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Full Opinion
Michael H. MEISELMAN
v.
Ira S. MEISELMAN, Lawrence A. Poston, Paul Edward Lloyd, Eastern Federal Corporation, Radio City Building, Inc., Center Theatre Building, Inc., Colony Shopping Center, Inc., General Shopping Centers, Inc., M & S Shopping Centers of Florida, Inc., Martha Washington Homes, Inc., and Try-Wilk Realty Company, Inc.
Supreme Court of North Carolina.
*552 Fleming, Robinson, Bradshaw & Hinson, P.A. by Russell M. Robinson, II, Charlotte, for plaintiff-appellee.
Blakeney, Alexander & Machen by J.W. Alexander, Jr., Charlotte, for individual defendants.
Farris, Mallard & Underwood, P.A. by Ray S. Farris and David B. Hamilton, Charlotte, for corporate defendants.
*553 FRYE, Justice.
In this appeal, we must determine whether Michael Meiselman, a minority shareholder with a substantial percentage of the outstanding stock in a group of familyowned close corporations, is entitled to relief under N.C.G.S. § 55-125(a)(4) and N.C. G.S. § 55-125.1, the statutes granting trial courts the authority to order dissolution or another more appropriate remedy when "reasonably necessary" for the protection of the "rights or interests" of the complaining shareholder. In so doing, we will articulate for the first time the analysis a trial court is to apply in resolving suits brought under these two statutes. We must also determine whether the trial court erred in concluding that Ira Meiselman, Michael's brother, committed "no actionable breach of fiduciary responsibility" as an officer or director of the defendant corporations through his sole ownership of the stock in a corporation holding a management contract with one of the family corporations. After outlining in detail the pertinent facts in this case and the development of the law in the area of corporate dissolution, we will address first the question of whether the trial court erred in denying Michael's claim for relief under N.C.G.S. § 55-125(a)(4) and N.C.G.S. § 55-125.1.
I.
Michael Meiselman, the plaintiff and complaining minority shareholder in this action, and Ira Meiselman, one of the defendants in this action, are brothers. Michael, the older of the two, was born in 1932 and has never married. Ira was born ten years later. He is married and has two children. The two men are the only surviving children of Mr. H.B. Meiselman, who immigrated to the United States from Austria in 1913. Over the years, Mr. Meiselman accumulated substantial wealth through his development of several family business enterprises. Specifically, Mr. Meiselman invested in and developed movie theaters and real estate. Several of the enterprises were merged into Eastern Federal Corporation [hereinafter referred to as Eastern Federal], a close corporation, most of the stock of which is owned by Ira and Michael. In addition, there are seven other corporations[1] which, together with Eastern Federal, comprise the Meiselman family business and are the corporate defendants in this case.
Beginning in 1951, Mr. Meiselman started a series of inter vivos transfers of corporate stock in the various corporations which, generally speaking, he divided equally between his two sons. However, in March 1971 Mr. Meiselman transferred 83,072 shares of stock in Eastern Federal to Ira, while Michael received only 1,966 shares in the corporation. The next month Michael transferred the control of his stock in the family corporations to his father in trust, a trust Michael could revoke without his father's consent only if he married a Jewish woman.[2]
The effect, then, of these transfers of stock from Mr. Meiselman to his two sons was to give Ira, the younger son, majority shareholder status in Eastern Federal while relegating Michael, the older son, to the position of minority shareholder. In addition, Ira owns a controlling interest in all of the other family corporations except General Shopping Centers, Inc., the corporation in which he and Michael hold an equal number of shares.
Michael owns 29.82 percent of the total shares in the family corporations, although he contends that once the shares attributed to intercorporate ownership (shares the various corporations own in each other) are distributed between himself and Ira, his ownership would amount to about 43 percent of the family business. The book value of all of the corporations was $11,168,778 as of 31 December 1978. The book value of *554 Michael's shares in all of the corporations using the 29.82 percent figure, was $3,330,303 as of that date.
As is true of many close corporations, the two shareholders—Michael and Ira—were employed by the family corporations. Michael began working for the family business in 1956 and Ira began nine years later in 1965. The extent of Michael's participation in the family corporations from 1961 until 1973 is not clear. Michael contends that he has worked continuously for the family business except for an interim of about one and one-half years. Ira would characterize Michael's participation differently. At any rate, both sides agree that from 1973 until 1979 Michael was employed by the family business. It is also clear that Ira fired Michael in September 1979, less than one month after Michael filed suit against Ira in connection with Ira's sole ownership of the stock in a corporation which held a management contract with Eastern Federal.
