| Page 375 195 A.2d 375  41 Del.Ch. 361 Frances ORZECK, Plaintiff Below,
Appellant,
v.
Otto T. ENGLEHART et al., Defendants Below,
Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Nov. 5, 1963.
Reargument Denied Nov. 22, 1963.
Page 376
[41 Del.Ch. 362] Appeal from the
Court of Chancery in and for New Castle
county.
William E. Taylor, Jr.,
Wilmington, for appellant.
[41 Del.Ch. 363] Rodney M. Layton
of Richards, Layton & Finger, Wilmington,
for Olson Brothers, Inc.
John P. Sinclair of Berl, Potter
& Anderson, Wilmington, for C. Dean Olson
and H. Glenn Olson.
James M. Tunnell, Jr., and
Richard L. Sutton of Morris, Nichols, Arsht
& Tunnell, Wilmington, for Morris L.
Sullivan.
Irving Morris, Wilmington, for
Otto T. Englehart, Dillon Geiger, John Paul
Stevens, George N. Craig, Paul Summers and
Angelo F. Baldini.
TERRY, C. J., and WOLCOTT and
CAREY, JJ., sitting.
WOLCOTT, Justice.
This is an appeal by the
plaintiff, a stockholder or Olson Brothers,
Incorporated (formerly Bellanca Corporation)
from an order of the Vice Chancellor denying
her motion for summary judgment on the first
two causes of action asserted in the
complaint.
The complaint challenges the
validity of the purchase by Bellanca
Corporation (now Olson Brothers,
Incorporated) from the defendants, C. Dean
Olson and H. Glenn Olson, of all of the
capital stock of seven California
corporations engaged in the egg business in
California.
Bellanca Corporation for many
years was in the business of manufacturing
airplanes. In recent years it ceased this
business and had been used as a holding
company by its president. It had in fact
become an 'empty shell'. For more than three
years prior to March, 1961, it had engaged
in no business operations, had been delisted
by the American Stock Exchange, but had
accumulated large losses available for
Federal tax loss carry-over purposes.
In March, 1961, negotiations
began between Bellanca and the Olsons
looking toward the purchase by Bellanca of
all the outstanding stock of the California
corporations. On April 5, 1961, Bellanca's
directors accepted an offer to sell this
stock to Bellanca, and a written agreement
was entered into on April 25, 1961, to
effectuate the purchase.
[41 Del.Ch. 364] The agreement
fixed the purchase price at $5,150,000, and
directed that it be paid by Bellanca to the
Olsons as follows: (1) 150,000 shares of
Bellanca's stock at its par value of $1.00;
(2) payment of one-half the recovery by
Bellanca in certain litigation with Bankers
Life and Casualty Company, and (3) the
balance payable over a period of 12 years
with interest at 2 1/2% annually commencing
four years from April 25, 1961.
By the agreement of purchase the
Olsons also were granted stock options to
purchase at par 1,250,000 shares of Bellanca
for a period of 10 years, and the individual
defendant, Morris L. Sullivan, was granted
an option as a 'finder's fee' to purchase
75,000 shares of Bellanca stock at par, and
further 2% of Bellanca's profits before
taxes for five years, and 3% of the profits
after taxes for five years.
The agreement of purchase has
long since been consummated by the parties,
and Bellanca actually acquired all the stock
of the seven California corporations. As a
result, it now appears that the Olson
brothers are in control of the affairs of
Bellanca.
Thereafter, Bellanca, then owning
all of the stock of the seven California
corporations in the egg business, went
through a so-called short-form merger
pursuant to 8 Del.C. § 253, and changed its
name to Olson Brothers, Incorporated. It now
conducts the egg business in California and
is controlled and its affairs directed by
the Olson brothers.
Page 377
The complaint alleges three
causes of action, viz., (1) that the
transaction set forth above constitutes a de
facto merger, and is accordingly unlawful
since the merger provisions of the Delaware
Corporation Law were not complied with; (2)
that the payment to Morris Sullivan as a
'finder's fee' was excessive and a waste of
corporate assets, and (3) that certain stock
options granted to some of the individual
defendants were invalid.
By reason of the pendency of a
suit by the corporation, itself, challenging
the validity of the stock options, the Vice
Chancellor stayed further proceedings on the
third cause of action. He denied, however,
plaintiff's motion for summary judgment on
the first two causes of action, from whence
comes this appeal.
