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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wolff who wrote (68193)3/11/2001 11:18:41 PM
From: Cheeky Kid  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
Hey Wolff,

Those are rumor photos and rumors of what the new PDA is all about. However, the new look looks like it was designed by a Dutch designer. The Dutch are way ahead of the rest of the world when it comes to innovative style design.

I would argue that Handspring is over a generation behind Palm, the expansion is the main part of the Visor that makes it unique. Oh, and the guys that run Handspring invented the Palm Pilot.

I am eager to see the news tomorrow, and who knows, maybe the new Visor will be avalible in color too.

>Oh and don't forget the aftermarket, all the aftermarket supports is based on the that Unique V series shape and expansion port.<

That's what the expansion port is all about. The only aftermarket stuff to come out will be cases and stylii.

And....Here is a good company that makes great cases:
ebcases.com

>Keep up the good work Cheeky<

Thank you



To: Wolff who wrote (68193)3/11/2001 11:35:59 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
New data affirms Japan on the brink of financial collapse
Thursday, March 08, 2001

special.scmp.com

Japanese Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawa did not mince his words in parliament on March 8 when he described the condition of Japan's finances as "quite near a state of collapse". REUTERS/Susumu Takahashi

A sharp drop in machinery orders fanned worries about Japan's economy on Thursday, hours after Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawa warned parliament that the nation's finances were on the verge of collapse.
The one-two blow sapped the strength of the yen and showed that whoever replaces Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori, who is expected to quit soon, will be accepting a poisoned chalice.

The government's Economic and Social Research Institute said core private machinery orders, closely watched as a leading indicator of capital investment some six months hence, fell 11.8 percent in January from December.

That was almost double the 6.1 percent fall that economists polled by Reuters had forecast.

"It's a nasty negative surprise. We're seeing an erosion across the board -- both manufacturers and non-manufacturers are down sharply," said Takehiro Sato, an economist with Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.

Following Japan's first trade deficit in four years in January, the report provided further evidence of how slowing growth in the United States and Asia is hitting Japan's export-dependent manufacturers.

Overseas orders for electronic machinery, including semiconductor-related equipment, fell 38.2 percent year-on-year in January.

The government promptly lowered its assessment of machinery orders for the first time in five months and economists started to revise down their forecasts for future business investment -- the main motor behind Japan's modest growth last year.

"Corporate capital spending will slow sharply from the April-June quarter and continue to slow in the July-September quarter," said Takuji Okubo with Goldman Sachs.

"But we think it will improve again after that into 2002."

MIYAZAWA BOMBSHELL

A renewed economic downturn will make it harder for the government to rein in Japan's public debt, which has ballooned to become the largest in the industrial world, prompting credit rating agencies to strip Japan of its top-notch debt rating.

Miyazawa surprised markets with a frank assessment of the country's plight, telling parliament that a decade of massive deficit spending had wrought havoc with public finances.

"Japan's fiscal condition is quite near a state of collapse, and fundamental fiscal reform is necessary," he said.

Government officials tried to play down the remarks, saying Miyazawa had been warning of the long-term price Japan would have to pay if it failed to tighten its belt in time.

"I don't see a reason to interpret Miyazawa's comments as a signal for a change in fiscal policy," Vice Minister Toshiro Muto, the top bureaucrat at the Ministry of Finance (MOF), told a news conference.

AVOIDING RECESSION

The double dose of bad news overshadowed figures released earlier that suggested Japan probably escaped recession -- commonly defined as two consecutive quarters of shrinking output -- at the end of last year.

MOF said firms raised spending on capital equipment by 7.1 percent between October and December from the same period a year earlier.

The rise was stronger than expected and left economists confident that figures for gross domestic product (GDP) next Monday will show overall output expanded at a reasonable clip in the last three months of 2000 after a 0.6 percent drop in the July-September period.

"I would describe the Japanese economy as gradually decelerating rather than in a state of collapse," said Geoffrey Barker, chief economist for Asia at HSBC in Hong Kong.

POLITICAL PACKAGE

But other figures for February issued on Thursday provided more grist to the pessimists' mill.