In the certified letter Ira sent to Michael informing Michael that he was being fired, Ira also notified his brother that his car insurance, his hospital insurance and his life insurance policies were all being terminated. In addition, Ira asked his brother in that same letter to return his "Air Travel credit card" and "any other corporate cards you might have as any further use of them is not authorized." Ira then sent his brother a second certified letter demanding payment within ten days to Eastern Federal of Michael's note of $61,500 plus interest of $2,028.66 and the balance of Michael's open account, $19,000. Furthermore, Lawrence A. Poston, Vice President and Treasurer of Eastern Federal stated that the effect of the letter terminating Michael's employment "also was to terminate Michael's participation in the profit-sharing trust."
In his deposition, Ira essentially admitted that he fired his brother in response to the lawsuit Michael had brought challenging Ira's sole ownership of Republic Management Corporation [hereinafter referred to as Republic], the corporation with which Eastern Federal had contracted to provide management services. However, Ira indicated that Michael's loss of employment was only an incidental effect of his termination of the employment contract between the two corporations, a corporate decision he felt was justified in light of the threat of continuing litigation on this matter. Ira stated that "[t]he purpose and the effect of the letter [terminating Michael's employment] were principally to advise [Michael] that we were terminating the arrangement between Eastern Federal and Republic and, correspondingly, that it would alter, affect, or eliminate his source of compensation as applied to Republic."
Republic was formed in 1973. As Ira stated, Republic was a "successor to two, or possibly three, previous companies of the same genre that had operated within the family framework back to 1951." Ira also stated that he did not own all of the stock in those predecessor corporations, that "there were some that I remember in the early years that Michael might have owned 100% of that I didn't." The record indicates that Michael was one of the initial shareholders in 1951 of Fran-Mack Management, Inc., one of those predecessor corporations and that Ira did not become a shareholder in that particular corporation until 31 December 1963.
According to Ira, the function of Republic "was to provide a means whereby, primarily now, administrative and primarily home office expenses utilized on behalf of all the companies, or all the individual operating units, were apportioned back to those individual operating units or operating companies." In short, Republic was "nothing more than a tool" through which the administrative costs incurred in operating the various Meiselman business units—including over 30 theaters—were apportioned.
As noted above, Republic agreed to perform these management services as a result of a contract entered into between it and Eastern Federal. Specifically, Republic agreed to perform the management services in exchange for 5.5 percent of Eastern Federal's theater admissions and concession sales. Although Republic paid Michael an *555 annual salary from 1973 until he was fired in 1979, Michael did not own any of the stock in the management corporation; Ira owned all of it. Although Republic earned profits some years while losing money in others, the net result was that it had retained earnings of over $65,000, earnings which only Ira as sole shareholder in Republic would enjoy and in which Michael claims he is entitled to share. It is this ownership to which Michael objects and upon which he bases his shareholder's derivative claim that Ira has breached the fiduciary duty he owes to the corporate defendants.
We turn now to an examination of the tenor of the relationship existing between Michael and Ira. In his brief, Ira contends "[t]he Record on Appeal reflects no bitterness and hostility between Michael and Ira, other than that which Michael generated after Mr. Meiselman's death in an effort to secure a redistribution of his father's patrimony." Further, he contends that "Michael was never denied participation in the management of the corporate defendants," that, on the contrary, Michael "voluntarily limited his participation in their affairs."
On the other hand, Michael vehemently denies Ira's characterization of their relationship and of his participation in the management of the corporations. In his deposition, Michael stated that his job has been "out in the field", and that when he had a recommendation to make he was, for the most part, to report it to his brother. Michael indicated that he was allowed to participate in the management of Eastern Federal in this manner apparently until the corporation entered into the management contract with Republic at issue here. Michael characterized this alleged change in his participation of the management of Eastern Federal as follows:
My brother had the majority of stock in Eastern Federal Corporation before this management contract. As to whether he had the final say in the control of Eastern Federal Corporation, that is the point. He might have been the final say, but when Republic Management started, I lost all say-so because he wouldn't listen to anybody.
In addition, Michael contends that, among other things, he has not been "allowed to even come up to the office and have [sic] been discouraged in getting the full details as to what they [the companies] borrow"; that Ira "will not let me walk in the office where the film buyer is and talk to him, not even [to] help"; that "theaters are being sold without my knowledge and theaters are being built without my knowledge"; and that "my brother solely and without my consent, not only develops but closes, sells, does anything he wants with all of the properties." Finally, Michael claims that although he previously worked 60 to 70 hours a week, he has been "discouraged systematically over a number of years to where I cannot exert the time and effort that I want to."
