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114 A.2d 231  35 Del.Ch. 198 Isabelle GROPPER, Plaintiff,
v.
The NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS OIL COMPANY, Inc., a
Delaware
corporation, Defendant. Court of Chancery of Delaware, New
Castle County. May 13, 1955.
Page 232
[35 Del.Ch. 199] Stewart Lynch
(of Hastings, Lynch & Taylor), Wilmington,
and Muccia & Muccia, New York City, for
plaintiff.
Aaron Finger (of Richards, Layton
and Finger), Wilmington, and Winslow M.
Lovejoy (of Lovejoy, Morris, Wasson &
Huppuch), New York City, for defendant.
[35 Del.Ch. 200] MARVEL, Vice
Chancellor.
Plaintiff seeks a preliminary
injunction enjoining defendant, a Delaware
corporation, from liquidating and making a
cash distribution to its stockholders in the
amount of $29 per share as a corollary to a
proposed sale of its principal assets to
North Central Corporation, a recently formed
Delaware corporation. The agreement of sale
of assets, the consummation of which
plaintiff also seeks to enjoin, covers
defendant's assets other than cash and
United States Government securities, subject
to a so-called retained production payment
payable out of the operation of defendant's
oil and gas interests. Filiorum Corporation,
a California corporation, has agreed to
purchase this payment from defendant for
$4,250,000. The proposed undertakings of the
defendant and of the purchasers and the tax
consequences of the proposed arrangements
are such as to assure payment of $29 per
share to defendant's stockholders in the
event that defendant's plans for going out
of business which include dissolution are
consummated.
Plaintiff, one of defendant's
stockholders, makes her basic attack on the
corporate actions sought to be enjoined on
the grounds that
1
stockholders authorization of such actions
was obtained by means of inaccurate and
incomplete information furnished to
stockholders in a management proxy letter of
March 11, 1955, and that the proposed
liquidation and sale are not, as represented
by the proxy statement, in the best
interests of the corporation.
In her attack on the proxy
statement, plaintiff charges that defendant
failed to disclose to its stockholders that
William Ewing Jr., a former director of
defendant and a partner of Morgan, Stanley
and Co., a stockholder of the proposed
purchaser, had played a [35 Del.Ch. 201]
central role in the negotiations between
buyer and seller prior to his resignation as
a director of defendant. On this same theme
of interest plaintiff argues that other
directors and officers of defendant breached
their fiduciary duty to defendant in voting
for the sale and liquidation, after
negotiations had been carried on at less
than arm's length and that as such
Page 233 self-interest was not disclosed to
stockholders, the proposed agreement of sale
of assets is void.
Plaintiff further contends that
the proxy statement was misleading in that
it disclosed the book value of defendant's
non-producing properties rather than their
actual value. The complaint also alleges
that the proxy statement incorrectly stated
that the estimates of reserves set forth in
an appraisal of defendant's assets made by
Robert W. Harrison and Co. for the proposed
purchasers were in substantial accord with
defendant's own estimates.
Finally, insofar as information
furnished to stockholders is attacked,
plaintiff questions the accuracy of the
proxy statement's gloomy picture of
defendant's future prospects in the light of
the corporation's past and prospective
earnings, the availability of new producing
properties, and the market for its stock.
Going outside the proxy statement
the complaint charges that defendant should
have obtained an independent appraisal of
its assets and not relied on the purchasers'
appraiser whose estimates plaintiff
questions. While plaintiff urges that
defendant's past and prospective earnings do
not warrant liquidation and sale of
defendant's assets, she insists that were
such actions desirable a better price than
$29 per share for defendant's stock could be
obtained.
The Chancellor declined to enjoin
the holding of a meeting of stockholders
called to approve the proposed liquidation
and contract of sale but he did restrain
temporarily the carrying out of such acts in
the event of stockholder approval pending a
fuller development of the issues to be
decided.
Stockholder approval having been
obtained, the matter now to be decided is
whether or not a preliminary injunction
should issue, the effect of which, if
granted, would enjoin consummation of
defendant's liquidation and proposed sale of
assets pending final hearing.
