is commenced by filing a
summons and complaint or summons with notice. ... At ... filing, the original and a copy of
such papers shall be date stamped by a court clerk who shall file the original and maintain a
record of the date of the filing . . . .").
291. See, e.g., Hollis v. Hill, 232 F.3d 460, 472 (5th Cir. 2000) (noting that the oppressive
conduct found by the court took place between February 1998 and November 1998).
292. See, e.g., Hendley v. Lee, 676 F. Supp. 1317, 1327 (D.S.C. 1987) (choosing the date of
trial as the valuation date); Waller, 706 A.2d at 463 (choosing "the approximate date of trial and
decision" as the valuation date); infra notes 296-99 and accompanying text (discussing why
postfiling dates are inferior valuation dates).
293. See, e.g., Michaud v. Morris, 603 So. 2d 886, 888 (Ala. 1992) ("Certain basic
expectations of investors are enforceable in the courts, and among those is a right to share
proportionally in corporate gains."); Baker v. Commercial Body Builders, Inc., 507 P.2d 387,
397 (Or. 1973) ("It is also true that the Bakers, as stockholders, had a legitimate interest in the
participation in profits earned by the corporation.").
294. See supra note 293 and accompanying text (noting that a shareholder is entitled to
participate in a company's fortunes until his "shareholder" status ceases).
295. See, e.g., Willis v. Bydalek, 997 S.W.2d 798, 800 (Tex. App. 1999) (involving an
allegedly oppressed shareholder who sued for "a buy-out of [his] corporate interest").
296. See, e.g., MODEL BUS. CORP. ACT § 14.34(f) (2002) ("Upon entry of an order [directing
the purchase of petitioner's shares], the court shall dismiss the petition to dissolve . . . and the
petitioning shareholder shall no longer have any rights or status as a shareholder . . . , except the
right to receive the amounts awarded to him by the . . . court . . . ." (emphasis added)).
297. Once litigation commences, the majority will have an incentive to manipulate the
company's revenues and expenses so as to minimize the company's overall valuation. See 2
Oppression, supra note 20, § 7:21, at 7-114 ("Anticipating the buyout of a minority
shareholder, majority shareholders . . . may manipulate a corporation's financial records to show
no or little . . . assets and . . . earnings."); cf. Wertheimer, supra note 115, at 639 (noting that a
controlling shareholder "can conduct or manipulate corporate affairs in a manner that depresses
market prices prior to mergers").
298. See, e.g., Rapid- Am. Corp. v. Harris, 603 A.2d 796, 802 (Del. 1992) ("It is frequently
the case in appraisal proceedings that valuation disputes become a battle of experts.");
Balsamides v. Protameen Chems., Inc., 734 A.2d 721, 729 (N.J. 1999) (observing that valuation
disputes "frequently become battles between experts").
299. But see supra note 292 (citing cases in which the date of trial was used as the
date). At the very least, setting a postfiling date of valuation, such as the date of trial o
of judgment, is likely to involve an even greater degree of speculation by the valuat
than company appraisals typically involve. See, e.g., Murdock, supra note 29, at 473 (no
valuation is an "inexact science"); Wertheimer, supra note 115, at 630 (observing th
testimony on valuation involves "inherent subjectivity and estimation"). After all, t
may be testifying about the company's value at some future, rather than past, date.
300. See supra note 259 and accompanying text (noting that "shareholder" status
one to participate in a company's fortunes).
