Lee C. Ritchie v. Ann Caldwell Rupe, as Trustee for the Dallas Gordon Rupe, III 1995 Family Trust , 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 771 ( 2014 )


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  •                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
    444444444444
    NO . 11-0447
    444444444444
    LEE C. RITCHIE, ET AL., PETITIONER,
    v.
    ANN CALDWELL RUPE, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE DALLAS GORDON RUPE, III 1995
    FAMILY TRUST, RESPONDENT
    4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
    ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
    COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
    JUSTICE GUZMAN , joined by joined by JUSTICE WILLETT and JUSTICE BROWN , dissenting.
    Thirty-seven states, including Texas, have statutes allowing a court to appoint some form of
    receiver over a closely held corporation for shareholder oppression. Today, Texas becomes the first
    of these jurisdictions with a statute that unequivocally prefers lesser remedies to effectively preclude
    those remedies—despite overwhelming authority observing that, to the contrary, many if not all
    jurisdictions allow these lesser remedies.1 But even jurisdictions with statutes that are silent on
    lesser remedies have interpreted their statutes to impliedly allow them. This departure from the plain
    language of the statute negates protections the law and Texas courts of appeals have long afforded
    to minority shareholders.2
    1
    See infra Part II.A.
    2
    See infra Part II.A.
    Historically, legislatures have recognized that minority shareholders are particularly
    vulnerable to abuse by majority shareholders and are thus entitled to significant protections. Without
    protection, shareholder oppression can significantly devalue or destroy the minority shareholder’s
    investment.3 As one colloquial anecdote declares, “‘[t]here are 51 shares . . . that are worth
    $250,000. There are 49 shares that are not worth a ___.’”4 Over half a century ago, when Texas
    enacted its shareholder oppression statute, we warned that “[a] minority stock interest is far from
    ‘change left on the counter.’”5 Ignoring our prescient observation, the Court today largely relegates
    minority stock interests to the “change left on the counter” we feared they might become. This
    radical departure from settled precedents and expectations is primarily the result of the Court
    effectively rewriting the statute to abolish the lesser remedies the statute prefers as well as the
    Court’s strict definition of oppression that will render any recovery highly unlikely. The Court today
    defines oppression as a decision that harms the corporation and was not determined in the honest
    exercise of business judgment. But typical acts of minority shareholder oppression (refusing to pay
    dividends, paying majority shareholders outside the dividend process, and making fire-sale buyout
    3
    The investment of minority shareholders in closely held corporations is crucial because of the key role closely
    held corporations play in the American economy. According to Forbes, America’s 224 largest privately held companies
    alone accounted for $1.61 trillion in revenue and over 4.5 million jobs in 2013. Andrea Murphy & Scott DeCarlo,
    America’s Largest Private Companies 2013, F O RBES (Dec. 18, 2013), http://www.forbes.com/sites/andreamurphy/
    2013/12/18/americas-largest-private-companies-2013/. Closely held corporations are a significant category of private
    companies, which include such organizations as partnerships and sole proprietorships.
    4
    Charles W . Murdock, The Evolution of Effective Remedies for Minority Shareholders and Its Impact Upon
    Valuation of Minority Shares, 65 N O TRE D AM E L. R EV . 425, 425 (1990) (quoting Humphrys v. Winous Co., 
    133 N.E.2d 780
    , 783 (Ohio 1956)).
    5
    Patton v. Nicholas, 279 S.W .2d 848, 854 (Tex. 1955).
    2
    offers) usually operate to benefit the corporation and hardly ever harm it.6 The ultimate effect of this
    holding is to negate the very foundations of protection the legislatures and U.S. courts have long
    afforded to minority shareholders in closely held corporations.
    Here, the minority shareholder prevailed on her oppression and fiduciary duty claims at trial
    by presenting legally sufficient evidence that the majority shareholders and corporation made bargain
    offers to buyout her stock, warned her that it would be the only purchaser of her stock, withheld
    corporate information from her, refused to meet with prospective purchasers of her shares, and paid
    personal expenses of a majority shareholder with corporate funds. Indeed, the chairman of the
    corporation’s board of directors admitted at trial that refusing to meet with prospective purchasers
    was oppressive. Because the Court extinguishes meaningful protections for minority shareholders
    and renders a take nothing judgment on a valid shareholder oppression claim, I respectfully dissent.
    I. Background
    The structure of closely held corporations situates minority shareholders in positions uniquely
    vulnerable to abuse. Hollis v. Hill, 
    232 F.3d 460
    , 467 (5th Cir. 2000). Typically, a board of
    directors elected by a majority of the voting interest of the shareholders oversees the corporation,
    which operates through officers that report to the board. TEX . BUS. ORGS. CODE §§ 3.103(b),
    21.401(a). Generally, these minority shareholders have no right to participate in the management
    of the corporation, and the directors often elect themselves as officers of the corporation. As an
    6
    See, e.g., Amicus Letter of Robert A. Ragazzo, Marc. I. Steinberg, Alan R. Bromberg, Joseph K. Leahy, Bruce
    A. McGovern, Gary S. Rosin, & David Simon Sokolow at 4–5, Ritchie v. Rupe, No. 11-0447, Supreme Court of Texas,
    Jan. 15, 2013; Patton, 279 S.W .2d at 853 (finding no evidence of damage to a corporation when majority shareholder
    refused to pay dividends to minority shareholder).
    3
    amicus brief submitted by several professors and faculty of Texas law schools7 demonstrates, the
    majority shareholders have the power to freeze out the minority shareholders by denying them
    employment and failing to pay dividends.8 The majority shareholders can magnify the economic
    impact of the freeze out scheme by using corporate funds to personally benefit themselves and
    denying the minority shareholders access to corporate information—conduct commonly referred to
    as a “freeze out.”9 And the majority shareholders can ultimately offer to redeem the minority
    shareholder’s stock at a bargain price10—often referred to as a “squeeze out.”
    Unlike minority shareholders in partnerships or public corporations, minority shareholders
    in closely held corporations are uniquely subject to this oppressive conduct because of their inability
    to freely exit the venture. In a partnership, a minority shareholder has a statutory right to withdraw
    from the partnership and receive either her share of the proceeds if the remaining partners terminate
    the partnership or a fair value buyout of her shares if the remaining partners continue the partnership.
    TEX . BUS. ORGS. CODE §§ 152.501(b)(1), 152.601(1). Likewise, dissatisfied minority shareholders
    in a publicly held corporation may sell their shares on the open market. But there is no statutory
    right for a minority shareholder to exit the corporation and receive a return of her investment. And
    frequently, the only buyers for minority shares of a closely held corporation are the remaining
    7
    Ragazzo, supra note 6.
    8
    