In examining the record we are struck by the tone of Ira's comments when referring to his dealings with his brother. Indeed, many of his statements indicate that although Michael may not have been actively prevented from entering the corporate offices, his participation in the decision-making carried on within those offices was less than welcome. For example, in testifying that Michael has never been barred from the home offices of the company, Ira stated that Michael "has exercised the privilege of going there on frequent occasions, unannounced, whenever he felt like it." (Emphasis added). He also stated that "[w]e have never failed, when he is entitled to notice, to give him adequate notice of stockholders' meetings." (Emphasis added). Furthermore, in a letter to Michael's lawyer concerning, among other things, the possibility of Michael's serving on the boards of directors of the family enterprises, Ira's lawyer stated that, "[w]e have no desire to see the productive efforts of the boards be affected by possibly allowing them to function as a forum for airing personal hurts and slights; and we all recognize that the course of business activity for the companies is not going to be altered by Michael's representation."
*556 Apparently in an attempt to further support his contention that Michael has never been excluded from participating in the management of the corporations, Ira testified that two corporate decisions were made or changed on the basis of objections Michael had lodged. In describing the abandonment of a proposed merger to which Michael had objected, Ira testified as follows:
I don't mean to belittle him. In one of those instances, as a sign we were not completely ignoring him, we made some changes. Specifically, I know of one single complaint and that was a proposed merger of some of these defendants [in] 1976, regarding a real estate company similar to our previous merger with Eastern Federal. Unfortunately, my timing was very poor because he was taking his first what he called his pre-test, I'm not sure, I guess it's preparation for the bar exam. He did very poorly with it and it came at the same time, and he just raised cain with me.
The second corporate action to which Michael objected was Ira's sole ownership of the stock in Republic. Ira contends that he terminated the management contract between Republic and Eastern Federal (and in so doing fired Michael) in response to Michael's objections to Ira's sole ownership of Republic. We note, however, that in responding to Michael's objections, Ira terminated the employment contract between the two corporations, and, thus, Michael's employment, even though it was Ira's sole ownership of the stock in Republic and not the contract between Republic and Eastern Federal which was the source of their disagreement.
Perhaps most indicative of the tenor of the relationship between the two brothers is Ira's comment that "[y]es, it is my position in this case that my brother, Michael, suffers as stated there [in defendant's brief] from crippling mental disorders and that was a reason that my father put me in control of the family corporations." Apparently in support of his allegations that his brother suffers from "crippling mental disorders", Ira presented evidence of an argument Michael had with his father which took place about 20 years ago during which Mr. Meiselman castigated Michael for having a non-Jewish woman at a family function. In addition, Ira testified to another fight which occurred between himself and Michael after he had failed to invite Michael to a football game to which all of the males in the family traditionally had been invited.
Finally, it appears the history of this litigation itself indicates a breakdown of the personal relationship between Michael and Ira. In June 1978, about two months after their father's death, Michael and Ira began negotiations in an effort to work out their differences. Over one year later, in August 1979, Michael filed suit. He was fired the next month. In short, this litigation and the tensions inherent in such activity have been going on for over four years now.
We turn now to the history of this litigation as it developed in the courts. In his amended complaint, Michael asked that the trial court "dissolve the Corporate Defendants under the provisions of G.S. 55-125(a) or, in the alternative, order such other relief under the provisions of G.S. 55-125.1 as the Court may deem just and equitable" because such relief is "reasonably necessary" for the protection of Michael's "rights and interests." Before this Court, Michael is requesting relief specifically under N.C.G.S. § 55-125.1(a)(4), a buy-out at fair value of Michael's interest in the corporate defendants. He is not seeking dissolution.
With respect to the derivative claim he brought asserting that Ira had breached the fiduciary duty he owes to the corporate defendants through his sole ownership of the stock in Republic, Michael asked that the "profits wrongfully diverted from the Corporate Defendants into Republic Management Corporation" be recovered.
