A.W. Chesterton v. Chesterton ( 1997 )


Menu:
  • USCA1 Opinion









    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________


    No. 97-1268

    A.W. CHESTERTON COMPANY, INC., JAMES D. CHESTERTON, THOMAS
    CHESTERTON, JR., ANDREW W. CHESTERTON, GLENN E. CHESTERTON,
    FLORENCE CHESTERTON, BOSTON SAFE DEPOSIT, INC., Trustee of
    the Thomas Chesterton Trust, and ADELE FORMAN,

    Plaintiffs,Appellees,

    v.

    ARTHUR W. CHESTERTON,

    Defendants,Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, Chief U.S. District Judge] _________________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________

    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    Martin F. Gaynor, with whom Harry L. Manion III was ________________ ___________________
    on brief, for appellees.
    Lawrence P. Heffernan, with whom Michael D. Lurie ______________________ _________________
    and Peter L. Banis were on brief, for appellant. ______________
    ____________________

    October 14, 1997

    ____________________

















    LYNCH, Circuit Judge. This appeal involves the duties LYNCH, Circuit Judge. _____________

    imposed by Massachusetts law on a minority shareholder in a

    closely held corporation. Arthur W. Chesterton

    ("Chesterton"), a minority shareholder in the A.W. Chesterton

    Company, frustrated in his efforts to dispose of his shares,

    proposed to transfer a portion of his stock in the Company to

    two shell corporations. Because such a transfer would

    terminate the Company's advantageous Subchapter S status

    under the Internal Revenue Code, the district court found

    that the proposed transfer violated Chesterton's fiduciary

    duty to the Company and enjoined him from proceeding with the

    transfer. Chesterton appeals this finding and injunction, as

    well as the district court's denial of Chesterton's

    counterclaim for relief under M.G.L. ch. 156B. We affirm.

    I.

    There is little dispute about the facts which

    emerged from the trial. While it is unclear whether

    Chesterton is asserting that the district court's factual

    conclusions are not supported by the evidence, we state the

    facts as the court could have found them. Cambridge Plating _________________

    Co. v. Napco, Inc., 85 F.3d 752, 756 (1st Cir. 1996). ___ ___________

    The Company has been a closely held Massachusetts

    corporation since its inception in 1885, and is currently

    owned and operated by the descendants of the Company's

    founder, Arthur W. Chesterton. Chesterton, the defendant in



    -2- 2













    this case and the grandson of the original Arthur Chesterton,

    is currently the Company's largest shareholder, with 27.06%

    of the Company s stock. The Company and its affiliates

    manufacture mechanical seals, packaging, pumps and related

    products, which are distributed throughout the world.

    Two corporate events set the stage. The first

    occurred in 1975, when the shareholders of the Company

    approved the Company's Restated Articles of Organization

    ("the Articles"). The Articles provide the Company with a

    right of first refusal in the event that a shareholder seeks

    to transfer her shares to an individual or entity outside the

    immediate Chesterton family. The shareholder must give the

    Company 30 days notice; the Company may avoid the sale by

    opting to purchase the stock within the 30 days. If the

    Company declines the option, the shareholder may proceed with

    the sale as planned. Part of Chesterton s argument focuses

    on the fact that he had complied with these provisions of the

    Articles when he proposed his stock transfer.

    The second occurred in 1985, when the Company's

    Board of Directors voted to change the Company's status under

    the Internal Revenue Code from a Subchapter C corporation to

    a Subchapter S corporation. The Board perceived Subchapter S

    status as advantageous to the Company because it allows

    shareholders in a small business corporation to avoid the

    double taxation of income to which shareholders in a



    -3- 3













    Subchapter C corporation are subject. The income of a

    Subchapter C corporation is taxed first at the corporate

    level when the company earns income, and a second time at the

    shareholder level when the shareholders receive the income in

    the form of dividends. A Subchapter S corporation, in

    contrast, is not taxed at the corporate level; rather, each

    shareholder pays income tax individually in proportion to her

    share of ownership in the corporation.1 See 26 U.S.C. ___

    1361 - 1399.

