| Page 416 156 A.2d 416  38 Del.Ch. 572 Aida ABELOW and Helen G. Hamburg,
Plaintiffs,
v.
Gardner SYMONDS et al., Defendants.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New
Castle County. Nov. 25, 1959.
Page 417
[38 Del.Ch. 573] Russell J.
Willard, Jr., of Hastings, Lynch & Taylor,
Wilmington, for plaintiffs.
Henry M. Canby and E. Norman
Veasey, of Richards, Layton & Finger,
Wilmington, for corporate defendants.
MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.
This action by holders of common
stock of Midstates Oil Corporation as
originally designed sought an order
restraining the proposed sale by that
corporation of its assets and properties to
the defendant, Middle States Petroleum
Corporation, the owner of 95.93% of the
common stock of Midstates. The original
complaint was filed on December 29, 1958,
the eve of a stockholders' meeting called to
approve such proposed sale of assets and
consequent liquidation of Midstates under a
plan which provided for the payment of
$1,125 for each share of such stock to be
surrendered under the plan. Also named as
defendants in the action were present and
former officers and directors of Midstates
and Middle States and Tennessee Gas
Transmission Company, a corporation
allegedly in control of Middle States,
which, according to the complaint, had
through an exercise of such control brought
about an exchange of stock whereby Tennessee
Gas had become the holder of 92% of the
outstanding shares of Middle States. The
original complaint alleged that the
contemplated liquidation of Midstates had
been engineered for the ultimate benefit of
Tennessee Gas and to the injury of the
minority stockholders of Midstates, that the
Page 418 minority stockholders of Midstates should
have been accorded the opportunity to
exchange their shares for Tennessee Gas
shares, and that in any event the fair
market value of the stock of Midstates as of
December, 1958 was at least $1,708 rather
than $1,125 per share. Fraud and concealment
in the disclosures made to the stockholders
of Midstates concerning the transaction
under attack were charged, and, couched in
derivative form, the complaint sought not
only interlocutory but final relief in the
form of an [38 Del.Ch. 574] injunction
against the consummation of the proposed
sale of the assets and properties of
Midstates to Middle States.
A motion for a temporary
restraining order, brought on without
notice, having been denied, the complaint
was dismissed on February 9, 1959, on the
grounds that the cause was moot inasmuch as
injunctive relief alone had been sought in
the complaint and the transaction sought to
be enjoined had in the meantime been
consummated. However, the effect of such
order of dismissal was suspended in order to
permit plaintiffs to move for leave to amend
their complaint. Thereafter, plaintiffs
filed several motions not only to amend but
also to supplement the complaint by pleading
matters which have taken place since the
consummation of the questioned sale and
liquidation, and this is the Court's opinion
on whether or not leave to file such
amendments should be granted. Defendants
oppose all of plaintiffs' proposed
amendments on the basic grounds that on
their face they fail to state a cause of
action cognizable in this Court.
Considered factually the proposed
amendments first of all elaborate on the
steps allegedly taken by the corporate
defendants preliminary to the sale and
liquidation complained of, making the
contention that Tennessee Gas had acquired
control of Middle States for the specific
purpose of gaining Midstates' production
income and freezing out plaintiffs, and
alleging on information and belief that
subsequent to the acquisition of 92% of the
Middle States stock by Tennessee Gas in
July, 1958, higher offers were made for the
assets of Midstates than the $24,947,610
December offer of Middle States. Allegations
of director bad faith are spelled out, a
conspiracy between the directors of
Tennessee Gas and of Middle States designed
to defraud the plaintiffs and other minority
stockholders of Midstates is charged in some
detail, and a decree adjudging defendants
liable to plaintiffs for their damages and
requiring defendants to account to
plaintiffs for the alleged breaches of
fiduciary duty complained of as prayed for.
While the proposed consolidated
amended complaint retains certain indicia of
a derivative suit such as the stating of
reasons for not making a demand on corporate
directors to correct the matters complained
of, it discloses that plaintiffs are no
longer stockholders of [38 Del.Ch. 575]
Midstates, having tendered their stock in
return for the proffered liquidation payment
of $1,125 per share in July 1959.