    Id. at 4–5.
    9
    
    Id. 10 Id.
    at 5.
    4
    shareholders—who might be engaging in the oppressive conduct from which they could ultimately
    profit.
    Ideally, minority shareholders would reach buy-sell or shareholder agreements with the
    majority shareholders before purchasing minority shares. When disputes arise, shareholders could
    readily turn to their agreements as the basis for their rights without needing to resort to the law to
    determine the duties owed. But as one commentator has observed, “[f]rom a relational standpoint,
    people enter closely-held businesses in the same manner as they enter marriage: optimistically and
    ill-prepared.”11 This case exposes the heightened vulnerability to oppression minority shareholders
    face: the minority shareholder inherited her shares from her husband, who acquired his shares as a
    member of a family owned business that foresaw no need for shareholder agreements.
    Giving due consideration to the plight of minority shareholders, thirty-one states have statutes
    that permit even the harsh remedy of allowing courts to appoint a receiver to liquidate a corporation
    based on shareholder oppression.12 Another four states allow liquidation for “persistent unfairness”
    11
    Murdock, supra note 4, at 426; see also Douglas K. Moll, Minority Oppression & the Limited Liability
    Company: Learning (or Not) from Close Corporation History, 40 W AKE F O REST L. R EV . 883, 912 (2005) (“Because
    close corporation owners are frequently linked by family or other personal relationships, there is often an initial
    atmosphere of mutual trust that diminishes the sense that contractual protection is needed. Commentators have also
    argued that close corporation owners are often unsophisticated in business and legal matters such that the need for
    contractual protection is rarely recognized.” (internal citations omitted)).
    12
    A LA . C O D E § 10-2A-1430; A RK . C O D E § 4-27-1430; C O LO . R EV . S TAT . § 7-114-301; C O N N . G EN . S TAT . § 33-
    896; G A . C OD E § 14-2-940; I D AH O C O D E § 30-1-1430; 805 I LL . C O M P . S TAT . 5/12.55; I OW A C O D E § 490.1430; M D .
    C O D E , C O RPS . & A SS ’N S § 3-413; M ICH . C O M P . L AW S § 450.1489; M ISS . C O D E § 79-4-14.30; M O . A N N . S TAT . § 351.494;
    M O N T . C O D E § 35-1-938; N EB . R EV . S TAT . § 21-2985; N.H. R EV . S TAT . § 293-A:14.30; N.J. S TAT . § 14A:12-7; N.M.
    S TAT . § 53-16-16; N.Y. B U S . C O RP . L AW § 1104-a; O R . R EV . S TAT . § 60.661; 15 P A . S TAT . § 1981; R.I. G EN . L AW S
    § 7-1.2-1314; S.C. C O D E § 33-14-300; S.D. C O D IFIED L AW S § 47-1A-1430; T EN N . C O D E § 48-24-301; U TA H C O DE
    § 16-10a-1430; V T . S TA T . tit. 11A, § 14.30; V A . C O D E § 13.1-747; W ASH . R EV . C ODE § 23B.14.300; W . V A . C O DE
    § 31D-14-1430; W IS . S TAT . § 180.1430; W Y O . S TAT . § 17-16-1430.
    5
    or “unfairly prejudicial” conduct.13 One state has broader language for when dissolution is
    appropriate.14 Thus, thirty-six states in all appear to allow liquidation for oppressive or similar
    conduct.15 See also DOUGLAS K. MOLL & ROBERT A. RAGAZZO , THE LAW                                  OF   CLOSELY HELD
    CORPORATIONS Fig. 7.1 (2012); Robert B. Thompson, The Shareholder’s Cause of Action for
    Oppression, 48 BUS. LAW . 699, 709 n.70 (1993).
    Here, Ann married into the Rupe family. Her husband’s sister, Paula Dennard, informed
    Rupe that she would “never get any money in this family.” Rupe and her husband, Buddy, wanted
    to add their son as a beneficiary to the family trust that owned 47% of Rupe Investment Corporation
    (RIC),16 but Dennard and her children refused. When Buddy passed away, Rupe acquired (together
    with her son)17 an 18% interest in RIC.18 Rupe claims that Dennard and her colleagues Lee Ritchie
    13
    A LASKA S TAT . § 10.06.628; C AL . C O RP . C O DE § 1800; M IN N . S TAT . § 302A.751; N.D. C EN T . C O DE
    § 10-19.1-115.
    14
    See N.C. G EN . S TAT . § 55-14-30(2)(ii) (authorizing liquidation if “reasonably necessary for the protection
    of the rights or interests of the complaining shareholder”).
    15
    Several states also impose special fiduciary duties on majority shareholders in closely held corporations. See,
    e.g., Barth v. Barth, 
    659 N.E.2d 559
    , 561 n.6 (Ind. 1995); Crosby v. Beam, 
    548 N.E.2d 217
    , 221 (Ohio 1989); Wilkes
    v. Springside Nursing Home, Inc., 
    353 N.E.2d 657
    , 663 (Mass. 1976). Fiduciary duty protections are discussed in Part
    II.E, infra.
    16
    The father of Buddy Rupe and Paula Dennard established the family trust to benefit his wife, his two children
    (Buddy and Dennard), and Dennard’s three children. At the time, Buddy had one adopted child. The father did not wish
    to leave voting shares to an adopted child and believed Buddy to be incapable of having children. Accordingly, the
    family trust provided that Buddy’s inheritance of RIC dividends would revert to Dennard and her three children on
    Buddy’s death.
    17
    Almost all of RIC’s voting shares were owned by trusts, including the 18% of the voting shares attributable
    to Rupe and her son. For ease of reference, this opinion will refer to the beneficial interest owners of the trust when
    possible.
    18
    In accordance with the terms of the family trust, see supra note 16, Buddy’s RIC dividends of $50,000 per
    year from his shares in the family trust reverted to Dennard and her children.
    6
    (a descendant of one of RIC’s early owners) and Dennis Lutes (an attorney for RIC and Dennard’s
    family) feared she would sue to reform the trust and add her and Buddy’s son as a beneficiary.
    Dennard serves as chair of RIC’s board of directors, and with her children controls over 70% of
    RIC’s voting stock. Ritchie serves as RIC’s president, is on the board, and together with his family
    owns just under 10% of RIC’s voting stock. And Lutes serves as vice-president and secretary of RIC
    and is on the board. Together, Dennard and her children, Ritchie and his family, and Lutes control
    approximately 79% of RIC’s voting shares and three of the board’s four positions. The trial court
    found that Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes voted the same for every shareholder vote for the entire time
    relevant to this lawsuit. Before his death, Buddy was RIC’s fourth director. RIC’s sales were
    approximately $152 million by 2007.
    After Buddy’s death, Ritchie offered to appoint Rupe to RIC’s board if she would agree to
    not sue another stockholder of RIC, which included the trust. Rupe accepted. Subsequently, when
    her home was facing foreclosure and she encountered a tax problem, Rupe asked if RIC would
    purchase her shares. Ritchie responded that RIC would prefer to delay any offer to purchase her
    shares because one of its subsidiaries was attempting to obtain new financing.
    Lutes later offered to redeem Rupe’s shares for $1 million. Rupe replied that the $1 million
    buyout offer was “absurd” and was designed to take advantage of her. Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes
    then elected Dennard’s daughter Gretchen to take Buddy’s seat on the board.
    Ritchie later offered for RIC to purchase Rupe’s shares for approximately $1.7 million (or
    $5,987 per share) to be paid over a seven-year period. In making the offer, Ritchie warned that RIC
    would be the only purchaser of her stock. Ritchie admitted at trial this value was calculated using
    7
    the book value of RIC’s shareholder equity, and Ritchie and Lutes both conceded that book value
    was not necessarily representative of market value.19 RIC’s calculation also deducted 50% of the
    book value of one of its major subsidiaries,20 and further reduced the value of Rupe’s stock by
    46.3%.21 Ritchie separately informed Dennard that based on the same date he valued Rupe’s shares
    at $5,987 per share, Dennard’s shares possessed a book value of $7,032 per share for gift tax
    purposes. And these offers to purchase Rupe’s shares were markedly lower than the per-share prices
    RIC paid to previous minority shareholders.
    Unsatisfied with the offer, Rupe retained investment banker George Stasen to market her
    stock to third parties. When they met, Dennard, several of her children, and Ritchie greeted Stasen
    in “a very hostile fashion,” and Ritchie refused Stasen’s request to meet with any potential third-
    party buyers. They required Rupe and any potential buyer to execute confidentiality agreements that
    were not subject to negotiation and that granted RIC sole discretion to approve or disapprove
    disclosure of requested information.
    According to Stasen, potential buyers laughed at him because they could not be expected to
    “make a decision on an investment from this limited information without meeting the executives”
    of a closely held corporation like RIC. Stasen explained that “[t]here was no way I could ever sell
    anything . . . [b]ecause there wasn’t enough information in the package and everybody wanted to be
    19
    For example, RIC listed an office building for sale for $1.8 million but established its book value at $124,000
    due to depreciation.
    20
    RIC subsidiary Hutton Communications was in a financial crisis, but Hutton’s chief financial officer testified
    that its turnaround began before the date on which RIC assessed the book value of Rupe’s shares.
    21
    RIC used this particular discount when buying back certain stock in previous years.
    8
    able to meet Lee Ritchie and talk to the executives of the companies.” Importantly Dennard admitted
    at trial that she disagreed with Ritchie’s refusal to meet with potential third-party buyers, she would
    want to meet with the president of a closely held corporation before investing, Stasen’s request of
    Ritchie was reasonable, and refusing such a request would be “oppressive to a minority shareholder.”
    Rupe sued Dennard, Ritchie, Lutes, and RIC, claiming shareholder oppression and breach
    of fiduciary duty. Rupe sought a court-ordered buyout of her shares or, alternatively, the
    appointment of a receiver to liquidate RIC. Among other things, the jury found after an eight-day
    trial that: (1) Dennard, Ritchie, Lutes, and RIC engaged in oppressive conduct; (2) RIC failed to
    allow Rupe to inspect and copy relevant books and records; (3) Dennard paid personal expenses
    from RIC’s corporate funds; (4) Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes offered Rupe a position on the board
    if she would agree to not sue a shareholder of RIC; (5) Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes engaged in
    oppressive conduct in their redemption offers and treatment of Rupe with regard to inspection and
    copying of corporate records; (6) Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes breached their fiduciary duties to
    Rupe; and (7) the fair value of Rupe’s shares was $7.3 million.22 The trial court entered judgment
    in favor of Rupe and ordered Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes to cause RIC to redeem Rupe’s shares for
    $7.3 million. The court of appeals agreed that the conduct amounted to shareholder oppression and
    a stock buyout was the most appropriate remedy but remanded for a redetermination of the stock’s
    value in light of the lack of marketability and control. 
    339 S.W.3d 275
    , 299, 302.
    22
    RIC’s $1.7 million offer was calculated utilizing a valuation date of June 30, 2003. The jury assessed the
    value of Rupe’s shares as of June 30, 2006. The court of appeals affirmed the jury’s valuation date, which is not at issue
    in this appeal.
    9
    II. Discussion
    The Court today holds that because the shareholder oppression statute only expressly
    addresses the remedy of receivership, no other remedy for oppression is available. And because the
    remedy of receivership is comparably harsh, the Court imposes a stringent definition of oppression
    by incorporating the business judgment rule. The Court’s logic in applying the business judgment
    rule in this context would presumably also apply to minority shareholder claims for breach of
    fiduciary duty. But the Court’s initial holding that receivership is the only remedy for oppression
    is flawed—which necessarily affects the soundness of the Court’s remaining holdings.
    The shareholder oppression statute not only addresses but also prefers lesser legal and
    equitable remedies than receivership—it does not extinguish them. Because courts may impose
    lesser remedies, the long-standing definition of oppression that has existed at common law in Texas
    and a host of other jurisdictions (to which the Legislature has acquiesced) should apply. Further, the
    business judgment rule is fundamentally incongruent with the concept of minority shareholder
    oppression because that oppression (such as buying minority shares for a bargain price) typically
    benefits the corporation. And the oppression statute contemplates use of lesser remedies in
    situations where oppression exists but does not harm the corporation—further indicating the business
    judgment rule should not apply. Neither does the business judgment rule have a place in minority
    shareholder claims for breach of fiduciary duty. I address each point in turn.
    A. Remedy
    At the heart of this case is the pre-codified version of the Texas oppression statute, former
    article 7.05. That provision requires a shareholder seeking a rehabilitative receivership to establish
    10
    that the directors’ acts are “illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent.” Act of Mar. 30, 1955, 54th Leg., R.S.,
    ch. 64, art. 7.05(A)(1), 1955 Tex. Gen. Laws 239, 290-91, amended by Act of May 3, 1961, 57th
    Leg., R.S., ch. 169, 1, 1961 Tex. Gen. Laws 319, 319 (hereinafter “former art. 7.05”). Additionally,
    a court may only appoint a receiver: (1) when the court deems it necessary “to conserve the assets
    and business of the corporation and to avoid damage to parties at interest,” and (2) if “all other