Bank lending fell 3.6 percent from the same month a year earlier -- the 38th straight month of decline -- while wholesale prices were flat on the month and down 0.4 percent from a year earlier. Only money supply growth, at 2.7 percent, was slightly stronger than expected.

"Today's figures provide more bearish signs of the economy as a whole," said Shinichi Sato, manager of market research at Tokyo-Mitsubishi Securities.

Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party, anxious ahead of an election for the Upper House of parliament in July, is due to unveil a package of measures on Friday to prop up the economy and the stock market, which is languishing near 15-year lows.

The LDP is expected to keep up the heat on the Bank of Japan (BOJ) to relax its monetary policy further following two interest rate cuts in February within the space of three weeks.

The governor of the central bank, Masaru Hayami, signalled again on Thursday that he had not ruled out the possibility of cutting short-term interest rates, now at 0.15 percent, back to zero to avert the risk of a deflationary spiral.

"With the economy slowing, the economy has entered a phase that warrants enhanced attention to price developments," he told parliament.

The BOJ ended an 18-month experiment with zero rates last August, saying the threat of deflation was gone.

Richard Jerram of ING Barings said pressure on the BOJ would grow because a downturn in the MOF's business sentiment index presaged a fall in the BOJ's own closely watched "tankan" business confidence survey due out on April 2.

The MOF said sentiment at large firms for the January-March period deteriorated to a reading of plus 2.0 -- the lowest since the end of 1999 -- from plus 5.9 percent in the previous quarter.



To: Wolff who wrote (68193)3/12/2001 12:27:45 AM
From: Anthony@Pacific  Read Replies (8) | Respond to of 122087
 
This is the post probably ends my posting on SI, & I couldnt care less..WOOOOOOOOOOHOOOOOOOOOOO!!!

Message 15485029

To:trader_joe who wrote (268)
From: Anthony@Pacific Monday, Mar 12, 2001 12:19 AM
Respond to of 280

Hey turd breath, You are a fake. I have read your posts and so far all you have done is chase housewives, people who are suspended and small roaches around..You have no credentials, have no track record and are running around in your boxers and that spaghetti stained T-shirt of yours, screaming " Look at me !! " For an old fart , you make a whole lot of noise..C'mon , do something that can be admired and or critiqued, Pick a long, a short or anything,, OR better yet, tell us who you are , Ya old fat wrinkled up old scrotum satchel.. Quit talkin about Expose's and surveillance. You are embarrassing yourself.. I can introduce you to surveillance ..... Would you like to meet the King of Surveillance???
If you give me a week, I can introduce him to you while he is wearing your Favorie Budweiser stained set of Drawers, and while he has your wife on his arm.

Quit pretending to be someone other than the fat saggy skinned loser you are. S

Ever since you signed up on SI,, you have been zippin around trying to get mixed up in every possible debate and controvery possible.. This is a message board about stocks ..not dimiwits like you...

Id love to get a good foot bath...brush your teeth with Colgate and I'll give ya an oppurtunity to suck on my toes tomorrow...

Now grab a glass of warm milk, put the nose plugs on the Mrs..and let loose with your frequent flatulations , ya old wrinkled up , bald , hairy ass/nose weasel boy.



To: Wolff who wrote (68193)3/12/2001 8:10:31 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
Asia Markets - Gloom here, there, everywhere

By Jennifer Chen


SINGAPORE, March 12 (Reuters) - Asian equity and currency markets sank on Monday, overwhelmed by bad news from Wall Street and Japan.

On top of that, Southeast Asian currencies, especially the Singapore dollar, were contending with a flailing Indonesian rupiah, which skidded to lows not seen since September 1998.

The U.S. Nasdaq market fell victim on Friday to investors whose hopes of a deep rate cut from the Federal Reserve were dashed by positive February jobs data.

The Nasdaq's 5.35 percent fall, chip giant Intel Corp's profit warning, and bad news from other U.S. technology leaders like Cisco (CSCO.O) sent Asian tech stocks reeling.

Tech-sensitive bourses in Singapore, Taiwan, and Korea all stumbled over the losses on Nasdaq.

Benchmark indices in Tokyo and Hong Kong fell back as well, with Japan's Nikkei faced with a home-grown brew of economic and political troubles.