301. For example, assume that a corporation is valued at $10 million on the d
oppressive freeze-out of a minority shareholder. Assume further that the minority sp
year in an unsuccessful attempt to negotiate a nonlitigation solution to the freeze-
minority then files suit for oppression. If the company's value over the past year has i
to $12 million by the date on which the lawsuit is filed, the minority is better off under
filing rule than a date-of-oppression rule. As mentioned, the rationale would emphasize
minority, as a shareholder, is entitled to participate in the corporation's gains. See s
259 and accompanying text (noting that "shareholder" status entitles one to partici
company's fortunes). If the company's value over the past year decreased to $8 m
course, the same rationale would work against the minority. As a shareholder, the
should also participate in the corporation's losses. Under these circumstances, the m
better off with a valuation keyed to the date of oppression rather than to the date of fi
306. See supra notes 169-70 and accompanying text (noting that many close corporation
shareholders have a reasonable expectation that their investment entitles them to participate in
the management of the company); see also In re Topper, 433 N.Y.S.2d 359, 365 (Sup. Ct. 198
("These reasonable expectations constitute the bargain of the parties in light of which
subsequent conduct must be appraised."); Sandra K. Miller, How Can the Reasonable
Expectations Standard Be Reasonably Applied in Pennsylvania?, 12 J.L. & COM. 51, 54 (1992)
(describing the reasonable expectations approach as a "departure from the bargain struck b
the majority and minority shareholders"); cf Bahls, supra note 89, at 321 ("Remedies fashione
to protect expectations help insure that innocent shareholders will realize their bargained-fo
benefit."); id. at 325 ("Because participation and rights in a closely held corporation are
normally negotiated, expectations are reasonable when they provide a basis for the bargain."
Murdock, supra note 29, at 465 (noting that, when applying the reasonable expectation
standard, "the crux is not identifying a traditional wrong but rather identifying the basis of the
bargain - what were the explicit or implicit conditions pursuant to which the parties associated
themselves together in the corporate form"); Ralph A. Peeples, The Use and Misuse of th
Business Judgment Rule in the Close Corporation, 60 NOTRE DAME L. REV. 456, 504 (1985) ("
a shareholder's reasonable expectations have been frustrated, the shareholder has lost th
benefit of the original bargain.").
307. See, e.g., Hendley v. Lee, 676 F. Supp. 1317, 1327 (D.S.C. 1987) ("In cases of minorit
stockholder oppression, the date of ouster seems appropriately used."); Moore v. Carney, 26
N.W.2d 614, 617 (Mich. Ct. App. 1978) (noting that the trial court "required defendants t
purchase the stock from [the oppressed minority] at the value of the stock in 1969," an
observing that the "oppressive acts . . . began in 1969"); Pooley v. Mankato Iron & Metal, Inc.
513 N.W.2d 834, 836 (Minn. Ct. App. 1994) (choosing the date when the minority sharehold
was voted out as an officer as the valuation date); Prentiss v. Wesspur, Inc., No. 36321-2-1, 1997
WL 207971, at *1 (Wash. Ct. App. Apr. 28, 1997) ("'[F]air value' means the shares' value at th
moment just before the majority committed misconduct."); id. at *3 ("'Fair value' is determined
as of the time before the disputed action occurred
(noting that when the minority has been wrongfully ousted from
value of his shares should no longer be affected by the majority's d
308. This argument is inapplicable, therefore, when the alleged
result in an ouster from management participation. See, e.g., Hollis
Cir. 2000) (observing that a 50 percent shareholder in a tw
"commanded as much authority to assert control over the
shareholder); see infra notes 315-30 and accompanying text (discuss
potentially applicable, however, in nonelection cases as well as in
the majority had rarely listened to the minority in the past, perhap
this time the majority would have been persuaded. The point, simply
put, is that no one will ever know with certainty what would have
happened because the majority oppressively denied the minority an
opportunity to participate.313 Because this uncertainty stems from the
majority's conduct, it is appropriate to resolve the uncertainty agains
the majority's interests.314 If a company experienced postoppression
losses, a court could legitimately presume that the minority's
managerial participation would have prevented the decline. On this
basis, a court could decide that the minority does not have to share in
the losses.