    In order to qualify for Subchapter S treatment, a

    corporation must be a domestic corporation which does not:

    (1) have more than seventy-five shareholders, (2) have a

    corporation or other non-individual as a shareholder, (3)

    have a non-resident alien as a shareholder, and (4) have more

    than one class of stock. 26 U.S.C. 1361(b). Failure to

    abide by any of these limitations results in automatic

    termination of Subchapter S status. 26 U.S.C. 1362(d)(2).



    After the Company Board voted to adopt Subchapter

    S status, the officers and directors sought to inform the


    ____________________

    1. There is a drawback to Subchapter S status known as
    "phantom income." That phrase describes the liability that
    shareholders in an S corporation face for taxes on their
    share of the corporation's profits, even if those profits are
    not distributed to the shareholders as dividends. Chesterton
    makes much of the fact that the Company's shareholders are
    subject to the risk of phantom income, but offered no
    evidence that the risk had materialized.

    -4- 4













    shareholders about the benefits and limitations of the S

    election, and recommended that the shareholders give their

    consent. Under the Internal Revenue Code, the unanimous

    consent of the shareholders of a corporation is required in

    order to finalize a Subchapter S election. 26 U.S.C.

    1362(a)(2). As an officer and director of the Company at the

    time, Chesterton was heavily involved in this process. He

    led and participated in shareholder meetings regarding the

    Subchapter S election. At those meetings the shareholders

    were provided with information regarding the benefits of

    Subchapter S election, as well as the limitations it imposed.

    The shareholders unanimously consented to the Subchapter S

    election. Implicit in this consent was a general

    understanding among the shareholders that they would take no

    action that would adversely affect the Company's Subchapter S

    status.

    In the early 1990's, Chesterton became discontented

    with the Company's performance, including its declining

    profits, heavy debt, and credit problems.2 Chesterton also

    objects to a financial arrangement that the Company has with

    Chesterton International, B.V. ("BV"), a Company affiliate.3

    ____________________

    2. Chesterton points to testimony which showed that the
    Company currently has $16,000,000 in outstanding debt, that
    it has violated its loan agreements, and that in 1994 the
    Company needed to borrow money to pay dividends.

    3. The affiliate BV is owned and operated by the same
    shareholders and Board of Directors as the Company.

    -5- 5













    Under the arrangement, the affiliate BV pays the Company a

    large management fee,4 which has allowed the Company to

    continue to pay dividends to its shareholders, despite its

    poor financial performance. Chesterton believes that this

    arrangement masks the Company s dire financial straights. He .

    also objects to the arrangement because much of the

    management fee is funnelled into Company pension plans, from

    which Chesterton does not benefit because he is not a current

    Company employee.

    Because of his dissatisfaction with the Company,

    Chesterton sought to sell his Company stock. He found little

    interest because all he could offer was a minority of

    shares.5 After some failed efforts to locate an investor

    willing to purchase his stock outright, Chesterton devised

    the scheme at issue in this case. Chesterton proposed to

    transfer a portion of his shares to two shell corporations

    which are wholly-owned by him. Chesterton complied with the

    Articles of Organization by providing the Company with the

    proper notice of his proposed transfer so that it could


    ____________________

    4. Chesterton asserts that this management fee does not
    actually reflect the value of services provided to the BV by
    the Company. He argues that because the Internal Revenue
    Service could reclassify the excess of the fee over the value
    of the services as dividends to the BV shareholders, this
    incongruity exposes the shareholders to increased tax
    liability.

    5. None of Chesterton s fellow shareholders were willing to
    sell their stock and join him to offer a majority package.

    -6- 6













    purchase his shares. The Company, however, declined because

    it lacks the ability to purchase the shares.

    When the Company would not purchase his shares,

    Chesterton sought to proceed with the transfer. But that

    transfer would have a deleterious effect on the Company's tax

    status. The Company and its shareholders derive significant

    tax benefits from the Company s status as a Subchapter S

    corporation. Should a corporation become a Company

    shareholder, as it would under Chesterton's proposed

    transfer, the Subchapter S status terminates automatically.

