Q Is there a law allowing us to conduct a meeting without a quorum reached? We
need more than 50 percent of the vote and certain shareholders refuse to attend
the meetings. We don’t have a co-op board and can not elect one. The old board members, still in
place, have moved out of state, and we can not hold elections. Housing court
ruled that we were to get a new board in place by the beginning of the year.
—Harlem Owner
A “Unfortunately, according to the New York State Business Corporation Law and your
bylaws, a quorum is necessary at a meeting of shareholders in order to elect a
board of directors,” explains Geoffrey R. Mazel, an attorney with the Manhattan-based law firm of
Hankin & Mazel, PLLC. There are no exceptions to this law. A quorum is usually defined in your bylaws
and is most commonly fifty percent of the outstanding shares present at a
meeting. A quorum may be reduced to a lower number, but this requires a
shareholder vote to amend the bylaws. It sounds like a serious situation in
light of the fact that your shareholder can not get a board elected, and the
board is not functioning.
“Based on your question, it sounds like litigation has been commenced in an
attempt to cure this situation. The New York State Supreme Court is empowered
to call shareholder meetings when the court is petitioned by aggrieved
shareholders. If such a meeting is court-ordered it is incumbent upon aggrieved
shareholders to collect sufficient proxies to reach a quorum. If this does not
work, you may consider resorting to the drastic remedy of petitioning the court
for the appointment of a court appointed receiver to manage your property,
until such time, and the cooperative can get a board elected to function
properly. This is a drastic measure and could prove costly to the shareholders.”
While there is no easy answer, but most prudent course is to motivate the
shareholders to attend the shareholder meeting in person or by proxy.
Otherwise, it could prove costly in more ways than one to the entire
cooperative.
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