[35 Del.Ch. 202] It has been
established by the Delaware decisions that
in the absence of evidence to the contrary
the judgment of directors in fixing the
terms and conditions of a sale, as in any
other corporate act, is entitled to the
presumption that it was exercised honestly
and in good faith,
Robinson v. Pittsburg Oil Refining Corp., 14
Del.Ch. 193, 126 A. 46,
Allaun v. Consolidated Oil Co., 16 Del.Ch.
318, 147 A. 257. Such presumption falls,
however, when the votes of interested
directors are necessary for approval of the
corporate action under attack,
Keenan v. Eshleman, 23 Del.Ch. 234, 2 A.2d
904, 120 A.L.R. 227, Fletcher
Cyclopedia, Corporations (Perm.Ed.) § 936.
Absent fraud such as was shown to exist in
the Eshleman case, it would appear that
where informed stockholders ratify a
contract approved by interested directors,
the burden of proving the contract unfair
rests on the plaintiff,
Gottlieb v. Heyden Chemical Corp., Del.,
91 A.2d 57. Compare Robinson v. Pittsburg
Oil Refining Corp., supra.
The plan to liquidate and
agreement to sell defendant's
2
assets arose as the indirect result of the
efforts of one of defendant's directors,
William Ewing, Jr., to find a buyer for
28.53% of defendant's stock beneficially
owned by the Equity Corporation, a large
investment corporation with diverse
holdings. This initial effort, which was
carried on late in 1953 and into 1954,
failed. In June, 1954, however, Gilbert
Kerlin, an attorney representing a group
interested in buying the assets of a going
oil business as a base for building future
operations, came to Mr. Ewing on behalf of
his clients with an offer to buy all of
defendant's assets at a price which when
combined with the proceeds of the oil
payment would net defendant's
Page 234 stockholders $26 per share. The offered
price was unsatisfactory to
3
[35 Del.Ch. 203] the Equity Corporation, as
had been other offers in the past, and sale
discussions accordingly stagnated.
In July, 1954, another attorney,
Garrard Winston, a member of Mr. Kerlin's
firm, brought into the discussions the firm
of Morgan, Stanley and Co. as well as
customers of Dominick and Dominick, and
shortly thereafter the original prospective
buyers joined these new potential buyers in
employing Theodore H. Swigart of Houston,
Texas to act for them in locating a going
oil and gas business such as defendant's.
Mr. Ewing kept in touch with the status of
the negotiations and arranged and attended
conferences at which Mr. McQuade, Mr. Kerlin
and Mr. Swigart were present. Negotiations
having reached a point where it appeared
that a purchase of defendant's assets might
be consummated in which Morgan, Stanley and
Co. would participate, Mr. Ewing on October
27, sold his stock in defendant corporation,
consisting of 100 shares, at a price of $24
5/8 per share. He resigned as director by
letter dated October 26, personally
delivered to defendant's president in
Shreveport, Louisiana, on October 28, and
accepted by the board in New York on
November 4.
The offer of the purchasing
group, which, if accepted and authorized by
the stockholders, would assure defendant's
stockholders the sum of $29 per share, was
discussed informally at least as early as
January 14, 1955, at a meeting of
defendant's board and was formally approved
at a board meeting held on February 3. On
the same date a letter was addressed to
stockholders by defendant's president
notifying them of the plan to liquidate and
sell corporate assets and that stockholders
would receive $29 per share for their stock
in the event of approval at a special
stockholders' meeting to be held on April 1.
On March 11, 1955, a detailed proxy
statement was mailed out to the stockholders
together with formal notice of the special
meeting to be held April 1.
Plaintiff complains that the
omission of specific information in the
proxy statement on the activities of Mr.
Ewing, who is a beneficial owner of stock in
the purchasing corporation, prior to the
contract of sale and the failure to disclose
that other directors were 'interested' taint
the proposed contract with fraud.
[35 Del.Ch. 204] It is conceded
that Mr. Ewing is a partner of Morgan,
Stanley and Co. which has acquired a 13.51%
interest in the stock of the prospective
purchasing corporation, and he is also
beneficiary of a trust which holds a 2.70%
stock interest in the same corporation.