STUMBLING YEN, MIXED-UP GOVERNMEMT

Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori's decision over the weekend to push the elections of his party's president ahead of schedule seemed to clear Japan's murky political scene.

But his denial on Monday that he intended to resign muddied those waters even more.

Despite slightly better than expected October-December economic growth data, the market remained deeply pessimistic over Japan's prospects.

Analysts shrugged off the 0.8 percent rise in gross domestic product, saying most indicators still pointed down.

Those concerns, questions over the country's leadership, scepticism over the ruling coalition's economic package and the Nasdaq's fall pushed the Nikkei to a 16-year closing low.

The yen fell below 120, casting a shadow over regional currency markets that have been under its thumb in recent sessions.

"At this point, we're certainly seeing that regional currency weakness...under the shadow of the yen," said Song Sen Wun, vice president of regional economics at G.K. Goh Research in Singapore.

With sickly markets in Japan and the United States, the euro was looking quite hale in comparison.

SUFFERING RUPIAH

However, the yen's woes paled next to the rupiah's. The Indonesian currency crashed to a low of 11,210 -- its worst since September 22, 1998.

The rupiah managed to claw back from that following verbal and actual intervention by Bank Indonesia. Dealers in Jakarta said the bank offered between $5-$10 million in the afternoon, after it offered $2 million in the morning to no avail.

Indonesia's economic and political woes sideswiped the rupiah earlier in the day as nervous interbank players bid up the dollar for fear of the situation getting worse.

Among the chief concerns in the market were those centred on Jakarta's frayed relationship with the International Monetary Fund and the leadership of embattled President Abdurrahman Wahid.

News of protests in Jakarta by pro- and anti-Wahid factions pushed the market over the edge, as investors fretted over possible violence between the two sides.

A straw poll of analysts surveyed by Reuters on Monday said that barring capital controls and a significant turnaround in the political situation, the rupiah could hit 12,000-15,000 by the end of June.

"The two things that I'm looking at are the situation with the IMF and the situation with Wahid... Even if things are patched up with the IMF, things still will look shaky if Wahid hasn't stepped down by June," said an analyst at a foreign bank in Singapore.

The IMF has delayed since December a $400 million loan to Jakarta over concerns about central bank independence, regional autonomy and asset sales.

"While the loan itself isn't a lot, it means a lot as far as investor confidence," said Nizam Idris, regional economist at IDEAglobal.com in Singapore.

Wahid said on Monday he would not resign, and called upon hugely popular Vice President Megawati Sukarnoputri to become more proactive.

CURRENCIES VS U.S. DOLLAR 0817 GMT

Change on the day

Currency Latest bid Prev Close Pct Move

Japan yen 120.38 119.62 -0.63

Sing dlr 1.7608 1.7560 -0.27

Taiwan dlr 32.47 32.40 -0.22

Korean won 1277.20 1269.00 -0.64

Baht 43.68 43.53 -0.34

Peso 48.00 48.00 +0.00

Rupiah 10400.00 9975.00 -4.09

Ringgit 3.7995 3.7995 +0.00

Change on year

Currency Latest End prev yr Pct Move

Japan yen 120.38 114.45 -4.93

Sing dlr 1.7608 1.7365 -1.38

Taiwan dlr 32.30 32.90 +1.86

Korean won 1277.20 1277.00 -0.02

Baht 43.68 43.70 +0.05

Peso 48.00 50.75 +5.73

Rupiah 10400.00 9470.00 -8.94

Ringgit 3.7995 3.7995 +0.00 ------------------------------------------------

ASIAN STOCK MARKETS 0817 GMT

Change on the day

Market Current Prev Close Pct Move

Tokyo 12171.37 12627.90 -3.62

Hong Kong 13776.72 14194.35 -2.94

Singapore 1848.18 1898.32 -2.64

Taipei 5582.67 5680.43 -1.72

Seoul 545.05 565.76 -3.66

Bangkok 305.30 307.00 -0.55

Manila 1567.53 1588.39 -1.31

Jakarta 394.99 414.11 -4.62

Kuala Lumpur 685.77 695.26 -1.36

Change on year

Market Current End prev yr Pct Move

Tokyo 12171.37 13785.69 -11.71

Hong Kong 13776.72 15095.53 -8.74

Singapore 1848.18 1926.83 -4.08

Taipei 5582.67 4739.09 +17.80

Seoul 545.05 504.62 +8.01

Bangkok 305.30 269.19 +13.41

Manila 1567.53 1494.50 +4.89

Jakarta 394.99 416.32 -5.12

Kuala Lumpur 685.77 679.64 +0.90

03:56 03-12-01



To: Wolff who wrote (68193)3/12/2001 8:14:41 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
Nasdaq bear mauls Asia shares, Nikkei at 16-yr low