The Fifth Circuit decision of Hollis v. Hilt15 provides at least
indirect support for this date-of-oppression position. In Hollis, James
Hollis and Dan Hill were each 50 percent owners of a Nevada close
corporation.316 Hill was a director of the company and served as the
president. Hollis was a director and served as the vice-president.317
The spouses of Hill and Hollis comprised the two remaining members
of the board of directors.318 On December 8, 1998, Hollis filed a
shareholder oppression action against Hill.319 A few weeks after the
filing, "Hill terminated Hollis as vice-president and eliminated all of
his company benefits," although Hollis continued to serve as director
and corporate secretary.320
313. Cf. W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser & Keeton on Torts § 41, at 269-70 (5th ed.
1984) ("The fact of causation is incapable of mathematical proof, since no one can say with
absolute certainty what would have occurred if the defendant had acted otherwise.").
314. Cf. Murdock, supra note 29, at 480 ("Another perspective from which to view this
situation is for the valuation process to resolve doubts as to value against the person who forces
the sale."); id. ("In the situation in which the minority shareholder seeks a judicial buy-out
because of oppressive conduct, it is the conduct of those in control that forces the sale.").
315. 232 F.3d 460 (5th Cir. 2000).
316. Id. at 463.
317. Mat 460.
318. Id. at 463.
319. At the time the lawsuit was filed, tensions between Hill and Hollis were high. Hill had
ceased paying Hollis a salary and had threatened to close down the business and establish his
own comparable venture. Id. Hill, without authority, had moved the company's annuity business
to his own sole proprietorship. Id. Hill had also stopped sending Hollis any financial information
about the company, and he later stripped Hollis of various company benefits. Id. at 463-64. Hill
even terminated the employment of Hollis's wife. Id. at 464.
320. Id. at 464.
321. Technically, the district court found that Hill's actions amounted to a breach of
fiduciary duty. See id. at 466; supra notes 37-40 and accompanying text (discussing the breach of
fiduciary duty approach to shareholder oppression).
322. Hollis, 232 F.3d at 464; see id. at 471 (stating that "the [district] court determined that
Hill began his oppressive conduct on February 28, 1998").
323. See id. at 463-64 (describing the problems faced by the company); see also Brief of
Appellee James P. Hollis at 26, Hill v. Hollis, 232 F.3d 460 (5th Cir. 1999) (No. 99-20725)
(suggesting that the company's value declined after February 1998, and stating that "[t]he use of
any subsequent date [after February 28, 1998] would effectively be Hill's last oppressive act");
Appellant's Reply Brief at 9, Hill v. Hollis, 232 F.3d 460 (5th Cir. 1999) (No. 99-20725) (noting
that "the business was basically defunct at the time of trial").
324. In support of its finding of oppression, the Fifth Circuit stated the following:
[W]e conclude that Hollis demonstrated an injury as a shareholder. He was a founder
and 50% shareholder of Kb USA [the close corporation]. His positions as vice
president and director clearly resulted therefrom. He had no reason to expect he
would be able to sell his FFUSA shares for a higher price, meaning that the value of
his investment was tied directly to his employment. The benefits he received from his
investment were distributed in the form of salary and certain perquisites; the firm
never declared a dividend and paid no salary to its directors. Hill totally deprived
Hollis of those benefits by terminating his employment and salary, closing the Florida
office, and cutting him off from company benefits. As a result, Hollis' [s] shares in
FFUSA were rendered worthless. No offer was made by the corporation to purchase
Hollis '[s] shares at a fair price upon termination, and Hollis did not have the option of
selling his shares to another buyer.
Id. at 471.
This passage strongly suggests that the Fifth Circuit believed that
Hollis shared some of the responsibility for the decline in the
company's value from the date on which the oppressive conduct
began to the date on which the oppression lawsuit was filed. The
court implies that Hollis, as a 50 percent shareholder, could have
participated in the management of the business but simply chose not
to.327 Although one can question whether Hollis could, in fact, have
exercised some management control over the business,328 the broader
easily inject himself into the management of the business. Similarly, given that Hill was the
president of the company, it may not have been true that Hollis "commanded as much authority
to assert control over the corporation as did [Hill]." Id. at 472. Because Hollis and Hill had
equal representation on the board of directors, however, it does seem that Hollis was not in a
powerless situation. See id. at 463 (noting that Hollis, Hill, and their spouses comprised the
board of directors of the company).