The trial court denied both of Michael's claims. Michael then appealed to the Court of Appeals. In its well written majority opinion, the Court of Appeals interpreted N.C.G.S. § 55-125(a)(4) as authorizing liquidation in cases where the complaining *557 shareholder has shown that "basic `fairness' compels dissolution." Meiselman v. Meiselman, supra, 58 N.C.App. at 766, 295 S.E.2d at 254-55. The Court of Appeals concluded that the complaining shareholder is not required to show "bad faith, mismanagement or wrongful conduct, but only real harm." Id. In finding "a plethora of evidence to suggest that Ira's actions have irreparably harmed Michael," the Court of Appeals further concluded that the trial court "misapplied the applicable law and abused its discretion by concluding that relief, other than dissolution, under G.S. 55-125.1 was not reasonably necessary for Michael's protection." Id. at 772, 295 S.E.2d at 258 (emphasis in original). In so doing it reversed the trial court judgment and remanded the case to the trial court "for the determination of an appropriate remedy under G.S. 55-125.1 that is reasonably necessary to protect Michael's rights and interests." Id. at 775-776, 295 S.E.2d at 260.
In addition, the Court of Appeals also determined that the trial court erred in concluding that Ira had not breached the fiduciary duty he owes to the corporate defendants through his sole ownership of Republic. It reversed the judgment of the trial court on this derivative claim and remanded the case to the trial court "for entry of judgment on behalf of the defendant corporation against Ira, as sole owner of Republic, in the total amount of the profits accumulated to date in Republic plus interest and cost of this action." Id.
Judge Hill dissented in this case on both issues. Therefore, defendants appeal to this Court as a matter of right under N.C. G.S. § 7A-30(2).
II.
We note at the outset that the enterprises with which we are dealing are close corporations, not publicly held corporations. This distinction is crucial because the two types of corporations are functionally quite different. Indeed, the commentators all appear to agree that "[c]lose corporations are often little more than incorporated partnerships." Comment, Oppression as a Statutory Ground for Corporate Dissolution, 1965 Duke L.J. 128, 138 (1965) [hereinafter cited as Comment, Oppression]. See also 2 F. O'Neal, Close Corporations § 9.02 (2d ed. 1971); Hetherington and Dooley, Illiquidity and Exploitation: A Proposed Statutory Solution to the Remaining Close Corporation Problem, 63 Va.L.Rev. 1, 2 (1977); Israels, The Sacred Cow of Corporate Existence: Problems of Deadlock and Dissolution, 19 U.Chi.L.Rev. 778, 778-79 (1952); Comment, Deadlock and Dissolution in the Close Corporation: Has the Sacred Cow Been Butchered?, 58 Neb.L.Rev. 791, 796 (1979) [hereinafter cited as Comment, Deadlock and Dissolution].
Israels, a recognized expert in this area, succinctly defines a close corporation as a "corporate entity typically organized by an individual, or a group of individuals, seeking the recognized advantages of incorporation, limited liability, perpetual existence and easy transferability of interests—but regarding themselves basically as partners and seeking veto powers as among themselves much more akin to the partnership relation than to the statutory scheme of representative corporate government." Israels, supra, at 778-79.
This characterization of close corporations as little more than "incorporated partnerships" rests primarily on the fact that the "relationship between the participants [in a close corporation], like that among partners, is one which requires close cooperation and a high degree of good faith and mutual respect ...." 2 F. O'Neal, Close Corporations § 9.02. See also Hetherington and Dooley, supra, at 2; Note, Corporations—Dissolution—Denial of Right to Participate in Management of Close Corporation Entitles Shareholder to Liquidation, 74 Harv.L.Rev. 1461, 1463 (1961) [hereinafter cited as Note, Corporations—Dissolution]. Indeed, one commentator noted that "[a]n organizational structure of this nature—in which the investment interests are interwoven with continuous, often daily, interaction among the principals—necessarily requires substantial trust among the individuals." *558 Comment, Deadlock and Dissolution, supra, at 795.
Professor O'Neal, perhaps the foremost authority on close corporations, points out that many close corporations are companies based on personal relationships that give rise to certain "reasonable expectations" on the part of those acquiring an interest in the close corporation. Those "reasonable expectations" include, for example, the parties' expectation that they will participate in the management of the business or be employed by the company. O'Neal, Close Corporations: Existing Legislation and Recommended Reform, 33 Bus.Law 873, 885 (1978). Other commentators have also noted that those investing in close corporations have some of these same "reasonable expectations." Afterman, Statutory Protection for Oppressed Minority Shareholders: A Model for Reform, 55 Va.L.Rev. 1043, 1064 (1969); Comment, Oppression, supra, at 141; Comment, Deadlock and Dissolution, supra, at 795; Comment, Dissolution Under the California Corporations Code: A Remedy for Minority Shareholders, 22 U.C.L.A.L. Rev. 595, 616 (1975) [hereinafter cited as Comment, Dissolution Under the California Corporations Code].
