| Page 629 239 A.2d 629  43 Del.Ch. 516 PAULEY PETROLEUM INC., a corporation
of the State of
Delaware, Pauley Pan American Petroleum,
Inc., a corporation
of the State of Delaware, and American
Independent Oil
Company De Mexico, S.A. de C.V., a
corporation of the
Republic of Mexico, Plaintiffs Below,
Appellants,
v.
CONTINENTAL OIL COMPANY, a corporation of
the State of
Delaware, Defendant Below, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Delaware.
Jan. 24, 1968.
Page 630
[43 Del.Ch. 517] Appeal from
Court of Chancery in and for New Castle
County.
H. Albert Young, H. James
Conaway, Jr., and Ben T. Castle, of Young,
Conaway, Stargatt & Taylor, Wilmington, and
Orris R. Hedges, Los Angeles, Cal., for
appellants.
James M. Tunnell, Jr., and
William S. Megonigal, Jr., of Morris,
Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell, Wilmington, and
Joseph C. Hutcheson, III, and Finis E.
Cowan, of Baker, Botts, Shepherd & Coates,
Houston, Tex., for appellee.
WOLCOTT, C.J., and CAREY and
HERRMANN, JJ., sitting.
WOLCOTT, Chief Justice.
This an appeal from the denial of
a preliminary injunction which would have
required Continental Oil Company
(hereinafter 'Continental'), a corporation
of the State of [43 Del.Ch. 518] Delaware,
defendant below, to cause its wholly-owned
subsidiary, Mexofina S.A. de C.V.
(hereinafter 'Mexofina'), a Mexican
corporation, to cease the prosecution of an
action filed in the First District Court for
Civil Matters of the Republic of Mexico
against Pauley Pan American Petroleum, Inc.
(hereinafter 'Pauley Pan Am'), a Delaware
corporation, and American Independent Oil
Company, S.A. de C.V. (hereinafter
'Aminoil'), a Mexican corporation,
wholly-owned subsidiaries of Pauley
Petroleum Inc. (hereinafter 'Pauley'), a
Page 631 Delaware corporation. The plaintiffs below,
Pauley, Pauley Pan Am and Aminoil, appeal.
In order to understand the
controversy, some background history is
necessary. About 1950, Edwin W. Pauley and
his associates (hereinafter 'Pauley Group')
obtained three mineral exploration contracts
for the petroleum exploration of certain
upland and tideland areas in Mexico from
Petroleos Mexicanos (hereinafter 'Pemex'), a
nationalied petroleum instrumentality of the
Republic of Mexico. Under these contracts,
the Pauley Group was entitled to recover
approved costs incurred in the exploration
and, in the event of oil production, certain
percentages of the production as their
compensation. In the decade 1950 to 1960,
the Pauley Group, acting through
subsidiaries wholly-owned by Pauley, viz.,
Pauley Pan Am (which was authorized to do
business in Mexico), Mexofina and Aminoil,
conducted the exploration. By 1961, these
three Pauley wholly-owned subsidiaries owned
all of the interest in the three exploration
contracts with Pemex.
In the latter part of 1960,
Continental became interested in investing
in the oil exploration conducted by the
three Pauley subsidiaries under contract
with Pemex. Acting upon legal advice,
Continental decided that it would not be
practical for it to obtain approval for the
doing of business in Mexico and accordingly,
reached the conclusion that it should invest
by acquiring one of the Pauley subsidiaries.
Ultimately, Continental purchased all of the
capital stock of Mexofina in a good-faith
transaction.
Prior to the acquisition of
Mexofina by Continental, Pauley management
had selected the officers of Mexofina and
made all important business decisions for
that corporation. Thereafter, Continental
carried on in the same fashion.
[43 Del.Ch. 519] The ownership of
Mexofina was transferred by a contract
between Continental and Pauley executed in
California and described as the 'Purchase
Agreement of 1961'. Under the terms of this
contract, Continental acquired all of the
stock of Mexofina, and Pauley caused a 50%
Interest in certain of the contracts with
Pemex to be conveyed to Mexofina.
By the Purchase Agreement of
1961, Pauley Pan Am was designated as the
operator and had exclusive control and
management of operations conducted under the
provisions of the contracts with Pemex.
The parties continued to operate
under the 1961 Agreement until June, 1962.