These facts were disclosed in the proxy
statement. Ewing's resignation as a director
was accepted on November 4, 1954, almost
three months before the proposed liquidation
and sale of assets were approved by
defendant's directors on February 3, 1955.
Plaintiff has failed to establish the basic
elements of a case within the rule of this
Court that there shall be no conflict
between a director's duty and his
self-interest,
Guth v. Loft, Inc., 23 Del.Ch. 255, 5 A.2d
503. There is no showing that any of the
seven directors who unanimously approved the
sale on February 3, 1955, were
'adversely interested',
Italon-Petroleum Corporation of America v.
Hannigan, 1 Terry 534, 14 A.2d 401.
While it is expected that defendant's
administrative officers, some twelve in
number, will be employed without contracts
by the proposed purchaser, such an
arrangement is not in itself fraudulent,
Mitchell v. Highland-Western Glass Co., 19
Del.Ch. 326, 167 A. 831. Furthermore,
defendant's principal officers, Arthur R.
Carmody and Edwin L. Norton hold between
them 13,533 shares of defendant's stock. If
these directors and the Equity Corporation
through its directors on defendant's board
participated in a bad bargain, they have
injured themselves, Finch v. Warrior Cement
Page 235 Corporation, 16 Del.Ch. 44, 141 A. 54. There
has been no showing of any plausible motive
which would cause such officers and
principal stockholder to commit acts of
self-injury. The proxy statement clearly
sets forth that there is no agreement or
understanding that any of defendant's
officers or directors will receive stock in
either North Central Corporation or in
Filiorum Corporation and plaintiff has not
attacked such statement as false. I conclude
that defendant's stockholders were
seasonably and adequately informed about the
background, nature and consequences of the
plan of sale and liquidation insofar as the
part played by its directors, past and
present, is concerned, Kaufman v. Shoenberg,
Del.Ch.,
91 A.2d 786.
The principal objection to the
sale raised before the Chancellor at the
argument for an order restraining the
holding of the [35 Del.Ch. 205]
stockholders' meeting of April 1, was the
alleged failure of the proxy statement to
give an appraisal of defendant's
non-producing interests, which were listed
at book value. While plaintiff still urges
that the value of such interests was
misrepresented, it is no longer her
principal objection. Significantly,
plaintiff's case against this method of
valuation, i. e., the Meyerhoff affidavit of
March 27, while questioning the accuracy of
the book value of the non-producing
interests does little to sustain the burden
which plaintiff must carry. In fact such
affidavit in its computations carries the
non-producing properties at defendant's book
value. While the finding of oil in close
proximity to non-producing property tends to
raise the value of such property, by the
same token the repeated drilling of dry
wells in the vicinity of non-producing lands
inevitably leads to a writing down and
eventual writing off of such properties.
Defendant has followed the practice of
carrying such properties on its books at
cost until they produce, and I am not
convinced that such valuation is improper in
view of the uncertainties inherent in
finding oil. It may be that the book value
of defendant's non-producing properties is
too high rather than too low. Moreover,
assuming the correctness of the break down
of valuation of defendant's producing
interests and current assets set forth in
the Harrison affidavit, which results in an
appraisal of $23.98 per share for such
assets, an ample margin for error exists in
the event that the non-producing interests
are in fact undervalued. The proxy statement
clearly discloses that the non-producing
interests are carried at cost on the
company's books and in the Harrison report,
and I am not convinced that there is
anything improper or misleading in the
presentation of such facts to the
stockholders.
Plaintiff's most forceful attack
is directed against the factual presentation
of defendant's reserves set forth in the
proxy statement, charging that they are
grossly undervalued in the Harrison report
which defendant accepts as being in
substantial accord with defendant's own
estimates of its reserves.
The Harrison report, which is
summarized in the proxy statement, was
prepared at the request of the individuals
who later formed [35 Del.Ch. 206] North
Central Oil Corporation. The report supports
the loan of the Chase National Bank which is
financing the purchase of the retained
production payment by Filiorum Corporation
and apparently has satisfied North Central
Corporation that $29 per share for
defendant's stock is a fair price. It will
require approximately ten years to pay off
the Chase National Bank loan and the
Harrison report accordingly includes an
estimate of production during such period.