Thus, when personal relations among the participants in a close corporation break down, the "reasonable expectations" the participants had, for example, an expectation that their employment would be secure, or that they would enjoy meaningful participation in the management of the business—become difficult if not impossible to fulfill. In other words, when the personal relationships among the participants break down, the majority shareholder, because of his greater voting power, is in a position to terminate the minority shareholder's employment and to exclude him from participation in management decisions.
Some may argue that the minority shareholder should have bargained for greater protection before agreeing to accept his minority shareholder position in a close corporation. However, the practical realities of this particular business situation oftentimes do not allow for such negotiations. In his article, Special Characteristics, Problems, and Needs of the Close Corporation, 1969 U.Ill.L.F. 1 (1969), Professor Hetherington, another recognized authority in this field, explains the situation as follows:
... the circumstances under which a party takes a minority stock position in a close corporation vary widely. Many involve situations where the minority party, because of lack of awareness of the risks, or because of the weakness of his bargaining position, fails to negotiate for protection. Probably a common instance of this kind occurs where an employee or an outsider is given an opportunity to buy stock in a close corporation wholly or substantially owned by a single stockholder or a small group of associates, often a family. Typically, the controlling individual or group retains a substantial majority position. The opportunity to buy into the business is highly valued by the recipient; his enthusiasm and weak bargaining position make it unlikely almost to a certainty that he will ask for— let alone insist upon—protection for his position as a minority stockholder. Purchases of stock in such situations are likely to be arranged without either party consulting a lawyer. The result is the assumption of a minority stock position without, or with only limited, appreciation of the risks involved.
Id. at 17-18 (footnote omitted).
In short, then, the "minority shareholder who acquired his shares to secure his position with the firm may have lacked sufficient bargaining power to force the majority to agree to terms which would enable him to protect his interests." Comment, Dissolution Under the California Corporations Code, supra, at 603-04. Indeed, as one commentator notes, "close corporations are often formed by friends or family members who simply may not believe that disagreements could ever arise." Id. Furthermore, when a minority shareholder receives his shares in a close corporation from another in the form of a gift or inheritance, as did plaintiff here, the minority shareholder never had the opportunity to negotiate for *559 any sort of protection with respect to the "reasonable expectations" he had or hoped to enjoy in the close corporation.
Unfortunately, when dissension develops in such a situation, as Professor O'Neal notes, "American courts traditionally have been reluctant to interfere in the internal affairs of corporations ...." F. O'Neal, Oppression of Minority Shareholders § 9.04, at 582 (1975). This reluctance, as applied to a minority shareholder holding an interest in a close corporation, places the minority shareholder in a remediless situation. As Professor O'Neal points out, when the personal relationship among the participants in a close corporation breaks down, the minority shareholder has neither the power to dissolve the business unit at will, as does a partner in a partnership, nor does he have the "way out" which is open to a shareholder in a publicly held corporation, the opportunity to sell his shares on the open market. 2 F. O'Neal, Close Corporations § 9.02. Thus, the illiquidity of a minority shareholder's interest in a close corporation renders him vulnerable to exploitation by the majority shareholders. E.g., Hetherington and Dooley, supra, at 3-6. Professor Hetherington, succinctly outlines in one of his articles the uniquely vulnerable position a minority shareholder occupies in a close corporation:
The right of the majority to control the enterprise achieves a meaning and has an impact in close corporations that it has in no other major form of business organization under our law. Only in the close corporation does the power to manage carry with it the de facto power to allocate the benefits of ownership arbitrarily among the shareholders and to discriminate against a minority whose investment is imprisoned in the enterprise. The essential basis of this power in the close corporation is the inability of those so excluded from the benefits of proprietorship to withdraw their investment at will. The power to withdraw one's capital from a publicly held corporation or from a partnership is unqualified in the sense that the participant's right is not dependent upon misconduct by the management or upon the occurrence of any other event. The shareholder or partner can withdraw his capital for any or no reason.
Hetherington, supra, at 21.
According to Professor O'Neal, the "two principal conceptualistic barriers to the courts' granting relief to aggrieved shareholders" in such a situation are: "(1) the principle of majority rule in corporate management and (2) the business judgment rule." F. O'Neal, Oppression of Minority Shareholders § 9.04 at 582. In explaining the inapplicability of the legal construct firmly established in corporate law that when out voted the minority must submit to the will of the majority, he writes as follows:
Apparently without close examination, courts accord the principle of majority rule the same sanctity in corporate enterprises, including small businesses, that it enjoys in the political world. The principle of majority rule is in traditional legal thought a firmly established attribute of the corporate form. Yet not uncommonly a person, unsophisticated in business and financial matters, invests all his assets in a closely held enterprise with an expectation, often reasonable under the circumstances even in the absence of express contract, that he will be a key employee in the company and will have a voice in business decisions. Thus, when courts apply the principle of majority rule in close corporations, they often disappoint the reasonable expectations of the participants.