By Valerie Lee


SINGAPORE, March 12 (Reuters) - Share markets in Asia took a tumble at the start of the week as high-tech sectors buckled under Nasdaq's 5.35 percent slide last Friday.

Benchmark indices in Tokyo, Hong Kong, Seoul, Taipei and Singapore sagged from the outset with Tokyo's tech-sensitive Nikkei index finishing at a fresh 16-year low.

The Nasdaq composite index tumbled 115.95 points, or 5.35 percent, to close at 2,052.78 on Friday on Intel's slumping sales and fears the Federal Reserve may not aggressively cut interest rates because of surprising strength in the labour market.

Analysts expect the stock market to fall further this week, amid Corporate America's almost daily confessions of downbeat earnings, particularly in the technology sector.

They said the Nasdaq could breach 2,000 soon.

In currency markets, the yen steadied in the early afternoon, recovering to 120.35 per dollar after hitting a 20-month low of 120.62 compared with the 119.52 in late U.S. trade.

Traders said sentiment remained deeply bearish with the Nikkei down, Japanese politics in disarray and the Bank of Japan expected to ease policy as soon as next week.

The euro was sidelined against the dollar at $0.9337/42, well within the $0.9250/9380 range that has held for the last week.

NIKKEI AT NASDAQ'S MERCY

Tokyo's Nikkei index dived after scepticism over the ruling coalition's economic package and the Nasdaq tumble overwhelmed better-than-expected gross domestic product data.

Leading Tokyo's decline were chip shares, including NEC Corp, which followed their U.S. counterparts lower. The Philadelphia Stock Exchange's semiconductor index fell 7.14 percent on Friday.

"What market players were dying to see in the package were concrete measures to clean up banks' bad loans, which were barely touched upon in the proposals," said Akira Hiramine, chief investment officer at fund manager Invesco Asset Management.

The Nikkei average closed down 456.53 points or 3.62 percent at 12,171.37, the lowest close since April 1985. The capital-weighted TOPIX index fell 31.78 points or 2.57 percent to 1,205.98.

South Korea's shares ended sharply lower as foreign investors unloaded technology stocks.

Key tech blue chips SK Telecom and Samsung Electronics both fell more than four percent.

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) closed down 3.66 percent at 545.05 while the over-the-counter Kosdaq ended down 5.53 percent at 72.33.

Foreign investors also sold banks heavily, disappointed with a decision by Korean creditors to support the cash-starved Hyundai group.

Taiwan shares closed lower for the third straight session as heavyweight electronics stocks took their cue from Nasdaq.

"Local technology shares will continue to face corrections in coming sessions (because of Nasdaq's continued falls)," said Michael On, managing director of Beyond Asset Management.

The electronics subindex slid 1.55 percent, to end at 269.45, extending Friday's 1.11 percent fall while the benchmark TAIEX closed down 1.72 percent at 5,582.67.

HANG SENG DOWN, RATE HOPES FIZZLE

Hong Kong stocks were down sharply by the late afternoon as property counters slumped on concerns interest rates would not be coming down as sharply as previously expected.

The Hang Seng Index was trading down 3.39 percent at 13,713.49 by 0634 GMT.

Hong Kong's interest rates closely track those in the U.S. because of the territory's currency peg to the U.S. dollar.

Among the casualties were property group Sino Land and global banking group, HSBC Holdings.

Dealers said HSBC stock was weighed down by a newspaper report that said the company plans to lay off 1,200 staff in Hong Kong.