    requirements of law are complied with” and “all other remedies available either at law or in equity,
    including the appointment of a receiver for specific assets of the corporation, are determined by the
    court to be inadequate.” Former art. 7.05. In short, a court may appoint a receiver when: (1) the
    directors engage in oppressive conduct; (2) such conduct harms the corporation; and (3) lesser legal
    and equitable remedies will not suffice.
    But the plain language of the oppression statute prefers other remedies—it does not
    extinguish them. Former article 7.05 provides for receivership only if “all other remedies available
    either at law or in equity . . . are determined by the court to be inadequate.” Former art. 7.05. If no
    other remedies are available under the statute or common law, as the Court holds, the oppression
    statute would have no need to express a preference for their use. Such a holding violates our
    fundamental canon of construction to not render any statutory language meaningless. See Columbia
    Med. Ctr. of Las Colinas, Inc. v. Hogue, 
    271 S.W.3d 238
    , 256 (Tex. 2008) (“The Court must not
    interpret the statute in a manner that renders any part of the statute meaningless or superfluous.”).
    And in doing so, the Court defeats the very purpose of the Legislature’s carefully chosen words.
    Other jurisdictions with similar oppression statutes have uniformly interpreted them as
    allowing other lesser remedies. The Texas oppression statute has its roots in the Illinois Business
    11
    Corporation Act of 1933,23 which formed the basis for the Model Business Corporation Act.24
    Courts in states with oppression statutes similar to ours have discussed eight legal and equitable
    remedies less drastic than a rehabilitative receivership: (1) appointment of a fiscal agent to
    periodically report to the court; (2) retention of jurisdiction by the court; (3) an accounting of
    allegedly misappropriated funds; (4) an injunction for oppressive conduct (such as reducing
    excessive salaries or bonuses); (5) ordering a dividend; (6) ordering a buyout; (7) permitting minority
    shareholders to purchase additional stock; and (8) awarding damages caused by oppressive conduct.
    See, e.g., Baker v. Commercial Body Builders, Inc., 
    507 P.2d 387
    , 395–96 (Or. 1973); Fix v. Fix
    Material Co., Inc., 
    538 S.W.2d 351
    , 357 n.3 (Mo. Ct. App. 1976). Ironically, the courts that have
    recognized these remedies attribute the creation of two of them (continuing the exercise of
    jurisdiction and ordering a dividend) to this very Court—even though the Court extinguishes them
    today. See 
    Baker, 507 P.2d at 395
    –96 (citing Patton v. Nicholas, 
    279 S.W.2d 848
    (Tex. 1955)); 
    Fix, 538 S.W.2d at 357
    n.3 (same).
    Several courts with statutes similar to ours have specifically addressed the propriety of a
    buyout as a remedy for oppression.25 Unsurprisingly, the seminal Texas case on the issue has
    likewise agreed with this authority in recognizing the availability of a buyout under our oppression
    23
    Cent. Standard Life Ins. Co. v. Davis, 
    141 N.E.2d 45
    , 49 (Ill. 1957) (“The concept of oppressive conduct as
    a ground for dissolution of a corporation in equity appears for the first time in the 1933 act.”).
    24
    Murdock, supra note 4, at 455.
    25
    See Balvik v. Sylvester, 411 N.W .2d 383, 389 (N.D. 1987); Delaney v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., 
    564 P.2d 277
    ,
    288 (Or. 1977) (“[T]his is an appropriate cause for relief in the form of a requirement that [the majority shareholder]
    purchase plaintiffs’ stock at a fair price.”). Oregon has since amended its statute to expressly allow buyouts and other
    remedies, noting that the listed remedies “shall not be exclusive of other legal and equitable remedies that the court may
    impose.” O R . R EV . S TAT . § 60.952(2)–(3).
    12
    statute that expresses a preference for the use of lesser legal and equitable remedies. Davis v.
    Sheerin, 
    754 S.W.2d 375
    , 380 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1988, writ denied) (“Texas courts,
    under their general equity power, may decree a [buyout] in an appropriate case . . . .”). Texas courts
    of appeals have agreed.26 And several courts in other jurisdictions whose oppression statutes address
    no remedy other than dissolution have found buyouts to be appropriate remedies for oppression.27
    Importantly, I am aware of no state that has interpreted their shareholder oppression statute
    as foreclosing all remedies except receivership, as the Court does today. Indeed, other state supreme
    courts have cited this Court’s precedent for the proposition that “[m]ost states have adopted the view
    that a dissolution statute does not provide the exclusive remedy for injured shareholders and that the
    courts have equitable powers to fashion appropriate remedies where the majority shareholders have
    breached their fiduciary duty to the minority by engaging in oppressive conduct.”28
    26
    See, e.g., Christians v. Stafford, No. 14-99-00038-CV, 2000 W L 1591000, at *2 (Tex. App.— Houston [14th
    Dist.] Oct. 26, 2000, no pet.) (mem. op.) (“[A] court may order an equitable ‘buy-out’ of a party’s minority shares for
    oppressive acts of the majority when the party sues both individually in his own right and as a shareholder on behalf of
    the corporation.”); Advance Marine, Inc. v. Kelley, No. 01-90-00645-CV, 1991 W L 114463, at *2 (Tex. App.— Houston
    [1st Dist.] June 27, 1991, no writ) (mem. op.) (“Courts have power to order the equitable remedy of a buy-out by the
    majority shareholders according to the facts of the particular case.”); see also Balias v. Balias, Inc, 748 S.W .2d 253,
    256–57 (Tex. App.— Houston [14th Dist.] 1988, writ denied) (affirming trial court’s denial of appointment of a receiver
    where shareholder failed to demonstrate that other remedies would have been inadequate).
    27
    See Maddox v. Norman, 
    669 P.2d 230
    , 237 (M ont. 1983) (“[A] court sitting in equity is empowered to
    determine the questions involved in a case and do complete justice. This includes the power to fashion an equitable
    result.” (citations and quotation marks omitted)); Alaska Plastics, Inc. v. Coppock, 
    621 P.2d 270
    , 274–75 (Alaska 1980);
    McCauley v. Tom McCauley & Son, Inc., 
    724 P.2d 232
    , 243 (N.M. Ct. App. 1986); Sauer v. Moffitt, 363 N.W .2d 269,
    274–75 (Iowa Ct. App. 1984).
    28
    Masinter v. WEBCO Co., 
    262 S.E.2d 433
    , 439–40 (W . Va. 1980) (citing Patton, 279 S.W .2d at 853); see
    also Rowen v. Le Mars Mut. Ins. Co. of Iowa, 282 N.W .2d 639, 656 (Iowa 1979) (“W herever a situation exists which
    is contrary to the principles of equity and which can be redressed within the scope of judicial action, a court of equity
    will devise a remedy to meet the situation, though no similar relief has been given before.” (quotation marks omitted)
    (citing Patton, 279 S.W .2d at 857)).
    13
    Commentators are in accord with the host of jurisdictions that recognize courts retain the
    authority to implement lesser legal and equitable remedies for shareholder oppression. As one
    commentator has observed, because most oppression statutes are based on the Model Business
    Corporation Act, “alternative relief, particularly buy-outs of minority shareholders, is available in
    most, if not all, jurisdictions.”29 And leading scholars on shareholder oppression have observed that
    buyouts “are the most common remedy for dissension within a close corporation.”30 But ignoring
    the plain language of the statute and the great weight of authority against its holding, today Texas
    becomes the first jurisdiction to hold that an oppression statute abolishes the remedies it expressly
    prefers.
    B. Definition of Oppression
    The Court’s first misinterpretation of the statute (that there is but one remedy) results in a
    second: that oppression must have an unduly restrictive definition. The Court observes that
    receivership is a harsh or drastic remedy, designed for situations that pose a serious threat to the
    corporation and its shareholders.31 __ S.W.3d at __; see also Balias v. Balias, 
    748 S.W.2d 253
    , 257
    29
    Murdock, supra note 4, at 464.
    30
    Douglas K. Moll, Shareholder Oppression and “Fair Value”: Of Discounts, Dates, and Dastardly Deeds
    in the Close Corporation, 54 D U KE L.J. 293, 309 n.56 (2004) (quoting 1 F. H ODGE O’N EAL & R O BERT B. T H O M PSO N ,
    O’N EAL ’S C LO SE C O RPO RATIO NS § 1.16, at 1-97 (3d ed. 2002); see also 
    id. at 308–09
    (“The most common remedy for
    oppression . . . is a buyout of the oppressed investor’s stockholdings. A buyout is advantageous because it provides a
    mechanism for an oppressed shareholder to extricate his investment from a venture without having to dissolve the
    corporation. The majority shareholder continues to operate the close corporation and to participate in the company’s
    successes and failures, while the minority shareholder recovers the value of his invested capital and removes himself from
    the company’s affairs.”); Murdock, supra note 4, at 470 (“The most common form of alternative remedy is the buy-out
    of the minority shareholder.”).
    31
    The remedy of receivership is harsh or drastic when compared to other remedies such as compelling dividends
    or a buyout because it replaces the shareholders’ chosen managers with court-chosen managers. __ S.W .3d at __; Balias,
    748 S.W .2d at 257. But this does not mean that even a receivership for dissolution will cause the corporation to cease
    14
    (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1988, writ denied). The Court has taken a position commentators
    previously warned against: “the view of dissolution as a ‘drastic’ remedy generally works to the
    disadvantage of minority shareholders.”32 Because the Court concludes that receivership is the only
    remedy under the oppression statute and that it is drastic or harsh, it adopts a novel and strict
    definition of oppression:
    when [directors or managers] abuse their authority over the corporation with the
    intent to harm the interests of one or more of the shareholders, in a manner that does
    not comport with the honest exercise of their business judgment, and by doing so
    create a serious risk of harm to the corporation.
    __ S.W.3d at __. The business judgment rule shields directors and managers from liability for
    rational decisions made for the benefit of the corporation.33 If there is no harm to the corporation,
    the director or manager has not violated the business judgment rule (and might not have violated the
    rule even if there is harm to the corporation if the decision was made in the honest exercise of
    business judgment). Thus, the Court’s definition of oppression will only allow recovery if a director
    or manager fails to honestly exercise her business judgment and harms a minority shareholder as well
    as the corporation itself.
    The Texas oppression statute and the court of appeals cases construing it did not develop in
    a vacuum. The developing body of law in Texas and beyond indicates why the Court’s restrictive
    to be a going concern. The majority shareholders may well purchase the corporation from the receiver, essentially buying
    out the minority shareholder.
    32
    Murdock, supra note 4, at 426.
    33
    See Texarkana Coll. Bowl, Inc. v. Phillips, 408 S.W .2d 537, 539–40 (Tex. Civ. App.— Texarkana 1966, no
    writ) (holding that a shareholder was not entitled to a remedy for oppression because the directors’ decisions were “not
    inconsistent with the honest exercise of business judgment and discretion”).
    15
    definition of oppression is unwarranted. Like many other states, Texas’s statute was similar to the
    Model Act.34 As discussed above, the overwhelming majority of courts have construed their
    oppression statutes to allow for remedies other than receivership. 
    See supra
    Part II.A. As
    commentators have observed, “less drastic remedies [than dissolution] may be justified by less
    oppressive conduct than that required to dissolve a corporation.”35 Accordingly, courts have “almost
    uniformly taken a broad approach to defining oppressive conduct, and where alternatives to
    dissolution do not exist by statute, have upheld the general equitable power of the courts to fashion
    such alternatives. The pattern appears firmly established”—except as of today in Texas.36
    New York has primarily shaped the definitions of oppression in the United States.37 The first
    New York court to squarely address the issue observed that “[w]hether the controlling shareholders
    discharged petitioner for cause or in their good business judgment is irrelevant;” rather, what was
    relevant was the minority shareholder’s “reasonable expectations.” In re Topper, 
    433 N.Y.S.2d 359
    ,
    362 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1980). The reasonable expectations test for oppression has been further refined
    34
    The Court believes the Model Act compels its conclusion here because the Act expressly provides a buyout
    as a remedy. __ S.W .3d at __ n.25. But the Model Act only changed in 1984 to expressly provide a buyout. Compare
    M O D EL B U S . C O RP . A CT § 14.34 (1984) (establishing procedure for buyout in lieu of dissolution) with M O D EL B U S .
    C O R P . A C T § 97 (1971) (allowing court to liquidate corporation due to oppressive conduct without specifying other
    remedies) and M O D EL B U S . C O RP . A CT § 90 (1960) (same). Presciently, the Texas Legislature added in 1955 the
    flexibility the Model Act did not have until recently by expressly allowing lesser legal and equitable remedies. Former
    art. 7.05. The Texas Act should not have to expressly enumerate lesser legal and equitable remedies to give the plain
    statutory language its intended effect.
    35
    Murdock, supra note 4, at 459.
    36
    