The report made as of September
1, 1954, values defendant's proven leasehold
and royalty interest at $4,704,480, which
breaks down to $20.38 per share for each of
defendant's 230,800 outstanding shares.
Current net assets are valued at $843,919 or
$3.60 per share and non-producing interests,
taken at their book value of $635,793.27, as
is made clear in the proxy statement, are
equivalent to $2.75 per share. The total of
these appraisals per share are below the
offered purchase price, and has not been
substantially increased by current net
earnings.
Page 236
Plaintiff contends, however, that
defendant's own records disclose estimates
of at least 1,000,000 more barrels of oil
reserves than shown in the Harrison report
and that the Harrison valuation of reserves
is based on controlled rather than
uncontrolled production and on an incorrect
projection of overhead and tax obligations
into the future. There is no showing made
that uncontrolled production of oil and gas
in any of the states in which defendant
holds oil interests is likely at any time in
the foreseeable future. If production
controls were to be lifted, the expected
consequences would be economically
disastrous to an oil business of defendant's
size, and I am of the opinion that estimates
of recoveries on an uncontrolled basis over
the next ten years are unrealistic. I am
also convinced that the Meyerhoff affidavits
do not disclose an understanding of the
recognized discount factors including
federal income taxes required to be applied
against defendant's recoverable reserves in
order to establish a fair market value of
defendant's assets for a corporate
purchaser.
As to the differences in
reserves, I am convinced that
notwithstanding plaintiff's analysis of such
discrepancies the overall company [35
Del.Ch. 207] estimates are in fact
substantially in accord with the Harrison
estimates.
The differences which do exist in
the two estimates arise out of the fact that
the company's estimates of known reserves
are derived from published statistical
reports on the many oil fields in which
defendant holds small interests, while the
Harrison report is based on geologic
analysis of each of defendant's interests.
By using the same percentage of total
reported reserves in a field as defendant's
annual production from its interests in such
field bears to the annual reported
production of the entire field, defendant
obtains a general picture of its reserves in
a specific field. This method of computation
does not take into consideration geologic
factors which would tend to increase the
reserves of those interests held by
defendant in productive areas of an
individual field. By the same token
defendant has overvalued its interests which
lie in an unproductive area of a generally
rich field. On the other hand where
defendant's interests are located in a field
where uniform production occurs or where
defendant's interests are scattered
uniformly over a given field, the Harrison
estimates prepared from geologic studies of
defendant's separate interests, are in
substantial agreement with defendant's.
The proxy statement stated that
the Harrison estimates by fields had been
examined by defendant's principal officers,
Mr. Carmody and Mr. Norton. It also stated
that the estimates in the Harrison report
had been compared with defendant's estimates
and that the two estimates were in
substantial accord. While the proxy
statement might well have been more explicit
on this score, there appears to have been no
material mis-statement in view of the
results reached by the two methods of
estimating reserves and the obvious
explanation of the variations that exist,
Kaufman v. Shoenberg, supra. The absence of
any intent to mislead becomes more apparent
when it is considered that the Harrison
estimates cover not only total reserves but
also estimated production, time of depletion
and producing days, which were disclosed to
stockholders and which were obvious factors
to be considered by the stockholders before
voting for or against the sale.
[35 Del.Ch. 208] Furthermore it
was clearly pointed out in the proxy
statement that the Harrison report was
confined to estimates of proven reserves and
had given no consideration to the fact that
'additional horizons of production may exist
in fields or leases presently producing'.
The report also excluded consideration of
possible future oil recoveries by secondary
production, except in those fields where
such production method was then being
employed.
As has been noted above,
plaintiff also questions the honesty of
defendant's directors' decision to sell
which, according to the proxy statement, was
based on defendant's past and prospective
earnings, the price range of its stock, the
increasing
Page 237 difficulty in obtaining new 'mineral
properties of merit at reasonable prices',
and defendant's estimated reserves.