01:57 03-12-01



To: Wolff who wrote (68193)4/14/2001 11:07:37 AM
From: Wolff  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
Supreme Court
No. 97-627-Appeal.
No. 98-436-Appeal.
(PC 94-6222)
: Joyce C. Hendrick, Executrix of the Estate of
Jeffrey P. Hendrick et al.
: v.
: Paul Hendrick, in his capacity as trustee

Present: Weisberger, C.J., Lederberg, Bourcier, Flanders, and Goldberg, JJ.

DATE OPINION FILED: July 10, 2000
Appeal from County:
SOURCE OF APPEAL: Superior Providence
JUDGE FROM OTHER
COURT: Clifton, J. & Thompson, J.
JUSTICES: Weisberger, C.J., Lederberg, Bourcier,
Flanders, Goldberg, JJ. Concurring
WRITTEN BY: BOURCIER, J.
ATTORNEYS: Bret Jedele

Amato A. Deluca

For Plaintiff

ATTORNEYS: Lauren E. Jones

John C. Tibbitts, Daniel P. Carter

For Defendant

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

O P I N I O N

Bourcier, Justice. In these consolidated appeals, Joyce Hendrick, individually and as
executrix of the estate of her late husband, Jeffrey Hendrick, seeks review of two Superior Court final
judgments that served to dismiss her eight counterclaims and/or crossclaims asserted against various
parties, both plaintiff and defendant, that include the Exeter Country Club, Inc., its officers, directors, stockholders and certain trustees.[1] Those asserted claims alleged, in general terms, breach of fiduciary obligations and duties and majority stockholder oppression. They also sought dissolution of the corporation, or alternatively, the corporate buyout of Joyce’s approximately 30 percent shareholder interest in the corporation pursuant to G.L. 1956 §§ 7-1.1-90 and 7-1.1-90.1.

I

Case Facts and Travel

The appellate Gordian knot we have before us was created and solidified in the following
fashion: Exeter Country Club, Inc. (ECC) is a closely held corporation owned by the Hendrick family
and authorized under Rhode Island law to carry on the business of a golf course in the Town of Exeter.
As of 1986, Paul Hendrick was a majority stockholder in ECC, and his two sons, Jeffrey and Peter,
owned minority interests in ECC. On January 17, 1986, Jeffrey and Peter entered into a reciprocal
stock purchase agreement (the purchase agreement), whereupon the death of one brother, the
survivor-brother would automatically, by way of such purchase agreement, purchase certain identified
ECC stock held by the decedent-brother, through the use of proceeds from life insurance policies held
on the life of that decedent-brother. [2] The agreement named both Paul and Rolland Jones (Jones), an

insurance agent, as trustees to administer the purchase-agreement transaction. Pursuant to that

agreement, the trustees were required to hold Jeffrey’s and Peter’s shares of stock designated in the

purchase agreement in trust, receive the life insurance policies proceeds, deliver the designated stock to

the survivor-brother, and deliver the stock purchase proceeds from the purchase-agreement transaction

to the particular decedent- brother’s executor or representative.

In late December 1990, ECC underwent a process of corporate recapitalization through the

issuance to the respective family shareholders of nine shares of Class B nonvoting stock for each Class

A voting stock or Class B stock then owned by the shareholders. Additionally, Paul and his wife,

Elizabeth, made subsequent gifts to both Peter and Jeffrey of a percentage of the newly issued stock. As

a result of the corporate recapitalization and the parental gifts, Jeffrey’s Class B equity shares in ECC

increased from 1,858 to approximately 22,000 shares. There was some immediate disagreement

between the Hendrick family members as to whether the newly issued and newly received shares were

to be governed by the 1986 stock purchase agreement executed between Peter and Jeffrey. Legal

counsel for trustee Jones opined in an August 1992 letter that because the purchase agreement predated

the recapitalization, the recapitalized new shares were not within the parameters of the purchase

agreement. On the other hand, ECC’s corporate counsel, several years later, reached the opposite

conclusion, advising ECC, its directors and the trustees that the purchase agreement was intended to

encompass all shares held by Jeffrey at the time of his death.