Furthermore, as noted above, plaintiffs seek
nothing for their erstwhile corporation but
rather damages and an accounting of their
alleged personal losses. Finally, if the
format of the complaint were not clearly
indicative of the fact that plaintiffs'
action is no longer a suit brought on behalf
of Midstates, their brief makes it entirely
clear that plaintiffs now seek individual
rather than derivative relief.
Plaintiffs, in support of their
contentions that they are entitled to bring
a class suit for individual relief, cite a
number of cases from jurisdictions other
than Delaware in which stockholders have in
certain situations been permitted to make
direct and individual claims, generally in
connection with the liquidation of a
dissolved corporation. And while not cited
by plaintiffs, a so-called 'spurious' or
non-derivative class action brought on
behalf of stockholders allegedly defrauded
in the course of liquidation of their
corporation was sanctioned in Zahn v.
Transamerica Corporation, 3 Cir., 162 F.2d
36, 172 A.L.R. 495, a case in which
plaintiff professed to be suing not on
behalf of his dissolved corporation
Page 419 but on his own behalf and that of other
stockholders of his class.
Southern Pacific Co. v. Bogert, 250 U.S.
483, 39 S.Ct. 533, 63 L.Ed. 1099.
Defendants on the other hand,
while conceding that a stockholder may sue
personally for the purpose of correcting
abuses such as the improper transfer of his
stock, the wrongful retention of due but
unpaid dividends, or for an order granting
inspection of corporate records, contend
that plaintiffs' action here is clearly for
the correction of injury to their
corporation, a body politic, a fact which
was recognized in plaintiffs' original
complaint. Defendants submit that it is
clearly established in Delaware that any
recovery gained as a result of the
establishing of contentions such as those
made by plaintiffs must be paid over to the
entity injured in the first instance, namely
the corporation,
Keenan v. Eshleman, 23 Del.Ch. 234, 2 A.2d
904, 120 A.L.R. 227,
Taormina v. Taormina Corporation, 32 Del.Ch.
18,
78 A.2d 473.
Plaintiffs insist, however, that
the dissolution of Midstates has led to the
conversion of what was originally a
derivative action into [38 Del.Ch. 576] a
personal one,
1
Lebold v. Inland S. S. Co., 7 Cir., 82 F.2d
351, Lebold v. Inland Steel Co., 7 Cir., 125
F.2d 369, Gardiner v. Automatic Arms Co.,
D.C., 275 F. 697, Vol. 33, Yale Law Journal,
p. 593, their theory being basically that
upon corporate dissolution stockholders
become the owners of their corporation's
property. Defendants point out, however,
that § 278 of Title 8 Del.C. expressly
provides that 'All corporations, whether
they expire by their own limitation or are
otherwise dissolved, shall nevertheless be
continued, for the term of three years from
such expiration or dissolution, bodies
corporate,' and that there is no reason why
a suit brought derivatively on behalf of a
dissolved Delaware corporation may not be
properly instituted within such statutory
period,
Anderson v. Derrick, Cal., 26 P.2d 463 and
220 Cal. 770, 32 P.2d 1078.
Defendants argue that
notwithstanding the very large holdings of
Midstates stock which stood in the name of
the purchaser, Middle States, nonetheless
there is no sound basis under Delaware law
for a direct claim by a stockholder in a
case of alleged corporate wrongdoing and
that to disregard a corporate entity in a
case such as this might lead to a veritable
deluge of individual stockholder
2 suits against persons
charged with breach of their fiduciary duty.
In the case of Taormina v.
Taormina Corporation, supra [32 Del.Ch. 18,
78 A.2d 475], a suit '* * * brought as a
class action under Rule 23 on their behalf
and on behalf of and all other stockholders
* * * similarly situated * * *' upon which
defendants heavily rely, it was argued that
because the only stockholder who could [38
Del.Ch. 577] have been injured as a result
of the actions of the individual defendants
was the person on behalf of whose estate the
suit was brought, the suit was therefore in
fact one for individual redress and should
have been so cast rather than as a suit for
corporate relief. It appears from the
pleadings that plaintiffs were concerned
with the unauthorized taking over of
corporate assets rather than a freeze out
and there is no indication that assets were
sold pursuant to a dissolution plan. In
other words defendants were charged with
appropriating
Page 420 the corporation's business, tendering in
return therefor an inadequate consideration.