    Id. at 470
    (citations omitted); compare favorably 
    McCauley, 724 P.2d at 236
    (“The absence of a rigidly
    defined standard for determining what constitutes oppressive behavior enables courts to determine, on a case-by-case
    basis, whether the acts complained of serve to frustrate the legitimate expectations of minority shareholders, or whether
    the acts are of such severity as to warrant the requested relief.”).
    37
    Murdock, supra note 4, at 465.
    16
    as “when the majority’s conduct substantially defeats the expectations that objectively viewed were
    both reasonable under the circumstances and were central to the minority shareholder’s decision to
    join the venture.” 
    Davis, 754 S.W.2d at 381
    (citing In re Wiedy’s Furniture Clearance Ctr. Co., 
    487 N.Y.S.2d 901
    , 903 (N.Y. App. Div. 1985)). High courts in Alaska, Iowa, Maryland, Montana, New
    Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Rhode Island, and Washington have followed
    New York’s lead in adopting the reasonable expectations test.38 And this test is firmly established
    in Texas jurisprudence, with the Amarillo, Corpus Christi, Dallas, El Paso, Fort Worth, Houston (1st
    and 14th Districts), San Antonio, Texarkana, and Tyler courts of appeals having applied the test in
    shareholder oppression cases.39
    But the reasonable expectations test can be a poor fit when the minority shareholder, such
    as the one here, inherited her shares (perhaps indicating she had no investment expectations at all).40
    38
    See Baur v. Baur Farms, Inc., 832 N.W .2d 663, 674 (Iowa 2013); Boland v. Boland, 
    31 A.3d 529
    , 542 (Md.
    2011); Scott v. Trans–Sys., Inc., 
    64 P.3d 1
    , 6 (W ash. 2003); Hendrick v. Hendrick, 
    755 A.2d 784
    , 791 (R.I. 2000);
    Brenner v. Berkowitz, 
    634 A.2d 1019
    , 1028–29 (N.J. 1993); Balvik, 411 N.W .2d at 387 (N.D. 1987); 
    McCauley, 724 P.2d at 237
    –38 (N.M. 1986); Stefano v. Coppock, 
    705 P.2d 443
    , 446 n.3 (Alaska 1985); Meiselman v. Meiselman, 
    307 S.E.2d 551
    , 563 (N.C. 1983); Fox v. 7L Bar Ranch Co., 
    645 P.2d 929
    , 933 (Mont. 1982); see also Adler v. Tauberg,
    