[41 Del.Ch. 365] Initially we
note that while the order appealed from
denied summary judgment on the second cause
of action, the Vice Chancellor in his
opinion devotes no discussion to it.
Furthermore, on the briefs and at the oral
argument plaintiff did not argue the point.
We assume, therefore, that she has abandoned
an appeal from this effect of the order. We
consider that we have before us solely the
correctness of the denial by the Vice
Chancellor of summary judgment for the
plaintiff upon the first cause of action.
The basic fact in this cause is
that the transaction complained of was the
purchase by one corporation of all of the
stock of seven other corporations. On its
face there is nothing illegal in this. On
the contrary, it is specifically authorized
by 8 Del.C. § 123. Once the acquisition has
been made the purchasing corporation
thereafter has the status of a stockholder
of the corporation whose shares it has
purchased and nothing more. In other words,
the purchasing corporation is not the owner
of the assets of the other corporation, but
is merely a stockholder with all the
incidents of such. Nor do the corporate
identities merge by reason solely of the
purchase by one of all of the other's stock.
Owl Fumigating Corp. v. California Cyanide
Co., 3 Cir., 24 F.2d 718;
Fidanque v. American Maracaibo Co., 33
Del.Ch. 262,
92 A.2d 311.
Despite this, however, plaintiff
argues that the end result of the
acquisition by Bellanca of all the stock of
the California corporations has been to
merge Bellanca into them, and put Bellanca
in the egg business. Thus, it is argued, a
merger has in fact taken place of the
apparent purchasing corporation into the
apparent selling corporation without
compliance with the merger provisions of the
Delaware Corporation Law, including the
right of a dissenting stockholder to
withdraw from the enterprise and be paid the
value of his stock.
While the argument made may have
a surface plausibility, it nevertheless is
contrary to the uniform interpretation given
the Delaware Corporation Law over the years
to the effect that action taken in
accordance with different sections of that
law are acts of independent legal
significance even though the end result may
be the same under different sections. The
mere fact that the result of actions taken
under one section may be the same as the
result of action taken under another [41
Del.Ch. 366] section does not require that
the legality of the result must be tested by
the requirements of the second section.
For example,
Federal United Corp. v. Havender, 24 Del.Ch.
318, 11 A.2d 331, the former Supreme
Court held that accumulated dividends on
preferred stock could be extinguished by
merger of two corporations under 8 Del.C. §
251, although earlier,
Keller v. Wilson & Co., 21 Del.Ch. 391, 190
A. 115, the same Court had held that the
same result could not be achieved legally by
amendment to a corporate charter under 8
Del.C. § 242.
Similarly,
in Heilbrunn v. Sun Chemical Corporation, 38
Del.Ch. 321, 150 A.2d 755, and
Hariton v. Arco Electronics, Inc., Del.,
188
A.2d 123, this Court held that the
reorganization of two corporations through
the medium of a sale of assets from one to
the other pursuant to 8 Del.C. § 271, and
Page 378 the subsequent absorption of one by the
other did not constitute a merger so as to
make it mandatory that the provisions of the
merger statute be complied with, including
the right of a dissenting stockholder to an
appraisal.
In speaking of the sale of assets
statute and the merger statute, we said:
'They are, so to speak, of equal dignity,
and the framers of a reorganization plan may
resort to either type of corporate mechanics
to achieve the desired end. This is not an
anomalous result in our corporation law.'
In Fidanque v. American Maracaibo
Co., supra, the Court of Chancery held that
the purchase by one corporation of all the
outstanding stock of another corporation did
not amount to a de facto merger of the two
corporations, for the reason that ownership
of stock in one corporation by another does
not create an identity of interest between
the two corporations and make one the owner
of the property of the other.
It is true that the Vice
Chancellor in the Fidanque case laid stress
on the absence of any agreement for the
liquidation or dissolution of the selling
corporation, but we think the point not
decisive of the question. The plan in the
Heilbrunn case to effect a reorganization by
the [41 Del.Ch. 367] sale of assets in fact
required the dissolution of the selling
corporation, but we held that fact did not
make the transaction a merger.
The effect of the cited cases is
to make it plain that the general theory of
the Delaware Corporation Law is that action
taken under one section of that law is
legally independent, and its validity is not
dependent upon, nor to be tested by the
requirements of other unrelated sections
under which the same final result might be
attained by different means.