Id. at 582-83.
In short, then, when the courts fail to provide a remedy for a minority shareholder whose "reasonable expectations" have been disappointed in the close corporation situation, the court, in effect, "compels a continuation of the association by legal constraint—what was once called `togetherness by injunction'—a prospect which scarcely seems a desirable policy goal." Hetherington, supra, at 29. In other words, an "insistence that the antagonistic parties resolve their differences within the corporate *560 framework" would seem "inconsistent with the traditional hesitance of courts of equity to enforce unwelcome personal relationships." Note, Corporations—Dissolution, supra, at 1463.
Apparently in response to these commentators' uniform calls for reform in this area of corporate law, many state legislatures have enacted statutes giving the tribunals in their states the power to grant relief to minority shareholders under more liberal circumstances. For example, at least seven states have given their courts the authority to grant dissolution of a corporation when the acts of the directors or those in control of the corporation are "oppressive" to the shareholders. Ill.Ann.Stat. ch. 32, § 157.86(a)(3) (Smith-Hurd Cum.Supp.1983); Md. Corps. & Ass'ns Code Ann. § 3-413(b)(2) (1975); Mich.Comp.Laws Ann. § 450.1825(1) (1973); N.J.Stat.Ann. § 14A:12-7(1)(c) (West Cum.Supp.1983); N.Y.Bus.Corp.Law § 1104-a(a)(1) (McKinney Cum.Supp.1983); S.C.Code Ann. § 33-21-150(a)(4)(B) (Law. Co-op.Cum.Supp.1982); Va.Code § 13.1-94(a)(2) (1978).
In interpreting the term "oppressive" as used in its dissolution statute, a New York Trial Court recently held in a case of first impression that where two controlling shareholders discharged the minority shareholder as an employee and officer of the two corporations in which he had an interest, thus severely damaging the minority shareholder's "reasonable expectations", their actions were deemed to be "oppressive" under New York Law. In re the Application of Topper, 107 Misc.2d 25, 433 N.Y.S.2d 359 (1980).
Furthermore, the Supreme Court of Illinois affirmed a Superior Court decree of dissolution where one shareholder was deemed to have engaged in "oppressive" conduct within the meaning of its dissolution statute in depriving the other shareholders of participation in the management of the corporation. Gidwitz v. Lanzit Corrugated Box Co., 20 Ill.2d 208, 220, 170 N.E.2d 131, 138 (1960). In defining the term "oppressive" in Gidwitz, the Supreme Court of Illinois wrote that the "word does not necessarily savor of fraud, and the absence of `mismanagement, or misapplication of assets,' does not prevent a finding that the conduct of the dominant directors or officers has been oppressive." Id. at 214-15, 170 N.E.2d at 135. The court also stated that the term is "not synonymous with `illegal' and `fraudulent'". Id. See also Afterman, supra, at 1063 ("oppression" is "probably best defined in terms of the reasonable expectations of the minority shareholders in the particular circumstances at hand"); Comment, Oppression, supra at 137-38 ("oppression" provision of corporate dissolution statutes "may be expected to afford relief in a variety of situations that range from exclusion from management in a family corporation to deliberate destruction of a subsidiary by the parent corporation"); Annot. 56 A.L.R.3d 358 (1974). Indeed, one commentator noted that the result in Gidwitz "seems responsive to the special characteristics of a close corporation, the dissolution of which has increasingly been recognized as desirable whenever its shareholders have ceased to cooperate." Note, Corporations—Dissolution, supra, at 1463.
Similarly, at least three states have statutes authorizing a court to grant dissolution when those in control of the corporation are guilty of treating the corporate shareholders "unfairly". Cal.Corp.Code § 1800(b)(4) (West 1977) ("persistent unfairness"); Mich.Comp.Laws Ann. § 450.1825(1) (West 1973) ("wilfully unfair"); N.J.Stat.Ann. § 14A:12-7(1)(c) (West Cum.Supp.1983).