I have previously held that
plaintiff has the burden of overcoming the
presumption the defendant's directors have
exercised honest business judgment. The
proxy statement discloses a falling off in
net earnings in 1953 and 1954 although a
dividend rate of $1.25 per share has been
maintained since 1950. Admittedly increased
administrative expenses account for the
falling off of earnings but this was
disclosed. The statement further shows that
the market price of $29 per share reached in
the fourth quarter of 1954 is the highest at
which the stock has ever sold and that while
defendant spent $128,110 for new interests
in 1954, its costs in participating in the
drilling operation of three oil wells, one
gas well and fourteen dry holes were
$99,122.
Plaintiff does not question these
operating statements and statistics except
as to the successful drilling of new wells
and the difficulty in obtaining new
properties. As to new wells she fails to
take into consideration defendant's
fractional interests in the 1954 drilling
activity testified to by Mr. Matthews in his
deposition and reported in defendant's
minutes. As to the availability of new
properties plaintiff merely differs with
defendant's directors. In brief plaintiff
thinks that it would be better business for
defendant to continue in business. The
directors and a majority of the stockholders
think differently.
[35 Del.Ch. 209] The Harrison
report, as has been noted, was prepared at
the request of the purchasers and was also
used to justify the loan of the Chase
National Bank which is proposed to be used
to purchase the production payment. Thus
there were compelling reasons for the
appraisal to be neither too high not too
low. The reputation and integrity of the
Harrison firm are unassilable and there
would appear to have been no need for
defendant to have incurred the expense of
another appraisal. Furthermore, as has been
pointed out, defendant's overall estimates
of its reserves are in substantial accord
with the Harrison estimates of reserves. The
absence of an outside appraisal under the
facts of this case should not block the
sale, Sterling v. Mayflower Hotel Corp.,
Del.Ch., 89 A.2d 862. Schiff v. RKO Pictures
Corp., Del.Ch.,
104 A.2d 267.
Finally there is nothing in the
pleadings, affidavits, depositions or other
papers before the Court to sustain the
charge that a better price than $29 per
share could have been obtained, or could be
obtained in the foreseeable future.
Furthermore, the price offered in the
pending liquidation and sale, which is free
of corporate tax under § 337 of the Internal
Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A., enures to the
benefit of all of defendant's stockholders.
The offered price is the highest firm offer
ever made for any of defendant's stock,
publicly or privately. Since stockholders
were first notified of the offer on February
3, a higher firm offer has not materialized.
An application for a preliminary
injunction imposes on the plaintiff the
burden of showing a reasonable probability
of ultimate success,
Belle Isle Corporation v. MacBean, 29 Del.Ch.
261, 49 A.2d 5;
Holladay v. General Motors Corporation, 28
Del.Ch. 378, 43 A.2d 844;
Sandler v. Schenley Industries, 32 Del.Ch.
46,
79 A.2d 606.
This rule applies whether the
improbability of ultimate success is a
question of law or a question of fact.
Otherwise a plaintiff might expect to obtain
a preliminary injunction by merely
supporting his complaint for injunction by a
sworn statement,
Allied Chemical & Dye Corporation v. Steel &
Tube Co., 14 Del.Ch. 117, 122 A. 142.
[35 Del.Ch. 210] On notice, an
order will be entered dissolving the
temporary restraining order entered April 1,
1955, and denying plaintiff's motion for a
preliminary injunction.
1 At a stockholders' meeting held on
April 1, to vote on the proposed liquidation
and sale, 86.6% of the outstanding stock
voted for and 2.3%, including plaintiff's
100 shares, voted against such actions.
Defendant's charter requires the affirmative
vote of 70% of its outstanding stock for
approval of a sale of its assets. § 271,
Title 8, Del.C. permits a sale of assets
when authorized by a majority of the voting
stock unless the corporate charter requires
the approval of a larger proportion of such
stock. Defendant's outstanding stock
consists of 230,800 shares of one class held
by some 400 stockholders.
2 These assets consist of approximately
2,000 producing royalty interests, 16
producing leasehold interests, approximately
3,000 non-producing royalty interests, and
225 non-producing leasehold interests. These
properties are scattered over 370 counties
and parishes in 17 states.
3 E. A. McQuade, one of the two directors
on defendant's board representing the
interests of the Equity Corporation, turned
down the $26 per share proposition. |