    881 A.2d 1267
    , 1269 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2005); Ford v. Ford, 
    878 A.2d 894
    , 904 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2005); Morrow v.
    Prestonwold, Inc., No. CV000445844S, 2002 W L 652369, at *4 (Conn. Super. Ct. Mar. 22, 2002).
    39
    See, e.g., Kohannim v. Katoli, __ S.W .3d __, __, 2013 W L 3943078, at *9 (Tex. App.— El Paso July 24,
    2013, pet. denied); Boehringer v. Konkel, 404 S.W .3d 18, 25 (Tex. App.— Houston [1st Dist.] 2013, no pet.); Argo Data
    Res. Corp. v. Shagrithaya, 380 S.W .3d 249, 265 (Tex. App.— Dallas 2012, pet. filed); In re Trockman, No. 07-11-0364-
    CV, 2012 W L 554999, at *2 (Tex. App.— Amarillo Feb. 1, 2012, no pet.) (mem. op.); Guerra v. Guerra, No. 04-10-
    00271-CV, 2011 W L 3715051, at *6 (Tex. App.—San Antonio Aug. 24, 2011, no pet.) (mem. op.); Gibney v. Culver,
    No. 13-06-112-CV, 2008 W L 1822767, at *16–17 (Tex. App.— Corpus Christi Apr. 24, 2008, pet. denied) (mem. op.);
    Redmon v. Griffith, 202 S.W .3d 225, 234 (Tex. App.— Tyler 2006, pet. denied); Cotten v. Weatherford Bancshares, Inc.,
    187 S.W .3d 687, 699–700 (Tex. App.— Fort W orth 2006, pet. denied); Gonzalez v. Greyhound Lines Inc., 181 S.W .3d
    386, 392 n.5 (Tex. App.— El Paso 2005, pet. denied); Willis v. Donnelly, 118 S.W .3d 10, 32 n.12 (Tex. App.— Houston
    [14th Dist.] 2003) aff’d in part and rev’d in part on other grounds, 199 S.W .3d 262 (Tex. 2006); Pinnacle Data Servs.,
    Inc. v. Gillen, 104 S.W .3d 188, 196 (Tex. App.— Texarkana 2003, no pet.).
    40
    See Ragazzo, supra note 6, at 10.
    17
    Due to such circumstances, New York courts developed a test for finding oppression if the conduct
    of the majority becomes “burdensome, harsh and wrongful.” Gimpel v. Bolstein, 
    477 N.Y.S.2d 1014
    , 1020 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1984). High courts in Maine, Mississippi, Oregon, Rhode Island, and
    Washington have followed this test,41 as have the courts of appeals in Texas.42
    Because of the panoply of legal and equitable remedies Texas and other courts have
    recognized for oppression, these two definitions of oppression are firmly established in Texas and
    national jurisprudence and allow courts the flexibility to craft remedies for the varying types of
    oppression.43 There is no valid basis to overturn this mountain of jurisprudence, leave Texas out of
    step with other jurisdictions whose statutes are similar to ours, and chill investment in closely held
    corporations.
    41
    See Napp v. Parks Camp, Ltd., 
    932 A.2d 531
    , 538 (Me. 2007); 
    Scott, 64 P.3d at 6
    (W ash. 2003); 
    Hendrick, 755 A.2d at 791
    (R.I. 2000); Kisner v. Coffey, 
    418 So. 2d 58
    , 61 (Miss. 1982); 
    Baker, 507 P.2d at 393
    (Or. 1973); see
    also Edenbaum v. Schwarcz-Osztreicherne, 
    885 A.2d 365
    , 378 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2005); Colt v. Mt. Princeton Trout
    Club, Inc., 
    78 P.3d 1115
    , 1118 (Colo. App. 2003); Morrow, 2002 W L 652369, at *5; Jorgensen v. Water Works, Inc.,
    582 N.W .2d 98, 107 (W isc. Ct. App. 1998); Whale Art Co. v. Docter, 743 S.W .2d 511, 514 (Mo. Ct. App. 1987).
    42
    See, e.g., Kohannim, __ S.W .3d at __, 2013 W L 3943078, at *9; Boehringer, 404 S.W .3d at 25; Shagrithaya,
    380 S.W .3d at 265; Trockman, 2012 W L 554999, at *2; Guerra, 2011 W L 3715051, at *6; Gibney, 2008 W L 1822767,
    at *16–17; Gonzalez, 181 S.W .3d at 392 n.5; Willis, 118 S.W .3d at 32 n.12; Gillen, 104 S.W .3d at 196; Devji v. Keller,
    No. 03-99-00436-CV, 2000 W L 1862819, at *7 (Tex. App.— Austin Dec. 21, 2000, no pet.) (mem. op.); Davis, 754
    S.W .2d at 382.
    43
    The Court holds that the Legislature cannot acquiesce to decisions that run contrary to a statute’s plain
    language and that long-standing Texas court definitions of oppression are thus invalid. __ S.W .3d at __ n.16. The first
    proposition is unquestionably true, but the Court’s application is incorrect. If, as the Court holds, the statutory definition
    of oppression should be more restrictive than the common-law definition because the statute applies to more than just
    closely held corporations, then the common-law claim for oppression should fill the “gap” in protection the Court
    admittedly leaves with its decision.
    18
    C. The Business Judgment Rule
    In addition to crafting a restrictive definition of oppression, the Court embeds in its definition
    the business judgment rule, shielding majority shareholders and directors from liability for decisions
    that do not harm the corporation or that were made in the honest exercise of business judgment. But
    the business judgment rule is fundamentally at odds with the lesser shareholder oppression remedies
    the oppression statute expressly prefers. The Court’s inclusion of the rule in the definition of
    oppression negates the very protection the oppression statute afforded until today.44
    When crafting the reasonable expectations test for shareholder oppression, the New York
    court observed that “[w]hether the controlling shareholders discharged petitioner for cause or in their
    good business judgment is irrelevant.” 
    Topper, 433 N.Y.S.2d at 362
    . A number of other courts have
    likewise rejected the business judgment rule in minority shareholder oppression cases.45
    Commentators have agreed that the business judgment rule should not apply in shareholder
    oppression cases. As one leading commentator has explained:
    [T]he shareholder oppression doctrine recognizes that decisions about such matters
    by a majority-controlled board can be part of a minority shareholder freeze-out. The
    oppression doctrine, therefore, is implicitly premised upon the notion that close
    corporation employment, management, and dividend decisions require more than a
    44
    The Court responds that the business judgment rule is congruent with the portion of the oppression statute,
    noting that it is “to conserve the property and business of the domestic entity and avoid damage to interested parties.”
    __ S.W .3d at __ n.13. This assessment is misguided for three reasons. First, minority shareholders whose investments
    are being diminished would seem to qualify as “interested parties.” Second, the Court is reading one provision of the
    statute (“conserve the property and business of the domestic entity”) to render two others meaningless (“interested
    parties” and “all other legal and equitable remedies”). Third, this distortion of the statute leaves a gap in protection under
    the common law.
    45
    See, e.g., Grato v. Grato, 
    639 A.2d 390
    , 396 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1994); 
    Fox, 645 P.2d at 934
    –35
    (Mont. 1982); Smith v. Atl. Props., Inc., 
    422 N.E.2d 798
    , 801, 804 (Mass. App. Ct. 1981); Exadaktilos v. Cinnaminson
    Realty Co., 
    400 A.2d 554
    , 561 (N.J. Super. Ct. Law Div. 1979).
    19
    mere surface inquiry into the majority’s conduct. Indeed, the fact that courts
    applying the oppression doctrine are subjecting the majority’s actions to “reasonable
    expectations” or “burdensome, harsh, and wrongful conduct” standards suggests that
    courts are requiring majority shareholders to do more than merely articulate a rational
    business purpose for their decisions.
    Douglas K. Moll, Shareholder Oppression in Texas Close Corporations: Majority Rule Isn’t What
    It Used To Be, 1 HOUS. BUS. & TAX . L.J. 12, 20 (2001) (citations omitted); see also F. Hodge
    O’Neal, Close Corporations: Existing Legislation and Recommended Reform, 33 BUS. LAW . 873,
    884 (1978) (criticizing the business judgment rule as a conceptual barrier to judicial relief for
    aggrieved minority shareholders).
    The typical example of minority shareholder oppression culminates when directors offer to
    buy a minority shareholder’s shares at a fraction of their true value. Such an offer will seemingly
    always be in the corporation’s best interest. For example, the directors here offered at most $1.7
    million for shares the jury valued at trial at $7.3 million. If this value were the fair market value,46
    the shareholder oppression could benefit the corporation by $5.6 million if the minority shareholder
    accepted. Likewise, refusing to pay dividends to shareholders strengthens the corporation’s cash
    reserves, paying a director’s personal expenses from corporate funds keeps the director satisfied and
    in continued service of the corporation, and refusing to meet with prospective purchasers prevents
    statements that might possibly be the basis for a securities fraud suit. Each such act that potentially
    oppresses a minority shareholder can benefit the corporation and be justified under the business
    judgment rule. But after today, the business judgment rule will allow essentially all minority
    46
    As explained below, I agree with the court of appeals that the jury’s valuation of the minority shareholder’s
    stock at $7.3 million failed to account for the stock’s lack of marketability or control. Thus, the fair market value would
    be somewhat less than $7.3 million.
    20
    shareholder oppression that does not harm the corporation (and even some liability that does harm
    the corporation if the directors or majority shareholders made an honest business decision).
    D. Common-Law Cause of Action
    The Court also determines “the foreseeability, likelihood, and magnitude of harm sustained
    by minority shareholders due to the abuse of power by those in control of a closely held corporation
    is significant, and Texas law should ensure that remedies exist to appropriately address such harm
    when the underlying actions are wrongful.” __ S.W.3d at __. But the Court concludes that the
    common-law standard for minority shareholder oppression is too vague47 and existing remedies
    provide adequate protection, thereby obviating the need for a common-law cause of action.
    Tellingly, the Court acknowledges that its interpretation of the oppression statute and failure
    to impose a common-law remedy for oppression “leaves a ‘gap’ in the protection that the law affords
    to individual minority shareholders” when the harm to the minority shareholders does not harm the
    corporation.48 __ S.W.3d at __. Until today, that gap has not existed because Texas courts have
    47
    One basis for the Court’s conclusion is its belief that the common-law reasonable expectations test is difficult
    to apply when a minority shareholder inherited her shares. __ S.W .3d at __. But this is precisely why courts in Texas
    and a host of other jurisdictions apply the test for burdensome, harsh, and wrongful conduct when addressing inherited
    shares. 
    See supra
    Part II.B.
    48
    The Court takes solace in the fact that majority shareholders that harm minority shareholders might also be
    harming the corporation, thus allowing a rehabilitative receiver under the oppression statute or a breach of fiduciary duty
    claim if the facts support it. __ S.W .3d at __ n.53. The Court specifically opines that “[r]efusal to pay dividends, paying
    majority shareholders outside the dividend process, and making fire-sale buyout offers certainly can harm the
    corporation, for instance, by lowering the value of its stock.” 
    Id. But such
    observation reflects a misunderstanding of
    closely held corporations. For example, refusing to pay dividends to any shareholder yields additional cash reserves.
    One buying a majority interest in the company would obviously pay more for a company with more cash, which they
    could extract with the powers associated with their majority interest. One buying a minority interest would not
    necessarily pay more if they have no legal recourse to compel the majority shareholder to pay a dividend to the minority
    shareholder (and they have no such recourse after today). Such an example is not difficult to find. It occurred the last
    time we addressed this issue. In Patton, the majority shareholder refused to pay dividends to the minority shareholders,
    and we held that such conduct did not harm the corporation. 279 S.W .3d at 853.
    21
    interpreted the oppression statute to allow lesser remedies for oppression that harms minority
    shareholders but not the corporation.
    No other existing remedy the Court discusses adequately protects minority shareholders from
    such oppression. The remedy that comes closest to affording some relief to the oppressed minority
    shareholder is a common-law claim for breach of fiduciary duty. But the Court’s logic expressly and
    impliedly negates such a claim. Expressly, the Court observes that we recognized this cause of