In declining to accept the defendants'
contention, then Chancellor Daniel F.
Wolcott stated after quoting language of the
Delaware Supreme Court on the rationale of
an action for corporate redress (Keenan v.
Eshleman, supra):
'The relief to be obtained in a
derivative action is relief to the
corporation in which all stockholders,
whether guilty or innocent of the wrongs
complained of, shall share indirectly.
Indeed, it is doubtful whether the result
would be different even if the suing
stockholder owned all of the stock of the
wronged corporation,
C. F. Brodsky v. Frank, 342 Ill. 110, 173
N.E. 775' [32 Del.Ch. 18, 78 A.2d 476].
Logically, there would appear to
be no valid reason for varying this rule
where all but a small number of shares were
held as here by one of the alleged corporate
wrongdoers if the wrongs here complained of
are clearly wrongs claimed to have been
suffered by Midstates and not by plaintiffs
as members of a class. However, the simple
fact is that plaintiffs purport to seek
redress for injuries which they claim are of
a personal and primary nature, and while a
plaintiff may not characterize an action as
non-derivative when in fact it seeks relief
for a wrong to his corporation, I am not
convinced that plaintiffs should be
summarily denied the right to couch their
complaint in terms which seek a remedy for
alleged personal injury to a class of
stockholders as opposed to the theoretical
injury to a now dissolved corporate entity,
95.93% of the stock of which was owned by
the corporation which under Tennessee Gas's
domination allegedly acquired the assets of
Midstates for an inadequate price.
[38 Del.Ch. 578] The line of
distinction between derivative suits and
those brought for the enforcement of
personal rights asserted on behalf of a
class of stockholders is often a narrow one,
the latter type of actions being designed to
enforce common rights running against
plaintiffs' own corporation or those
dominating it, while the former are clearly
for the purpose of remedying wrongs to the
corporation itself, 3 Moore's Federal
Practice, 2nd Ed., § 23.16 et seq.
Rule 15, Chancery Court Rules,
Del.C.Ann., provides that leave to amend
shall be freely granted when justice so
requires. In my opinion the proposed
amendments to plaintiffs' complaint
sufficiently meet the prerequisites for a
non-derivative class suit laid down in Zahn
v. Transamerica Corporation, supra, and
clearly implied in the Lebold cases, supra,
and should be permitted to be filed.
As to the objection that this
Court is without jurisdiction to try a class
suit for damages it would appear that such
suits have been long recognized as being a
part of equity jurisprudence, 19 Am.Jur.,
Equity, § 124, a fact which is reflected in
the court rules of this state. Even were
this not so, equity having taken
jurisdiction of a case should in order to
avoid a multiplicity of suits assume
jurisdiction of the entire subject under
litigation, Cohen v. Markel, Del.Ch., 111
A.2d 702.
Finally, in the light of the
present theory of their case the acceptance
by plaintiffs of liquidating dividends does
not work an estoppel to their right to bring
this action, Lebold v. Inland Steel Co.,
supra.
On notice an order granting
plaintiffs leave to file their proposed
amendments will be entered.
1 The Lebold opinions, while allowing
damages to plaintiffs, nowhere discuss the
basic distinction between a derivative and a
personal action, however, the facts of the
case are closely analogous to those alleged
here, including a charge of freezing out of
the minority by a majority stockholder by
means of a dissolution plan.
2 The case of Shrage v. Bridgeport Oil Co., 31 Del.Ch.
203, 68 A.2d 317 and 31 Del.Ch. 305, 71 A.2d
882, an action brought to restrain the
consummation of a dissolution plan similar
in many respects to the one here involved,
was apparently a class action of a
non-derivative sort. The flexibility
evidenced there by the Court in doing equity
in a sale of assets case involving
liquidation was foreshadowed
Finch v. Warrior Cement Corporation, 16 Del.Ch. 44, 141 A. 54. |