    26 U.S.C. 1362(d)(2). If Chesterton were to consummate

    his proposed transfer to the shell corporations, the Company

    would revert to Subchapter C status. The Company's

    Subchapter S status enabled it to distribute an additional

    $5.3 million in dividends between 1985 and 1995. Reversion

    to Subchapter C status would represent a significant

    financial loss for the Company and its shareholders. Once a

    corporation loses its Subchapter S status, it cannot reattain

    that status for a minimum of five years. 26 U.S.C. 1362(g).

    In fact, loss of Subchapter S status would have a more severe

    effect on the Company because it is currently grandfathered

    under an old provision which exempted Subchapter S

    corporations from taxes on the sale of corporate assets. See ___

    26 U.S.C. 1374(c)(1). Even if the Company eventually





    -7- 7













    regained its Subchapter S status, it would permanently lose

    its grandfathered status.

    Fearing the loss of its Subchapter S status, the

    Company and its shareholders instituted suit, seeking to

    enjoin Chesterton from effectuating his plan. The original

    complaint alleged breach of fiduciary duty, breach of

    contract, breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair

    dealing, and interference with an advantageous relationship.

    Before trial, the parties stipulated to a dismissal of all

    claims, with prejudice, except for the breach of fiduciary

    duty claim. Plaintiffs also agreed to "waive their claims

    for damages, but [not] their claims for equitable relief."

    After a bench trial, the district court ruled that the

    proposed transfers would violate Chesterton's fiduciary duty

    under Massachusetts law and that they would result in

    irreparable harm to the Company. The court enjoined the

    transfers and denied Chesterton's counterclaim for monetary

    relief under Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156B.

    Chesterton argues that the district court

    improperly determined the scope of Chesterton's fiduciary

    duty under Massachusetts law. He asserts that the district

    court improperly resurrected the waived contract claim by

    discussing the general agreement among the shareholders not

    to disrupt the Company's Subchapter S status. He argues that

    the district court improperly concluded that the Subchapter S



    -8- 8













    election imposed an implied restriction on transferability of

    stock, where the Company did not follow the legal

    requirements for imposing stock transfer restrictions under

    Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156B. Finally, he argues that the

    district court improperly restricted Chesterton's

    presentation of evidence at trial concerning certain Company

    accounting practices. We reject Chesterton's arguments.

    II.

    We review the district court's grant of a permanent

    injunction for abuse of discretion. Narragansett Indian ____________________

    Tribe v. Narragansett Elec. Co., 89 F.3d 908, 912 (1st Cir. _____ _______________________

    1996) (citing Caroline T. v. Hudson Sch. Dist., 915 F.2d 752, ___________ _________________

    754-55 (1st Cir. 1990)). The standard for issuing a

    permanent injunction requires the district court to find that

    (1) plaintiffs prevail on the merits; (2) plaintiffs would

    suffer irreparable injury in the absence of injunctive

    relief; (3) the harm to plaintiffs would outweigh the harm

    the defendant would suffer from the imposition of an

    injunction; and (4) the public interest would not be

    adversely affected by an injunction. Indian Motorcycle __________________

    Assoc. III Ltd. Partnership v. Massachusetts Housing Fin. _____________________________ ___________________________

    Agency, 66 F.3d 1246, 1249 (1st Cir. 1995) (internal citation ______

    omitted). The district court found, and we agree, that the

    public interest was not at issue in this case. We turn to

    the remaining three factors.



    -9- 9













    A. Success on the Merits _____________________

    In Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype Co. of New England, _______ ____________________________________

    Inc., 328 N.E.2d 505 (Mass. 1975), the Massachusetts Supreme ____

    Judicial Court first announced that shareholders in a closely

    held corporation owe an elevated fiduciary duty to one

    another. See generally, Peter M. Rosenblum, Corporate ______________ _________

    Fiduciary Duties in Massachusetts and Delaware, in How to ________________________________________________ __

    Incorporate and Counsel a Business 331, 354-366

    (Massachusetts Continuing Legal Education, Inc., ed., 1996)