    action in Patton and treated it as a derivative action. __ S.W.3d at __. But a shareholder only has
    standing to bring a derivative action if she fairly and adequately represents the interests of the
    corporation.49 TEX . BUS. ORGS. CODE § 21.552(2). Thus, a derivative action would only lie in this
    context when the oppression of the minority shareholder harms the corporation itself. The Court
    espouses this principle by observing that “actions that are ‘oppressive’ under the statute ordinarily
    will not give rise to derivative suits.” __ S.W.3d at __ n.15. But in Patton, we recognized that the
    majority shareholder’s misconduct did not harm the corporation itself but nonetheless allowed the
    minority shareholder’s claim for breach of fiduciary 
    duty. 279 S.W.2d at 853
    (“[W]e find no
    evidence . . . that [the corporation] was damaged.”). Thus, if the Court is correct today and minority
    shareholders may only bring fiduciary duty claims for the benefit of the corporation, Patton is
    wrong.50 But, Patton is not wrong; it correctly allowed a minority shareholder claim for breach of
    49
    The Court observes that shareholders in closely held corporations that elect to be close corporations do not
    have to fairly and adequately represent the interests of the corporation. __ S.W .3d at __; T EX . B U S . O RGS . C O DE
    § 21.552. But this offers no remedy for minority shareholders in corporations like RIC that have not elected close
    corporation status.
    50
    The Court also notes that the Business Organizations Code allows courts to treat a closely held corporation’s
    shareholder claim as direct rather than derivative. __ S.W .3d at __; T EX . B U S . O RGS . C O D E § 21.563(c). But because
    the Court interprets the oppression statute to only allow a remedy if the corporation itself is harmed, treating derivative
    22
    fiduciary duty even when there was no harm to the 
    corporation.51 279 S.W.2d at 853
    . Patton did
    not require a derivative claim.
    The Court’s logic also impliedly restricts fiduciary duty claims. As addressed below, the
    Court’s conclusion that the business judgment rule should apply to statutory shareholder oppression
    claims would seem to apply with equal force to fiduciary duty claims. See infra Part II.E. But the
    rule is fundamentally at odds with the remedy of the fiduciary duty claim, just as it is at odds with
    shareholder oppression claims. 
    See supra
    Part II.C. In short, the Court acknowledges that its unduly
    restrictive interpretation of the oppression statute leaves minority shareholders unprotected from
    conduct that will harm them but not the corporation. It is precisely the Court’s restrictive view of
    the statute that creates the gap in protection and requires a common-law cause of action.
    E. Breach of Fiduciary Duty
    Shareholder oppression was not the only cause of action in this proceeding. Rupe also sued
    for breach of fiduciary duty.
    Like shareholder oppression, breach of fiduciary duty is a doctrine that protects minority
    shareholders from abuse and oppression. As one leading commentator has observed:
    The development of the statutory cause of action and the enhanced fiduciary duty
    reflect the same underlying concerns for the position of minority shareholders,
    particularly in close corporations after harmony no longer reigns. Because of the
    actions as direct actions offers no meaningful protection to the oppressed minority shareholder.
    51
    The Court mischaracterizes Patton as standing for the proposition that an improper refusal to declare
    dividends entitled minority shareholders to relief “either directly to the corporation or through a derivative action.” __
    S.W .3d at __. But we found no harm to the corporation in Patton and required the majority shareholder to declare
    reasonable dividends for up to five years. 279 S.W .2d at 857–58. W e required declaring dividends to benefit the
    shareholders (which had been harmed) rather than the corporation (which had not been harmed by withholding
    dividends).
    23
    similarities between the two remedial schemes . . . it makes sense to think of them
    as two manifestations of a minority shareholder’s cause of action for oppression [or]
    as two sides of the same coin . . . .
    Douglas K. Moll, Shareholder Oppression & Dividend Policy in the Close Corporation, 60 WASH .
    & LEE L. REV . 841, 852 (2003) (quotation marks and citations omitted). The fiduciary concept for
    close corporations arose in the 1970s, when the Massachusetts high court recognized that
    “stockholders in the close corporation owe one another substantially the same fiduciary duty in the
    operation of the enterprise that partners owe to one another.” Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype Co., 
    328 N.E.2d 505
    , 515 (Mass. 1975).
    As the Fifth Circuit has observed, this “recognition of special rules of fiduciary duty
    applicable to close corporations has gained widespread acceptance.” 
    Hollis, 232 F.3d at 468
    . High
    courts in Indiana, Maryland, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Utah, and West Virginia have recognized
    that majority shareholders can owe fiduciary duties to minority shareholders.52
    We expressly avoided the issue in Willis v. Donnelly because the record there could not
    support the existence of a fiduciary duty. 
    199 S.W.3d 262
    , 276–77 (Tex. 2006). But we did
    recognize the existence of a fiduciary duty in Patton, where we held that “[u]ndoubtedly the
    malicious suppression of dividends is a wrong akin to breach of trust, for which the courts will afford
    a 
    remedy.” 279 S.W.2d at 854
    . In light of Patton and the mainstream approach in American
    52
    See Centro Empresarial Cempresa S.A. v. Am. Movil, S.A.B. de C.V., 
    952 N.E.2d 995
    , 1001 (N.Y. 2011);
    U.S. Bank N.A. v. Cold Spring Granite Co., 802 N.W .2d 363, 381 (Minn. 2011); McLaughlin v. Schenck, 
    220 P.3d 146
    ,
    155 (Utah 2009); 
    Barth, 659 N.E.2d at 561
    n.6 (Ind. 1995); 
    Crosby, 548 N.E.2d at 221
    (Ohio 1989); Toner v. Balt.
    Envelope Co., 
    498 A.2d 642
    , 648 (Md. 1985); 
    Masinter, 262 S.E.2d at 438
    (W . Va. 1980); see also D & J Tire, Inc. v.
    Hercules Tire & Rubber Co., 
    598 F.3d 200
    , 206 (5th Cir. 2010) (applying Connecticut law); Fiederlein v. Boutselis, 
    952 N.E.2d 847
    , 860 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011); Walta v. Gallegos Law Firm, P.C., 
    40 P.3d 449
    , 456–57 (N.M. Ct. App. 2001);
    Lazenby v. Godwin, 
    253 S.E.2d 489
    , 492 (N.C. Ct. App. 1979).
    24
    jurisprudence, Texas courts of appeals have determined on a case-by-case basis whether majority
    shareholders owe an informal fiduciary duty to minority shareholders of closely held corporations.53
    A key factor weighing in favor of a fiduciary duty is the extent to which the majority shareholders
    dominate control over a closely held corporation. Redmon v. Griffith, 
    202 S.W.3d 225
    , 237 (Tex.
    App.—Tyler 2006, pet. denied).
    Finally, the business judgment rule should not apply to these fiduciary duty claims. When
    we recognized a claim for breach of fiduciary duty in Patton, the majority shareholder was harming
    the minority shareholders but not the corporation itself, and we compelled a dividend to be paid to
    the minority 
    shareholders. 279 S.W.2d at 853
    , 857. Had the business judgment rule applied, we
    could not have compelled a dividend because there was no harm to the corporation.
    F. Application
    1. Oppression
    Rupe prevailed at trial on her shareholder oppression and fiduciary duty claims, and the trial
    court compelled a $7.3 million buyout. The court of appeals held there was sufficient evidence of
    shareholder oppression (and therefore did not reach the fiduciary duty issues), but the $7.3 million
    buyout failed to account for the minority shares’ lack of marketability and 
    control. 339 S.W.3d at 302
    . The jury charge defined oppression as:
    burdensome, harsh and wrongful conduct, a lack of probity and fair dealing in the
    affairs of the company to the prejudice of some of its members, or a visible departure
    53
    See, e.g., Redmon, 202 S.W .3d at 237; Willis, 118 S.W .3d at 31; Pabich v. Kellar, 71 S.W .3d 500, 504–05
    (Tex. App.— Fort W orth 2002, pet. denied); Hoggett v. Brown, 971 S.W .2d 472, 487–88 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
    Dist.] 1997, pet. denied); Fisher v. Yates, 953 S.W .2d 370, 378–79 (Tex. App.— Texarkana 1997, pet. denied); Gaither
    v. Moody, 528 S.W .2d 875, 877 (Tex. Civ. App.— Houston [14th Dist.] 1975, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
    25
    from the standards of fair dealing, and a violation of fair play on which every
    shareholder who entrusts her money to a company is entitled to rely.
    As previously addressed, this definition is more appropriate here than the reasonable expectations
    definition because Rupe inherited her shares and thus had no expectations when making a decision
    to invest.
    The jury found that Dennard, Ritchie, Lutes, and RIC all engaged in oppressive conduct. The
    jury also affirmatively answered special submissions that: (1) Dennard paid personal expenses from
    RIC corporate funds; (2) Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes offered Rupe a position on the board in
    exchange for her agreement not to sue a shareholder of RIC; (3) Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes’s
    buyout offers were oppressive; (4) Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes’s failure to permit Rupe to examine
    and copy corporate information was oppressive; (5) Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes owed Rupe a
    fiduciary duty; (6) Dennard, Ritchie, and Lutes breached their fiduciary duty; and (7) the fair value
    of Rupe’s shares was $7.3 million, not discounted for lack of marketability or control. The trial
    court entered judgment that compelled a buyout of Rupe’s shares for $7.3 million.
    Before assessing whether sufficient evidence supports the verdict, one must assess whether
    the submission was proper. In addition to submitting a broad-form question on oppression,54 the trial
    court asked the jury to resolve disputed facts. This submission was proper. If equitable remedies
    still exist (and the statute specifies they should), the trial court must know what conduct constitutes
    oppression in order to fashion the least harsh remedy requested to rectify that oppression. For
    example, if a majority shareholder either refused to pay dividends or issued a bargain buyout offer
    54
    Specifically, the jury was asked: “Do you find that the Defendants engaged in oppressive conduct to the rights
    of [Rupe] as a shareholder in Rupe Investment Corporation?”
    26
    and the jury simply answered “yes” to the broad-form question, the trial court sitting in equity would
    not know whether to compel a dividend or a buyout. Because the oppression statute expressly
    prefers equitable remedies, I believe the trial court’s submission of special issues to the jury here was
    appropriate.
    Having determined the trial court’s submission was proper, I also believe there is legally
    sufficient evidence supporting the findings of oppression. Because Rupe inherited her shares,
    oppression is defined as burdensome, harsh, or wrongful conduct.55 There is evidence of the
    following conduct the jury found to be oppressive: (1) making inferior offers of $1 million and $1.7
    million; (2) warning Rupe that RIC would be the only purchaser of her stock; (3) refusing to meet
    with prospective purchasers of Rupe’s shares; and (4) Dennard paying personal expenses from
    corporate funds.56 Regarding the offers to purchase, Ritchie testified he thought Rupe was not
    entitled to a “fair offer.” And the $1.7 million valuation reflected discounts beyond those applied
    to previous redemptions of minority shares.                 Regarding the refusal to meet with prospective
    purchasers, Dennard admitted: (1) she disagreed with Ritchie’s refusal to meet with prospective
    purchasers; (2) she would want to meet with the president of a closely held corporation before
    investing; (3) the request for Ritchie to meet with prospective purchasers was reasonable; and
    (4) such a refusal would be “oppressive to a minority shareholder.” Lutes also agreed that it would
    be reasonable for Rupe to expect that RIC would help her sell her stock “[t]o the extent possible,”
    55
    