In helping to establish this growing trend toward enactment of more liberal grounds under which dissolution will be granted to a complaining shareholder, the legislature in this State enacted in 1955 N.C.G.S. § 55-125(a)(4), the statute granting superior court judges the "power to liquidate the assets and business of a corporation in an action by a shareholder when it is established" that "[l]iquidation is reasonably necessary for the protection of the rights or interests of the complaining shareholder". Two other states have similar statutes— California and New York. Cal.Corp.Code § 1800(b)(5) (West 1977) (formerly *561 § 4651(f)); N.Y.Bus.Corp.Law § 1104-a(b)(2) (McKinney Cum.Supp.1983). Indeed, one of the members of the drafting committee of the new Business Corporation Act, the Act which included N.C.G.S. § 55-125(a)(4), stated that in drafting the Act the committee "drew heavily on the Model Act of the American Bar Association and on the corporation laws of other states, particularly California and Ohio." Latty, The History, Purpose, Spirit and Philosophy of the New Act, North Carolina Corporation Manual (1960) (emphasis added). Furthermore, in commenting upon the new Act, Professor Latty stated that "[t]here would seem, then, to be no reason under the new Act for a court to approach the problem of liquidation of the business of a close corporation with substantially more conservatism than it would show in dissolving a partnership, free from any carry-over of the `sacred cow' tradition of corporate existence." Latty, The Close Corporation and the New North Carolina Business Corporation Act, 34 N.C.L.Rev. 432, 449-50 (1956).
In interpreting the provision of its corporate dissolution statute which provides that such relief will be ordered where "liquidation is reasonably necessary for the protection of the rights or interests" of the shareholders, a California Appellate Court affirmed in Stumpf v. C.E. Stumpf & Sons, Inc., 47 Cal.App.3d 230, 120 Cal.Rptr. 671 (1975), a trial court's conclusion that relief was appropriate when supported by the following evidence: "The hostility between the two brothers had grown so extreme that respondent severed contact with his family and was allowed no say in the operation of the business. After respondent's withdrawal from the business, he received no salary, dividends, or other revenue from his investment in the corporation." Id. at 235, 120 Cal.Rptr. at 675. See also In re the Application of Topper, 433 N.Y.S.2d at 366 ("rights and interests" of a minority shareholder in a close corporation "derive from the expectations of the parties and special circumstances that underlie the formation of close corporations").
In short, then, it appears that these new statutory schemes which permit involuntary dissolution of corporations pursuant to actions brought by minority shareholders— and which "virtually every state has"— "represent a concerted effort and recognition by the states that the perpetual existence of the corporate structure at common law is ill suited to the functional realities of the closely held corporation." Comment, Deadlock and Dissolution, supra at 793. However, it is important to recognize that the statutes in question apply to all corporations, not just "close" corporations.[3] Of course, "the rights or interests of the complaining shareholder" will vary according to the circumstances, including the circumstance of the nature of the corporation, whether public or a close corporation. Likewise, whether liquidation (or some alternate form of relief) "is reasonably necessary for the protection of" those "rights or interests" will also depend, to a great extent, on whether the corporation is a public corporation or a close corporation.
III.
With this background in mind, we turn now to the primary issue in this case: whether the trial court misapplied the applicable law by concluding that relief under N.C.G.S. § 55-125(a)(4) and N.C.G.S. § 55-125.1 *562 was not "reasonably necessary" for the protection of Michael's "rights or interests" in the defendant corporations. However, before we can decide whether the trial court "misapplied the applicable law" we must first determine what the applicable law is. In so doing, we will set out for the first time the analysis a trial court is to apply in determining whether relief should be granted to a complaining shareholder seeking relief under N.C.G.S. § 55-125(a)(4).
The basic question at issue is what standard we should adopt to determine whether a minority shareholder is entitled to dissolution or other relief. The statutes require a standard in which all of the circumstances surrounding the parties are considered in deciding whether relief should be granted and, if so, the nature and method of such relief.
When a shareholder brings suit seeking relief under N.C.G.S. § 55-125(a)(4) and N.C.G.S. § 55-125.1, he has the burden of proving that his "rights or interests" as a shareholder are being contravened. However, once the shareholder has established this, the trial court, in deciding whether to grant relief, "must exercise its equitable discretion, and consider the actual benefit and injury to [all of] the shareholders resulting from dissolution" or other possible relief. Henry George & Sons, Inc. v. Cooper-George, Inc., 95 Wash.2d 944, 632 P.2d 512, 516 (1981). "The question is essentially one for resolution through the familiar balancing process and flexible remedial resources of courts of equity." Id. To hold otherwise would allow a plaintiff to demand at will dissolution of a corporation or a forced buy out of his shares or other relief at the expense of the corporation and without regard to the rights and interests of the other shareholders.