    (providing an informative review of Donahue and its progeny). _______

    After noting that close corporations bear a "striking

    resemblance to a partnership," the court stated that "the

    relationship among the stockholders must be one of trust,

    confidence and absolute loyalty if the enterprise is to

    succeed." Id. at 515. The court condemned "[d]isloyalty and ___

    self-seeking conduct on the part of any stockholder" in a

    close corporation, and held that such shareholders owe one

    another a duty of "utmost good faith and loyalty." Id. The ___

    court stated that stockholders in a close corporation "may

    not act out of avarice, expediency or self-interest in

    derogation of their duty of loyalty to the other stockholders

    and to the corporation." Id. Although the Donahue case ___ _______

    itself dealt with the majority's treatment of a minority

    shareholder, the court expressly did not limit the

    application of its strict fiduciary duty standard to majority



    -10- 10













    shareholders, and stated that "[i]n the close corporation,

    the minority may do equal damage through unscrupulous and

    improper 'sharp dealings' with an unsuspecting majority." Id. ___

    at n. 17 (citing Helms v. Duckworth, 249 F.2d 482 (D.C. Cir. _____ _________

    1957)).

    The first Massachusetts case to apply the Donahue _______

    standard to a minority shareholder was Smith v. Atlantic _____ ________

    Properties, Inc., 422 N.E.2d 798 (Mass. App. Ct. 1981). In ________________

    Smith, a provision in the corporate charter effectively gave _____

    minority shareholders the power to veto any distribution of

    dividends. Although all the other shareholders desired a

    distribution of dividends, the defendant steadfastly refused

    to agree to a distribution because nondistribution was

    personally beneficial to him. The appeals court held that

    the majority could seek protection from the actions of the

    minority shareholder which were detrimental to the interests

    of the corporation and the other shareholders. Id. at 801. ___

    Although the court recognized that the veto provision was

    drafted in part to protect minority interests, it

    nevertheless determined that a minority shareholder was bound

    to the Donahue standard of fiduciary responsibility when that _______

    shareholder's actions controlled the disposition of a

    particular corporate issue. Id. at 803 n.9 ("'A minority ___

    shareholder whose conduct is controlling on a particular

    issue should be bound by no different standard [than the



    -11- 11













    majority].'") (quoting Hetherington, The Minority's Duty of _______________________

    Loyalty in Close Corporations, 1972 Duke L.J. 921, 946). _____________________________

    The Supreme Judicial Court endorsed the Smith _____

    approach in Zimmerman v. Bogoff, 524 N.E.2d 849 (Mass. 1988), _________ ______

    holding a minority shareholder to the same standard of strict

    fiduciary duty as the majority, where the minority's self-

    interested actions were harmful to the corporation and other

    shareholders. Id. at 853-54. The court made clear that ___

    "[t]he protections of Donahue are not limited to those with _______

    less than 50% share ownership." Id. at 853. ___

    The Donahue family of cases establishes that _______

    Chesterton owes the Company and its other shareholders a

    fiduciary duty of "utmost good faith and loyalty." The

    district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that

    Chesterton breached that duty. If Chesterton were to

    effectuate his proposed transfer, the Company and its

    shareholders would lose the substantial financial benefits

    they have derived from the Company's Subchapter S status.

    Such benefits are likely to continue if the Company maintains

    its Subchapter S status. Chesterton, disgruntled with

    overall Company performance and in pursuit of his own self-

    interest, has threatened to destroy these substantial

    benefits. No claim is before us as to whether the Company

    and its other shareholders have acted fairly toward

    Chesterton over the years; we decide only that the district



    -12- 12













    court did not abuse its discretion in holding that he has not

    acted fairly towards them.

    Chesterton's attack focuses on part of the district

    court's analysis:

    At the time of the S election, the
    shareholders were informed and understood
    that the Company would lose its S status
    if a shareholder sold shares to another
    corporation. By unanimously electing S
    status, the shareholders agreed that they
    would not act in any way that would cause
    the Company to lose the considerable
    benefits of S status. . . . In view of
    the agreement regarding S status, which
    Defendant supported and facilitated, he
    cannot now sell his shares in a manner
    that would terminate the Company's S
    status, even though he would have been
    entitled to do so under the Articles had
    there been no S status agreement.