Thus it is that we think the
transaction here complained of was a valid
purchase of stock by Bellanca Corporation
under the authority of 8 Del.C. § 123, which
has independent legal significance unrelated
to the merger sections.
We do not intend to be understood
as holding that the doctrine of de facto
merger is not recognized in Delaware. Such
is not the case for it has been recognized
in cases of sales of assets for the
protection of creditors or stockholders who
have suffered an injury by reason of failure
to comply with the statute governing such
sales.
Drug, Inc. v. Hunt, 5 W.W.Harr. 339, 168 A.
87, and
Finch v. Warrior Cement Corp., 16 Del.Ch.
44, 141 A. 54. In the case before us the
statute has been complied with and a
stockholder has no ground to claim injury.
Plaintiff argues, however, that
this cause is different because the selling
corporations have actually taken over and
absorbed the purchasing corporation. The
argument is founded upon
Farris v. Glen Alden Corporation, 393 Pa.
427, 143 A.2d 25, in which the Supreme
Court of Pennsylvania held a sale of assets
to be a de facto merger upon the challenge
of a stockholder of the purchasing
corporation, and permitted him appraisal
rights under the merger sections of the
Pennsylvania Business Corporation Law.
We note that the Supreme Court of
Pennsylvania has rejected the theory, firmly
embodied in the Dalaware Corporation Law, of
the independent legal significance of action
taken under one section of that law, as
opposed to other sections. If that is the
holding in the Farris case, as we think it
is, we decline to accept it as persuasive.
[41 Del.Ch. 368] Finally,
plaintiff claims that the Investment Company
Act of 1940 voids the acquisition by
Bellanca of the stock of the California
corporations. The argument is that Bellanca
was an unregistered investment company under
the Act and, having failed to comply with
Section 8 thereof (requiring registration),
is prohibited by Section 7 from purchasing
stock of any other corporation.
Page 379
We ordinarily would refuse to
consider this issue for the reason that it
was not raised below, and indeed it is
doubtful if the pleadings in their present
state would have permitted it to be raised.
In the interest, however, of orderly
procedure from here on out, and the
termination of this litigation, we will
decide it, but as briefly as we can.
Weinberg v. Baltimore Brick Co., 35 Del.Ch.
144, 112 A.2d 517.
Section 3(a)(3) of the Investment
Company Act defines an investment company as
a company engaged in the business of
investing in securities and owning
securities having a value exceeding 40 per
centum of the value of the company's total
assets. By subsection (b)(1) of Section 3
excluded from the operation of the act is
any company 'engaged, directly or through a
wholly-owned subsidiary * * * in a
business.'
Bellanca, we think, came within
the exception to Section 3 and, hence, was
not subject to its provisions. See Aldred
Inv. Trust v. S. E. C., 1 Cir., 151 F.2d
254, cert. den. 326 U.S. 795, 66 S.Ct. 486,
90 L.Ed. 483. We are of the opinion there is
no merit whatsoever to this final argument
of the plaintiff.
The judgment below is affirmed.
ON APPELLANT'S PETITION FOR
REARGUMENT.
Plaintiff petitioned for
reargument upon the ground that we summarily
disposed of her contention that the
acquisition of the egg companies' stock by
Bellanca was void by reason of the
Investment Company Act of 1940. In addition,
it is alleged that our disposal of this
point was erroneous as a matter of law.
We have read the petition and
decline to grant reargument on the merits of
this point. Furthermore, we should not have
considered[41 Del.Ch. 369] the point since
it was not raised before the Vice
Chancellor, although ample opportunity was
given the plaintiff to have raised it if she
so desired.
Equitable Trust v. Gallagher, 32 Del.Ch.
401, 77 A.2d 548; Trout v. Farmers'
Trust Co., 19 Del.Ch. 437, 168 A. 208, and
Stephenson v. Commonwealth & Southern Corp.,
19 Del.Ch. 447, 168 A. 211.
In addition to her petition for
reargument, the plaintiff moved for a
special mandate remanding the cause with
permission to amend the pleadings to state a
claim under the Investment Company Act of
1940 or, in the alternative, for a stay of
mandate to permit the filing of a petition
or a writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court
of the United States.
Since ample opportunity was given
below to the plaintiff to raise any points
desired, we decline to issue a special
mandate.
We have also considered the
alternative motion of the plaintiff for a
stay and decline to stay the issuance of our
mandate.
The judgment below is accordingly
affirmed. |