At that time, pursuant to the desire of
Continental to make a heavier investment in
these Mexican oil operations, three separate
agreements were entered into between the
several corporations concerned. A 'Purchase
Agreement of 1962' was entered into between
Mexofina, Aminoil and Pauley Pan Am. A
supplemental agreement was entered into
between Pauley, Pauley Pan Am, Aminoil,
Mexofina and Continental, and a 'Guarantee
Agreement' was entered into between Pauley
and Continental.
As a result of the Purchase
Agreement of 1962, Mexofina acquired an
additional 25% Interest in one of the Pemex
contracts, bringing its total interest to
75% In certain defined tideland areas of
exploration. Mexofina was designated as the
operator under the Pemex contracts in the
defined area in lieu of Pauley Pan Am. The
Guarantee Agreement between Pauley and
Continental did not relate to the operation
of the exploratory activities on the Mexican
oil lands but did guarantee on behalf of
Pauley and Continental the proper
performance of the obligations of their
wholly-owned subsidiaries under the other
two contracts. The third agreement,
designated as 'Supplemental Agreement',
amended specifics of the 1961 Agreement and
concerned matters affecting only Continental
and Pauley.
The Purchase Agreement of 1962,
in paragraph 5(d), required Mexofina under
certain circumstances and with certain
restrictions to 'carry' Pauley Pan Am and
Aminoil by paying some of the expenses of
performing
Page 632 the Agreements with Pemex for a certain
period of time. It is paragraph 5(d) of this
Agreement which causes the [43 Del.Ch. 520]
current litigation since Mexofina, directed
by Continental, its parent, has served
notice on the Pauley wholly-owned
subsidiaries that the so-called 'carrying
period' has been terminated. As a result,
Mexofina now refuses to continue the paying
of the expenses under the contracts with
Pemex.
This, we understand, is the main
controversy between the parties, although
Pauley claims in addition damages arising
from its dissatisfaction with Mexofina's
operating efficiency and employment
practices, and with its performance of the
exploitation of the contracts with Pemex.
Pauley, Pauley Pan Am and Aminoil
instituted an action in the Superior Court
of Delaware against Continental and
Mexofina. Service was obtained upon
Continental. Service was sought to be
obtained upon Mexofina by writ of foreign
attachment. The property owned by Mexofina
sought to be attached was an alleged debt in
the approximate amount of $8,000,000 owed by
Continental to Mexofina. Mexofina appeared
specially and moved to quash the foreign
attachment on the ground that the statutory
proceedings had not been complied with. The
Superior Court, after hearing, quashed the
writ. The Pauley plaintiffs appealed to this
Court. We ultimately reversed and held that
the writ of foreign attachment was validly
issued. 235 A.2d 284. As of this date,
Mexofina has not appeared generally in the
Superior Court action.
Prior to the date when Mexofina,
under the rule, was required to respond to
the Superior Court's writ of foreign
attachment, it filed suit in Mexico seeking
a declaratory judgment as to its right to
terminate the 'carried period' provided for
by paragraph 5(d) of the Purchase Agreement
of 1962 and, also, seeking to recover from
Pauley Pan Am and Aminoil moneys allegedly
erroneously paid by Mexofina for the benefit
of those two corporations.
The Mexican suit filed by
Mexofina is similar to the suit instituted
in the Superior Court of Delaware in that
both seek an interpretation of paragraph
5(d) of the Purchase Agreement of 1962, and
the establishment of their rights under it.
Each action, however, seeks additional money
damages. Mexofina seeks damages for the
alleged improper refusal of Pauley Pan Am
and Aminoil to pay [43 Del.Ch. 521] expenses
it claims they were obliged to pay under the
Purchase Agreement of 1962. In the Superior
Court action the Pauley plaintiffs seek to
recover damages incurred subsequent to 1964,
whereas Mexofina seeks to recover damages
incurred from May, 1962 to date.
Following the filing of the
Mexican action by Mexofina, and prior to any
ruling by the Superior Court as to the
validity of the writ of foreign attachment,
the Pauley plaintiffs filed an action in the
Court of Chancery seeking a mandatory
injunction to order Continental to compel
its wholly-owned Mexican subsidiary to
dismiss the Mexican action. After hearing
and briefing, the Chancellor refused to
issue a preliminary injunction. This refusal
is now before us in this appeal.