329. See supra notes 302-04 and accompanying text (discussing the typical oppression
lawsuit).
330. Some jurisdictions allow a party to elect to purchase the petitioning investor's shares
even after the court has found oppression. See, e.g., MINN. Stat. Ann. § 302A.751 subd. 2
(West Supp. 2000):
In an action under subdivision 1, clause (b) . . . in which one or more of the
circumstances described in that clause is established [including oppression], the court
may, upon motion of a corporation or a shareholder . . . order the sale by a plaintiff or
a defendant of all shares of the corporation held by the plaintiff or defendant to
either the corporation or the moving shareholders ....
(emphasis added); see also N.Y. Bus. CORP. Law § 1118 (McKinney Supp. 2003) (stating, in an
election statute, that a prospective purchaser must elect "at any time within ninety days after the
filing of such [dissolution for oppression] petition or at such later time as the court in its
discretion may allow" (emphasis added)); R.I. GEN. LAWS § 7-1.1-90.1 (2003):
[O]ne or more of [a company's] other shareholders may avoid the dissolution [for
oppression]by filing with the court prior to the commencement of the hearing, or, in
the discretion of the court, at any time prior to a sale or other disposition of the assets of
the corporation, an election to purchase the shares owned by the petitioner at a price
equal to their fair value.
(emphasis added); MODEL Bus. CORP. ACT § 14.34(b) (2002) ("An election to purchase . . .
may be filed with the court at any time within 90 days after the filing of the [dissolution for
oppression] petition . . . or at such later time as the court in its discretion may allow.'''' (emphasis
added)). When such postliability elections occur, a court should consider whether the date of
oppression would serve as a more appropriate valuation date, particularly when the court
determines that the petitioner possessed a reasonable expectation of management participation
that was frustrated by the majority's oppressive actions. Depending on the circumstances,
therefore, one could make a date-of-oppression argument even in an election context.
Conclusion
331. See supra notes 302-04 and accompanying text (discussing the typic
lawsuit).
332. Cf. Kenneth S. Abraham, The Forms & Functions of Tort Law 269 (2d ed.
2002) (noting that some courts allow successful fraud plaintiffs to choose between "benefit of
the bargain" damages and "out of pocket" damages because "there are times when the benefit-
of-the-bargain measure does not maximize the plaintiff's recovery").
333. See supra notes 311-14 and accompanying text (making a date-of-oppression
argument).
334. Humphrys v. Winous Co., 133 N.E.2d 780, 783 (Ohio 1956) (quoting John H. Doyle,
Address to the Ohio State Bar Ass'n (July 1893)).
reasons exist for measuring fair value as of the date of the filing of an
oppression lawsuit, this Article has contended that, in many cases, th
date of the occurrence of the oppressive conduct may serve as a more
appropriate benchmark. Such an argument sets the stage for the
suggestion that courts should allow an oppressed investor to choose
between a date-of-filing valuation and a date-of-oppression valuation
On the one hand, the oppressed minority remains a shareholder of
the company. As a shareholder, the minority is still an owner, and h
is entitled to participate in postoppression changes in the company'
value - at least until he files his lawsuit and "unofficially" ceases hi
shareholder status. On the other hand, when oppression involves the
wrongful ouster of a minority from management participation in th
business, one can make an equally valid argument that the minority
should not have to share in any postoppression changes in the
company's value. Indeed, the minority's bargained-for role in
company decisionmaking ended the moment that the oppressive
ouster occurred. Consequently, the minority's responsibility fo
company decisions arguably ended at that time as well. As this Articl
has suggested, therefore, a "plaintiff's choice" view of the valuation
date decision may, in certain circumstances, be an appropriate
position to take.
In conclusion, value is central to corporate law, and the close
corporation context is no exception. Fair value buyouts in
shareholder oppression disputes are quite common, and they show no
sign of abating. By rejecting the application of discounts and by
recognizing the importance of the valuation date, courts can insure
that "fair value," as a principle, lives up to its name.