Michael, as the complaining shareholder in this case, brought an action under N.C. G.S. § 55-125(a), the statutory provision which articulates four situations, one of which must be "established" before a Superior Court Judge has the power to liquidate a corporation in an action brought by a shareholder. Specifically, N.C.G.S. § 55-125(a) provides as follows:
The superior court shall have power to liquidate the assets and business of a corporation in an action by a shareholder when it is established that:
(1) The directors are deadlocked in the management of the corporate affairs and the shareholders are unable to break the deadlock, so that the business can no longer be conducted to the advantage of all the shareholders; or
(2) The shareholders are deadlocked in voting power, otherwise than by virtue of special provisions or arrangements designed to create veto power among the shareholders, and for that reason have been unable at two consecutive annual meetings to elect successors to directors whose terms had expired; or
(3) All of the present shareholders are parties to, or are transferees or subscribers of shares with actual notice of a written agreement, whether embodied in the charter or separate therefrom, entitling the complaining shareholder to liquidation or dissolution of the corporation at will or upon the occurrence of some event which has subsequently occurred; or
(4) Liquidation is reasonably necessary for the protection of the rights or interests of the complaining shareholder.
Michael alleged that he was entitled to relief under subsection (4); in effect, he is claiming that liquidation is "reasonably necessary" for the protection of his "rights or interests". However, before it can be determined whether, in any given case, it has been "established" that liquidation is "reasonably necessary" to protect the complaining shareholder's "rights or interests", the particular "rights or interests" of the complaining shareholder must be articulated. This is so because N.C.G.S. § 55-125(a)(4) refers to the "rights or interests" of "the complaining shareholder"; the statute does not refer to the "rights or interests" of shareholders generally. Therefore, the "rights or interests" which Michael has in these family-run, close corporations must be determined with reference to the specific *563 facts in this case. In so doing, we hold that a complaining shareholder's "rights or interests" in a close corporation include the "reasonable expectations" the complaining shareholder has in the corporation. These "reasonable expectations" are to be ascertained by examining the entire history of the participants' relationship. That history will include the "reasonable expectations" created at the inception of the participants' relationship; those "reasonable expectations" as altered over time; and the "reasonable expectations" which develop as the participants engage in a course of dealing in conducting the affairs of the corporation. The interests and views of the other participants must be considered in determining "reasonable expectations." The key is "reasonable." In order for plaintiff's expectations to be reasonable, they must be known to or assumed by the other shareholders and concurred in by them. Privately held expectations which are not made known to the other participants are not "reasonable." Only expectations embodied in understandings, express or implied, among the participants should be recognized by the court. Hillman, The Dissatisfied Participant in the Solvent Business Venture: A Consideration of the Relative Permanence of Partnerships and Close Corporations, 67 Minn.L.Rev. 1, 77-81 (1983). Also, only substantial expectations should be considered and this must be determined on a case-by-case basis. These requirements provide needed protection to potential defendants in this type case. Cf. Capitol Toyota v. Gerwin, Miss., 381 So.2d 1038 (1980). (Dissolution denied and relief limited to purchase of plaintiff's shares at book value as of the date he left employment with the corporation).
In short, then, the "rights or interests" of a shareholder in any given case will not necessarily be the same "rights or interests" of any other shareholder. An articulation of those "rights or interests" will necessarily require a case-by-case determination based on an examination of the entire history of the participants' relationship—an examination not only of the "expectations generated by the participants' original business bargain," but also of the "history of the participants' relationship as expectations alter and new expectations develop over the course of the participants' cooperative efforts in operating the business." O'Neal, supra, at 888. In so holding, we recognize the rule that Professor O'Neal suggests should be applied in a corporation based on a "personal relationship":
[A] court should give relief, dissolution or some other remedy to a minority shareholder whenever corporate managers or controlling shareholders act in a way that disappoints the minority shareholder's reasonable expectations, even though the acts of the managers or controlling shareholders fall within the literal scope of powers or rights granted them by the corporation act or the corporation's charter or bylaws.
The reasonable expectations of the shareholders, as they exist at the inception of the enterprise, and as they develop thereafter through a course of dealing concurred in by all of them, is perhaps the most reliable guide to a just solution of a dispute among shareholders, at least a dispute among shareholders in the typical close corporation. In a close corporation, the corporation's charter and bylaws almost never reflect the full business bargain of the participants.