The Chancellor held, assuming
that Continental wholly dominated and
controlled Mexofina, that, nevertheless,
there could be no piercing of the corporate
veil in order to compel Mexofina to cease
its Mexican lawsuit. The Pauley plaintiffs'
argument in this respect is that, in
actuality, they are not seeking to pierce
the corporate veil, but are merely seeking
to compel Continental as whole owner of
Mexofina and exercising ultimate and active
control over it, to compel its dominated
subsidiary to take certain action.
The Chancellor, however, treated
the matter as an effort to disregard the
separate corporate entities of these two
corporations and, in effect, to set aside
the separateness of the two and treat the
two as one. In so doing, we are of the
opinion that he was correct.
Page 633
There is, of course, no doubt
that upon a proper showing corporate
entities as between parent and subsidiary
may be disregarded and the ultimate party in
interest, the parent, be regarded in law and
fact as the sole party in a particular
transaction. This, however, may not be done
in all cases. It may be done only in the
interest of justice, when such matters as
fraud, contravention of law or contract,
public wrong, or where equitable
consideration among members of the
corporation require it, are involved. 1
Fletcher, Cyclopedia Corporations
(Perm.Ed.), § 41;
Martin v. D. B. Martin Co., 10 Del.Ch. 211,
88 A. 612, 102 A. 373;
Equitable Trust Co. v. Gallagher, 34 Del.Ch.
76, 99 A.2d 490, and
Buechner v. Farbenfabriken Bayer
Aktiengesellschaft, 38 Del.Ch. 490, 154 A.2d
684.
[43 Del.Ch. 522] There is no
showing whatsoever in this litigation of
fraud or other elements which would
authorize the disregard of the separate
corporate entities of Continental and its
wholly-owned subsidiary, Mexofina. There is
nothing to put this case within the
framework required to disregard corporate
entities and treat the two separate
corporations as one. As a matter of fact, as
far as the record before us shows, the
separate existence of Mexofina serves a most
legitimate business purpose.
The Pauley plaintiffs argue that
they are not seeking to pierce the corporate
veil, but are merely seeking for various
equitable reasons to compel Continental to
exercise its dominant control over its
subsidiary to accomplish the termination of
the Mexican law suit which, it is argued, is
unfair to the Pauley plaintiffs.
Thus, it is argued that they have
the right to have the Purchase Agreement of
1962, and in particular paragraph 5(d)
thereof, construed in accordance with
Delaware law. This argument is hotly
controverted by Continental but, be that as
it may, this is one issue which ultimately
must be determined in the litigation. We do
not think the current case on appeal from
Chancery is the proper one in which that
question should be decided.
The contract is, of course,
written in English without a
contemporaneous, executed paper of equal
dignity written in Spanish. This, however,
despite the vehement argument of the Pauley
plaintiffs, does not mean necessarily that
Delaware law is applicable. The Pauley
plaintiffs also argue strenuously that a
particular provision of the 1961 contract,
requiring construction under the law of
Delaware, has been impliedly incorporated
into the Purchase Agreement of 1962. In
point of fact, however the Purchase
Agreement of 1962 omits any reference to
incorporation by reference of this
particular provision of the 1961 Agreement.
The record made by the Pauley plaintiffs
indicates that they thought the applicable
law provision was to be incorporated, while
the Continental record indicates that its
omission from the Purchase Agreement of 1962
was, at least on its part, deliberate and
that it intended the governing provisions of
the Purchase Agreement of 1962 to be
determined in accordance with Mexican law.
All parties are agreed that the final
negotiations of the Purchase Agreement of
1962 were conducted in Mexico City and that
it was in fact executed in Mexico City in
the Republic of Mexico.
[43 Del.Ch. 523] This question is
one which must be decided. It might well be
a difficult one, but we think the present
case is not the one in which that question
should be determined.
The sole question before us is
whether or not the Courts of Delaware should
interfere by injunctive process to prevent
the going forward with a law suit in another
jurisdiction for the reason that there is
pending in Delaware a law suit upon similar
issues between some of the parties.
We note that while the foreign
attachment process of the Superior Court,
issued against the alleged property of
Mexofina, has been upheld, Mexofina has not
as yet appeared generally as a party before
the Superior
Page 634 Court. Mexofina, it seems to us, might well
be an indispensable party to the cause of
action sought to be asserted by the Pauley
plaintiffs in the Superior Court and, yet,
Mexofina is not a party defendant in that
litigation as yet. It may well be that in
the future Mexofina will voluntarily appear,
in which event the Superior Court will have
full and complete jurisdiction over all
necessary parties, but that event has yet to
take place.