    A.W. Chesterton Co. v. Chesterton, 951 F. Supp. 291, 295 (D. ___________________ __________

    Mass. 1997). Chesterton argues that this discussion

    improperly resurrects a contract claim that plaintiffs

    voluntarily dismissed. We disagree: in context it is clear

    that the court was discussing the shareholders' understanding

    as it relates to Chesterton's fiduciary duty. Under

    Massachusetts law, the expectations and understanding of the

    shareholders are relevant to a breach of fiduciary duty

    determination. See, e.g., Wilkes v. Springside Nursing Home, _________ ______ ________________________

    Inc., 353 N.E.2d 657, 664 (Mass. 1976) (holding that the duty ____

    of utmost good faith and loyalty at a minimum requires

    shareholders to consider their actions in light of company

    policies or long-standing understandings of the


    -13- 13













    shareholders). Viewed in this context, it is irrelevant

    whether the agreement among the shareholders that they would

    not act so as to destroy the Company's Subchapter S status is

    legally enforceable. The existence of the agreement simply

    sheds light on the Company's and other shareholders'

    expectations, and reinforces the disloyal nature of

    Chesterton's proposed plan. Further, the strict duty

    Chesterton owes is created at law and would exist regardless

    of any agreement.

    Chesterton also argues that he falls within an

    exception to Donahue. In Wilkes v. Springside Nursing Home, _______ ______ ________________________

    Inc., 353 N.E.2d 657, 663 (Mass. 1976), the Supreme Judicial ____

    Court fashioned an exception to Donahue, recognizing that _______

    "the controlling group in a close corporation must have some

    room to maneuver in establishing the business policy of the

    corporation." If "the controlling group can demonstrate a

    legitimate business purpose for its action," then it will not

    be held to have violated its fiduciary duty to the

    corporation and other shareholders. Id. The court held that ___

    the proffered legitimate business purpose defense would fail,

    however, if the complaining shareholder(s) could demonstrate

    that the same business objective could have been achieved

    through a less harmful course of action. Id. ___

    Implicitly conceding that his proposed transfer

    would further his own personal interests but not the



    -14- 14













    interests of the business, Chesterton argues that the

    legitimate business purpose test applies only to minority

    shareholders with management discretion or control over the

    corporation, and that he is not in such a position.

    Chesterton proposes the adoption of a less demanding test for

    non-managing minority shareholders that inquires whether the

    action is for a "bona fide purpose." Chesterton's bona fide

    purpose test, although creative, fails for a number of

    reasons.

    First, Massachusetts law has not adopted any such

    rule. The Massachusetts cases make clear that a "legitimate

    business purpose" must be a legitimate purpose for the ________

    corporation, not for the defendant shareholder. In Zimmerman ___________ _________

    and Smith, for example, the defendant minority shareholders _____

    acted to benefit their own interests, while disregarding the

    interests of the corporation. The fact that their actions

    were taken to benefit themselves was no excuse. The

    defendant in Smith argued that his use of the veto power to _____

    block the payment of dividends was at least partly due to his

    own legitimate purposes, specifically a "tax avoidance

    purpose." Smith, 422 N.E.2d at 800. Regardless of the Smith _____ _____

    defendant s personal reasons for refusing to authorize the

    payment of dividends, the refusal nevertheless violated his

    duty of good faith and loyalty to the corporation s

    interests. Id. at 803. The Massachusetts cases do not ___



    -15- 15













    provide any grounds for Chesterton s proposed test, and as a

    federal court ruling on Massachusetts law, we hesitate to

    expand that law beyond its clearly established boundaries.

    See F.D.I.C. v. Insurance Co. of N. Am., 105 F.3d 778, 783 ___ ________ ________________________

    (1st Cir. 1997) ("We must apply the law of Massachusetts as

    given by its state legislature and state court decisions.").

    In addition, Chesterton's proposed expansion

    mistakes the purpose of the legitimate business purpose test.

    The test is designed to prevent "the Donahue remedy [from _______

    placing] a strait jacket on legitimate corporate activity."

    Zimmerman, 524 N.E.2d at 853. If the defendant has no _________

    control over the enterprise, he has no need for the business

    discretion that the Wilkes court intended to protect through ______

    its legitimate business purpose defense. Furthermore, as

    Smith and Zimmerman explain, a minority shareholder is held _____ _________

    to the Donahue fiduciary duty precisely because his actions _______

    could and do affect the interests of the corporation and the

    other shareholders. Here, because Chesterton's actions will

    determine whether the Company retains its advantageous S

    status, he unquestionably has control over that issue.