    See supra
    notes 40–42 and accompanying text.
    56
    Despite never having been an RIC employee, Dennard receives health insurance from RIC, receives $2,500
    per month, and receives secretarial assistance at home on a weekly basis to balance her personal checkbook and pay her
    bills. No minority shareholder receives similar benefits.
    27
    and that “[i]t would have been possible” for Ritchie to have met with potential purchasers.
    Accordingly, there is some evidence to support the jury’s findings of oppression.
    2. Remedy
    Having concluded there is legally sufficient evidence of oppression, the question becomes
    what remedy is appropriate. Rupe primarily requested a buyout and alternatively requested
    dissolution if the buyout was inadequate. Dissolution is undoubtedly harsher than a buyout. See
    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.”). But the statute does not allow for dissolution based on oppression. Former
    art. 7.05. Thus, there is no need to compare the harshness of a buyout to a remedy Rupe never
    requested.57
    Because I agree with the court of appeals that it was error for the trial court to instruct the
    jury to not discount the value of Rupe’s stock for its lack of marketability or minority status, I would
    affirm its judgment remanding for a redetermination of the amount of the 
    buyout. 339 S.W.3d at 302
    . Under Rule of Appellate Procedure 44.1(b), a new trial may be ordered on a separable part of
    a proceeding, but a separate trial on unliquidated damages is improper if liability is contested. TEX .
    R. APP . P. 44.1(b). Here, the amount of the buyout is an equitable remedy rather than a measure of
    57
    The Court observes that the court of appeals did not analyze whether a buyout is less harsh than a
    rehabilitative receiver. __ S.W .3d at __. But Rupe never requested a rehabilitative receiver. And the court of appeals
    actually assessed the alleged harshness of the buyout and determined the trial court did not abuse its discretion in light
    of RIC’s $152 million net sales and $55 million in assets. 339 S.W .3d at 298–99. It would seem premature for the court
    of appeals to fully assess the comparative harshness of a buyout when it remanded for a recalculation of that amount.
    28
    unliquidated damages, and a retrial on the amount of the buyout alone is separable without unfairness
    to the parties.58
    III. Conclusion
    In sum, I cannot agree that a proper construction of the shareholder oppression statute is that
    the statute extinguishes the very remedies it expressly prefers. Uniformly, courts in Texas and
    beyond have held that less harsh remedies at law and equity are available, such as a court-ordered
    buyout. Under the time-honored definitions of oppression, there is some evidence that the majority
    shareholders here engaged in burdensome, harsh, and wrongful conduct by (1) making inferior
    buyout offers; (2) warning Rupe that RIC would be the only purchaser of her stock; (3) withholding
    corporate information; (4) refusing to meet with prospective purchasers of Rupe’s shares; and
    (5) paying Dennard’s personal expenses with corporate funds. RIC’s chairman even admitted that
    refusing to meet with prospective purchasers was oppressive. But because the valuation of Rupe’s
    shares failed to account for their lack of marketability or control, I would affirm the judgment of the
    court of appeals, which remanded to the trial court for a redetermination of the amount of the buyout.
    Because the Court renders judgment that Rupe take nothing on her valid shareholder oppression
    claim, I respectfully dissent.
    58
    Rupe’s alternative basis of relying on the fiduciary duty claim would not affect that remand for a retrial.
    Assuming a buyout is the appropriate remedy for the breach of fiduciary duty here, the buyout calculation still failed to
    account for the shares’ lack of marketability or control.
    29
    ____________________________________
    Eva M. Guzman
    Justice
    Opinion Delivered: June 20, 2014
    30
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-0447