In June 1993, while Jeffrey was still alive but seriously ill, an attempt was made by ECC and the

trustees, through counsel, to revise or amend the 1986 purchase agreement to include those new Class

B shares in the purchase agreement, but Joyce, now acting as Jeffrey’s "attorney-in-fact," refused to

allow the purchase agreement to be modified to include the new shares. Despite this continuing feud

over the scope of the purchase agreement, after Jeffrey’s death on December 22, 1993, the trustees

designated by the purchase agreement attempted a valuation of all shares then owned by Jeffrey and set

a purchase closing date in September 1994 for the transfer of all of those shares to Peter. Joyce, the

executrix of Jeffrey’s estate, disputed the trustees’ valuation and purchase attempt of the additional

Class B stock owned by Jeffrey, disagreed with the price valuation on that stock as determined by

ECC’s accountant, and did not attend the scheduled stock-purchase closing. Subsequently, no attempt

was made by the trustees to transfer any of Jeffrey’s interest in ECC, although under the purchase

agreement the original 1,858 shares could have been transferred by the trustees without the presence or

permission of Joyce.

On November 9, 1994, Paul commenced an action in the Washington County Superior Court

against Joyce, Jeffrey’s estate and Peter, [3] seeking specific performance of the stock purchase

agreement. Joyce responded to that complaint by denying that specific performance should be ordered,

and filed a counterclaim against Paul in his individual capacity and as trustee, and a crossclaim against

Peter, alleging certain breaches of fiduciary duty towards her and waste of corporate assets as a result

of actions taken by both Paul and Peter. Over the later course of the litigation, ECC, trustee Jones, later

his executrix, Alice Jones [4] and Elizabeth Hendrick, Paul’s wife, all were added as parties in the case. [5]

The Hendrick family feud not only expanded, but also spilled out of the courtroom into the everyday

operations of the corporation, with ever-increasing animosity. In December 1994, ECC declared no

dividends on its stock for the year, but instead voted to give Paul a bonus of $65,000 and to give Peter

a bonus of $85,000, while Joyce received a bonus amount of only $2,500. The Internal Revenue

Service, upon review, subsequently disallowed $40,000 of that bonus amount paid to the ECC

corporate officers during 1994.

In March 1995, Paul proceeded on his complaint for a declaratory judgment relating to the

purchase agreement. On May 18, 1995, after trial, a Superior Court trial justice issued a declaratory

judgment declaring that the January 17, 1986, purchase agreement was unambiguous on its face and did

not by its terms include the shares in ECC that Jeffrey had subsequently acquired. He declared that the

purchase agreement provided for the sale and purchase of only the original 1,858 shares held by Jeffrey

on January 17, 1986, and not to the recapitalization shares and the stock gifts Jeffrey received after that

agreement was executed.[6] He ordered those 1,858 shares to be transferred, and severed Joyce’s

counter and crossclaims for later trial. After the transfer of the 1,858 shares to Peter, pursuant to the

May 18, 1995 declaratory judgment, Joyce was left owning approximately 31 percent of the Class B

nonvoting shares in ECC. Unfortunately for Joyce, her status as a powerless minority shareholder was

merely the beginning of her travails with ECC. In August 1995, Joyce was fired from her position as

ECC’s bookkeeper after eighteen years of service, for what she claimed was her refusal to convey her

remaining stock to ECC and what ECC characterized as her creation of a hostile workplace

environment. She also found herself thwarted in her attempts to gain sufficient access to review ECC’s

corporate books and records. Finally, in January 1996, ECC purchased a $400,000 parcel of land

which, although not adjacent or directly beneficial to ECC’s property, apparently fronted certain parcels

owned jointly by Peter and his wife and son, a transaction that Joyce asserted benefited Peter

individually and not the corporation.

On September 2, 1997, the defendants in Joyce’s counterclaims and crossclaims moved for

summary judgment on Joyce’s claims relating to the breach of fiduciary duties owed to her and the issue

of excessive bonuses paid to the directors and officers of ECC. While that summary judgment motion

was pending, Joyce moved, and was granted leave, to amend both her counterclaims and crossclaims.