    Chesterton did not establish a legitimate business

    purpose for his proposed transfer at trial, and does not

    argue one on appeal. Indeed, if there was no market for

    Chesterton's shares because they were minority shares, there

    is little reason to think that there will suddenly be a



    -16- 16













    market because those same minority shares have been

    transferred to corporate ownership. There is no evidence of

    any such effect.6 Further, Chesterton proposed to transfer

    only approximately 10% of his shares to the corporations,

    which hardly would have satisfied his articulated goal of

    complete divestment. The district court did not abuse its

    discretion.

    1. Chesterton's Chapter 156B argument __________________________________

    Chesterton argues that the only legitimate

    restrictions on the transferability of Company stock are

    those found in the 1975 Restated Articles of Organization and

    that he complied with the Articles' procedural requirements

    by providing the Company with the proper notice of his

    proposed transfer. This argument misses the point. If the

    strict Donahue fiduciary obligations did not restrict _______

    otherwise legitimate actions, they would add nothing to a

    shareholder s legal duties. See, e.g., Smith, 422 N.E.2d at _________ _____

    802 (minority shareholder breached his fiduciary duty to the

    corporation in exercising veto power over dividends that

    corporate charter gave him). Chesterton cannot defend a

    breach of fiduciary duty claim on the basis that he has not

    violated the Articles of Organization.


    ____________________

    6. Chesterton asserts that he had a potential buyer for an
    interest in his new corporations. That buyer was an old
    friend of Chesterton's and the district court found this
    rationale to be a sham.

    -17- 17













    Chesterton also asserts that any transfer

    restriction beyond those incorporated in the 1975 Articles is

    invalid for failure to comply with the requirements of Mass.

    Gen. Laws ch. 156B. Chesterton refers to 76, 77(d), and

    87-98, which provide, inter alia, that a shareholder in a __________

    chapter 156B corporation is entitled to appraisal rights in

    the event that the corporation adopts any amendment to its

    articles which restrict the transferability of stock. Those

    sections also require that notice of the rights of dissenting

    shareholders be provided in the notice of any meeting at

    which the proposed transfer restrictions will be considered.

    Chesterton argues that the district court was precluded from

    finding that the 1985 Subchapter S election resulted in an

    implied restriction on the shareholders ability to transfer

    their shares because the Company did not comply with Mass.

    Gen. Laws ch. 156B.

    Again, Chesterton s argument is misguided. These

    provisions do not apply here. The procedures and rights that

    Chesterton refers to apply in only three situations: (1) when

    the corporation makes certain amendments to the articles of

    organization; (2) when certain mergers are accomplished; and

    (3) when the corporation sells all or substantially all of

    its assets. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 156B, 76-77, 82-83, and

    86-98. None of these situations exist in this case.





    -18- 18













    Chesterton argues that even if the 156B protective

    procedures do not technically apply to this situation, 156B

    reveals a strong public policy disfavoring any transfer

    restrictions in the absence of formal notice and appraisal

    rights. This argument fails for two reasons. First,

    Chesterton s strict fiduciary duty does not result in a

    complete transfer restriction. Chesterton was free to

    transfer his shares in a manner that would not terminate the

    Company s S status. Second, the public policy embodied in

    the Donahue doctrine is at least as strong as the policy _______

    disfavoring transfer restrictions.

    We reject all of Chesterton s inventive arguments,

    and affirm the district court s finding that plaintiffs

    succeed on the merits of their breach of fiduciary duty

    claim.

    B. Irreparable Harm ________________

    The district court found that the Company would

    suffer irreparable harm from the loss of its Subchapter S

    status, in part because that harm is not measurable.

    Chesterton argues that because the harm to the Company from

    the loss of its Subchapter S status is entirely financial,

    equitable relief is inappropriate. Where the harm is not

    measurable, it is not an abuse of discretion to award

    equitable relief. Ross-Simons of Warwick, Inc. v. Baccarat, ____________________________ _________

    Inc., 102 F.3d 12, 19 (1st Cir. 1996) ("If the plaintiff ____



    -19- 19













    suffers a substantial injury that is not accurately

    measurable . . . irreparable harm is a natural sequel.").