Citation Numbers: 443 S.W.3d 856, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 771, 2014 WL 2788335, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 500

Judges: Boyd, Hecht, Green, Johnson, Lehrmann, Devine, Guzman, Willett, Brown

Filed Date: 6/20/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (34)

Barth v. Barth , 1995 Ind. LEXIS 217 ( 1995 )

Patton v. Nicholas , 154 Tex. 385 ( 1955 )

Smith v. Atlantic Properties, Inc. , 12 Mass. App. Ct. 201 ( 1981 )

Central Standard Life Insurance v. Davis , 10 Ill. 2d 566 ( 1957 )

Delaney v. Georgia-Pacific Corp. , 278 Or. 305 ( 1977 )

Davis v. Sheerin , 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 1693 ( 1988 )

Masinter v. Webco Co. , 164 W. Va. 241 ( 1980 )

Willis v. Donnelly , 49 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 661 ( 2006 )

Kisner v. Coffey , 418 So. 2d 58 ( 1982 )

Toner v. Baltimore Envelope Co. , 304 Md. 256 ( 1985 )

Colt v. Mt. Princeton Trout Club, Inc. , 2003 Colo. App. LEXIS 273 ( 2003 )

Columbia Medical Center of Las Colinas, Inc. v. Hogue , 51 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1220 ( 2008 )

Brenner v. Berkowitz , 134 N.J. 488 ( 1993 )

McCauley v. Tom McCauley & Son, Inc. , 104 N.M. 523 ( 1986 )

Maddox v. Norman , 206 Mont. 1 ( 1983 )

Edenbaum v. Schwarcz-Osztreicherne , 165 Md. App. 233 ( 2005 )

Scott v. Trans-System, Inc. , 64 P.3d 1 ( 2003 )

Walta v. Gallegos Law Firm, P.C. , 131 N.M. 544 ( 2001 )

Baker v. Commercial Body Builders, Inc. , 264 Or. 614 ( 1973 )

Fix v. Fix Material Co., Inc. , 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2074 ( 1976 )

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