The Purchase Agreement of 1962,
the basis of this litigation, is between
Pauley Pan Am, a Delaware corporation,
wholly owned by Pauley; Aminoil, a Mexican
corporation, wholly owned by Pauley, and
Mexofina, a Mexican corporation, wholly
owned by Continental. Pauley and Continental
are not parties to this Agreement.
In the Mexican action,
jurisdiction has been obtained over all of
the parties to the Purchase Agreement of
1962; whereas, in the Superior Court,
jurisdiction over all of the parties to that
Agreement has not as yet been obtained.
Under these circumstances,
therefore, it seems clear that a Delaware
Court will not interfere by injunctive
process with the prosecution of a law suit
in another jurisdiction, even though a law
suit upon substantially the same controversy
is pending in Delaware, when the Delaware
Court has not acquired jurisdiction over all
of the parties.
Peyton v. William C. Peyton Corp., 21
Del.Ch. 299, 187 A. 849;
Smith v. Biggs Boiler Works Co., 32 Del.Ch.
287, 85 A.2d 365, 367.
[43 Del.Ch. 524] The Pauley
plaintiffs argue that, nevertheless, the
ultimate party liable under these contracts
is Continental, and that it is not a party
in the Mexican action. Indeed, Continental
has never qualified to do business in Mexico
and could not be served with process there.
It is argued that in the event of a recovery
by the Pauley subsidiaries against Mexofina,
a further action will be required to be
brought against Continental under the
Guarantee Agreement of 1962.
The fact is, however, that
Continental is not a party to the Purchase
Agreement, nor is Pauley, and would probably
be an improper party in the Mexican
litigation. It is possible, also, that in
the Superior Court action it is not an
indispensable party. In any event, however,
it appears that Mexofina has substantial
assets and there is no showing that it is
not responsive in damages to the claim
asserted by the Pauley plaintiffs against it
in the amount of approximately $620,000.
We find that there are no
sufficient equities in favor of the Pauley
plaintiffs to warrant piercing the corporate
veil between Continental and Mexofina, nor
are there any overriding equities in favor
of them which would lead a Court to restrain
the going forward with an action in another
jurisdiction upon basically the same cause
of action asserted in the Courts of Delaware
in which jurisdiction over all the parties
has not been obtained. Lack of jurisdiction
follows from the fact that there is to be no
disregarding the corporate entity of
Mexofina.
To hold otherwise would be to
impliedly infer that justice could not be
obtained in the Courts of the Republic of
Mexico. We are unwilling to make such an
inferential finding. We are unwilling to
restrain an action in the Republic of Mexico
upon a contract which may be governed by
Mexican law. Indeed, the basic contracts
granted by Pemex under which these parties
operate are undoubtedly subject to and
governed by the laws of the Republic of
Mexico. We do not know, but it is entirely
possible, that the policy of the Republic of
Mexico would prohibit, in connection with
the exploitation of contracts with an agency
of the Mexican Government, the application
of foreign law. As to whether or not the
Purchase Agreement of 1962 is such a
contract, we express no opinion.
[43 Del.Ch. 525] Accordingly,
both law suits must go forward. In due time,
either the Superior Court or the Mexican
Court will necessarily have to decide upon
proper application
Page 635 whether or not either should be stayed
pending the outcome of the other. We do not
suppose for a moment that this decision will
be made under other than a proper
application of the respect one jurisdiction
owes to the courts of another. Of course,
any of the parties to the Superior Court
action or the Mexican action may make proper
application to the court concerned to stay
its proceedings pending the outcome of the
other. Cf. Commercial Acetylene Co. v. Avery
Portable Lighting Co., C.C., 152 F. 642 and
Sperry Rand Corp. v. Sunbeam Corp., 7 Cir.,
285 F.2d 542.
For the foregoing reasons, the
judgment below is affirmed.
ON PETITION FOR REARGUMENT
We have read the petition for
reargument filed by the appellants and
hereby deny it.
The appellants, however, ask us
to continue in effect the order staying
prosecution of the Mexican action pending
decision of this appeal. We decline to do
so. |