Upon amendment, her counterclaims and crossclaims alleged common law breach of fiduciary duty on

the part of the trustees and ECC by failing to act impartially in their attempts to coerce Joyce into

modifying the stock purchase agreement to include all shares owned by Jeffrey at the time of his death;

malicious prosecution and abuse of process [7] relating to the specific performance and declaratory- relief

civil action filed by Paul against her; oppressive conduct by ECC toward her as a minority shareholder

by its failure to declare stock dividends while granting excessive bonuses to its officers and directors, as

well as the termination of her eighteen-year long-standing employment relationship with ECC and finally,

denying her access to necessary ECC corporate books and records, in violation of § 7-1.1-46. Joyce

also alleged shareholder derivative type-claims, asserting that the $400,000 land purchase by ECC was

for the primary benefit only of Peter and not the corporation and that the above-described excessive

bonuses paid to Paul and Peter operated as a financial drain on the corporate assets. Contained within

each count in Joyce’s claims were allegations based in part upon § 7-1.1-90.1 as well as common law,

and allegations that the acts described in each count amounted to "illegal, oppressive or fraudulent"

conduct pursuant to § 7-1.1-90. Her prayers for relief included a demand in the form of a buyout of her

corporate shares at fair value by ECC, or, in the alternative, a court-ordered forced liquidation sale of

ECC, pursuant to § 7-1.1-90.

On October 21, 1997, a Superior Court motion hearing justice, after hearing on the counter and

crossclaim defendants’ motions for summary judgment, granted those motions on counts 1, 2, and 5 in

the counterclaims and crossclaims. He found that as a matter of law, no coercion had been exerted by

the trustees toward Joyce, and that the trustees had acted in good faith reliance on advice of counsel,

pursuant to § 7-1.1-33, [8] when they attempted to persuade Joyce to modify the purchase agreement to

include all of Jeffrey’s outstanding shares. The hearing justice determined that there was no evidence of

any disputed material facts concerning whether any corporate assets had been wasted or improperly

drained through the payment of the corporate bonuses. The record reveals, however, that the hearing

justice failed to address Joyce’s claims of oppression under §§ 7-1.1-90 and 7-1.1-90.1.

On June 26, 1998, the defendants moved to dismiss Joyce’s remaining counterclaims and

crossclaims in a second Superior Court hearing before a different motion justice in that court. The

second hearing justice ultimately dismissed with prejudice Joyce’s shareholder derivative claims (counts

4 and 7), finding that both causes of action as alleged properly belonged to the corporation, not to

Joyce. She also granted summary judgment against Joyce with respect to Joyce’s remaining counts

(counts 3, 6, and 8), concluding that Joyce had failed to show, in those three counts, the existence of

any material issues of disputed facts. Alternatively, she found that the trustees were shielded from

liability relating to the purchase-agreement transaction by an exculpatory provision contained in the

purchase agreement. [9] The hearing justice, it should be noted, only addressed Joyce’s claims made

pursuant to §§ 7-1.1-90 and 7-1.1-90.1 to the extent that she believed they were not properly pled as

causes of action. Joyce has timely appealed the final judgments entered in both those proceedings, and

they have been consolidated here for purposes of this appeal.

II

The Summary Judgment Motions

It is well settled that "[s]ummary judgment is an extreme remedy that should be applied

cautiously." Sjogren v. Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Co., 703 A.2d 608, 610 (R.I.

1997) (citing Rotelli v. Catanzaro, 686 A.2d 91, 93 (R.I. 1996)). "In reviewing the grant of a summary

judgment motion, this Court employs the same standard on review as the trial justice. We must examine

all of the pleadings, memoranda and affidavits in the ‘light most favorable to the party opposing the

motion.’ " Truk-Away of Rhode Island, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 723 A.2d 309, 313 (R.I.

1999) (quoting Splendorio v. Bilray Demolition Co., 682 A.2d 461, 465 (R.I. 1996)). We have said on

previous occasions that "n reviewing these materials, the motion justice should draw all reasonable

inferences in favor of the nonmoving party and must refrain from weighing the evidence or passing upon

issues of credibility." Superior Boiler Works, Inc. v. R.J. Sanders, Inc., 711 A.2d 628, 631 (R.I. 1998)

(citing Rustigian v. Celona, 478 A.2d 187, 189 (R.I. 1984)). "Accordingly, if our review of the

admissible evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party reveals no genuine issues

of material fact, and if we conclude that the moving party was entitled to judgment as a matter of law,

we shall sustain the trial justice’s granting of summary judgment." Accent Store Design, Inc. v.