    The loss of advantageous tax status can form the basis for a

    finding of irreparable harm. See San Francisco Real Estate ___ __________________________

    Investors v. Real Estate Inv. Trust of Am., 701 F.2d 1000, _________ ______________________________

    1007 (1st Cir. 1983) (relying on loss of advantageous tax

    status and other findings to support a preliminary

    injunction). The district court found that the actual degree

    of the injury was not measurable, "because the amount of the

    increased tax liability would be contingent on the Company's

    future earnings and distributions." This finding is

    supported by the record and common sense, and is not an abuse

    of discretion.

    Chesterton also argues that the Company would

    suffer no irreparable harm in the absence of the injunction,

    because the Company could have achieved a return equal to the

    Subchapter S status tax savings by redirecting the management

    fee that the BV pays to the Company. He argues that if the

    BV made distributions of its income directly to the

    shareholders, rather than to the Company through the

    management fee, the shareholders would receive substantial

    sums of money. In addition, he asserts that the management

    fee does not accurately measure the value of services

    provided by the Company to the BV, and that this disparity

    could result in an IRS reallocation of income, in turn



    -20- 20













    resulting in substantially greater taxes to the shareholders.

    This argument, regardless of its accuracy, is irrelevant.

    The fact that the Company could achieve greater distributions

    for its shareholders by redirecting the management fee does

    not alter the fact that the loss of Subchapter S status is

    injurious in any event.

    For the same reasons, we reject Chesterton's claim

    that the district court improperly restricted Chesterton's

    attempts to cross-examine the Company's tax expert regarding

    the nature and propriety of the management fee. We review

    the district court's decision to exclude evidence for abuse

    of discretion. Stevens v. Bangor and Aroostock R.R. Co., 97 _______ _____________________________

    F.3d 594, 599 (1st Cir. 1996). The district court limited

    Chesterton's proffered examination because it found that the

    testimony was collateral to the main issues in the case. The

    court also relied on the fact that for the years 1991 through

    1993, the IRS had audited the Company's taxes and had made no

    adjustments or comments regarding the management fee. Such a

    ruling was well within the court's discretion.

    C. Balance of Equities ___________________

    The final consideration regarding the propriety of

    injunctive relief is whether, on balance, the harm plaintiffs

    will suffer from the proposed transfers outweighs the harm

    that Chesterton will suffer if his transfers are enjoined.

    The district court found that an injunction would not harm



    -21- 21













    Chesterton because the proposed sales would do little to

    advance his efforts to sell the stock. The court stated

    that, "if [Chesterton] was unable to find a buyer for his

    shares in the Company, it strains logic to believe that he

    would be able to find a buyer for shares in [the shell

    corporations] when their primary assets are the very same

    shares he was previously unable to sell." Chesterton claims

    that by transferring the shares to his shell corporations, he

    will somehow increase the liquidity of those shares. The

    claim is counter-intuitive and no evidence was presented to

    support it. On this record, the district court's finding

    that the potential harm to plaintiffs outweighs the harm to

    defendant was proper.

    II. Chesterton s Counterclaim for Relief Under 156B _______________________________________________

    Finally, Chesterton appeals the district court's

    denial of his claim for relief under Mass. Gen. Laws ch.

    156B. Chesterton argues that even if the district court

    properly determined that the Subchapter S election impliedly

    restricted the shareholders' rights to transfer their stock

    to a corporation, he is now entitled to notice and to the

    exercise of his dissenter's rights under 156B. He asserts

    that the district court's decision is the first notice of the

    restriction that he has had, and that under 156B he is now

    entitled to dissent from the restriction and enforce his

    appraisal rights. Chesterton's claim to 156B appraisal



    -22- 22













    rights fails for the same reason that his general 156B

    argument fails: that provision is not triggered by this

    situation. The district court correctly denied Chesterton's

    misdirected claim to 156B appraisal rights.

    The decision of the district court is affirmed. ________











































    -23- 23