Marathon House, Inc., 674 A.2d 1223, 1225 (R.I. 1996) (citing Mallane v. Holyoke Mutual Insurance

Company in Salem, 658 A.2d 18, 20 (R.I. 1995)).

We are mindful that "[c]orporate officers and directors of any corporate enterprise, public or

close, have long been recognized as corporate fiduciaries owing a duty of loyalty to the corporation and

its shareholders * * *." A. Teixeira & Co. v. Teixeira, 699 A.2d 1383, 1386 (R.I. 1997). This Court

has also recognized that, quite apart from officers and directors, the shareholders themselves in a closely

held family corporation may have a fiduciary duty toward one another and to the minority shareholders

because of the potential for oppression by the majority toward the minority shareholders by simple

virtue of majority voting share power, coupled with the absence of a ready market for a closely held

corporation’s shares. See, e.g., Broccoli v. Broccoli, 710 A.2d 669, 673 (R.I. 1998); A. Teixeira &

Co., 699 A.2d at 1386-87; Long v. Atlantic PBS, Inc., 681 A.2d 249, 256 n. 8 (R.I. 1996); Estate of

Meller v. Adolf Meller Co., 554 A.2d 648, 651-52 (R.I. 1989). "Such a [fiduciary] relationship is one

of trust and confidence and imposes the duty on the fiduciary to act with the utmost good faith." Point

Trap Co. v. Manchester, 98 R.I. 49, 54, 199 A.2d 592, 596 (1964).

Recognizing the potential for the freeze out and oppression of minority shareholders, the General

Assembly enacted several statutory mechanisms by which such aggrieved shareholders might seek relief.

Section § 7-1.1-90, entitled "[j]urisdiction of court to liquidate assets and business of corporation,"

allows shareholders to seek relief from "illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent" acts of those controlling the

corporation:

"(a) The superior court shall have full power to liquidate the assets and business of a

corporation:

(1) In an action by a shareholder when it is established that, whether or not the

corporate business has been or could be operated at a profit, dissolution would be

beneficial to the shareholders because:

(i) The directors or those other persons that may be responsible for

management pursuant to § 7-1.1-51(a) are deadlocked in the management of the

corporate affairs and the shareholders are unable to break the deadlock; or

(ii) The acts of the directors or those in control of the corporation are illegal,

oppressive, or fraudulent; or

(iii) The shareholders are deadlocked in voting power, and have failed, for a

period which includes at least two (2) consecutive annual meeting dates, to elect

successors to directors whose terms have expired or would have expired upon the

election of their successors; or

(iv) The corporate assets are being misapplied or are in danger of being wasted

or lost; or

(v) Two (2) or more factions of shareholders are divided and there is such

internal dissension that serious harm to the business and affairs of the corporation is

threatened * * *."

Section 7-1.1-90.1, entitled "[a]voidance of dissolution by stock buyout," provides an

alternative to the drastic remedy of liquidation by allowing the corporation the option of buying out the

aggrieved shareholder’s equity interest at fair value:

"Whenever a petition for dissolution of a corporation is filed by one or more

shareholders (subsequently in this section referred to as the ‘petitioner’) pursuant to

either § 7-1.1-90 or a right to compel dissolution which is authorized under § 7-1.1-51

or is otherwise valid, one or more of its other shareholders may avoid the dissolution by

filing with the court prior to the commencement of the hearing, or, in the discretion of the

court, at any time prior to a sale or other disposition of the assets of the corporation, an

election to purchase the shares owned by the petitioner at a price equal to their fair

value. If the shares are to be purchased by other shareholders, notice shall be sent to all

shareholders of the corporation other than the petitioner, giving them an opportunity to

join in the election to purchase the shares. If the parties are unable to reach an

agreement as to the fair value of the shares, the court shall, upon the giving of a bond or

other security sufficient to assure to the petitioner payment of the value of the shares,

stay the proceeding and determine the value of the shares, in accordance with the

procedure set forth in § 7-1.1-74, as of the close of business on the day on which the

petition for dissolution was filed."