| Page 246 262 A.2d 246  Ida BOKAT, Plaintiff Below,
Appellant,
v.
GETTY OIL COMPANY and J. Paul Getty,
Defendants Below, Appellees.
Ida BOKAT, Plaintiff Below, Appellant,
v.
GETTY OIL COMPANY and J. Paul Getty,
Defendants Below, Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Jan. 15, 1970.
Page 248
Appeals from the Court of
Chancery in and for New Castle County.
Samuel R. Russell, Wilmington,
for appellant.
William S. Potter, Charles S.
Crompton, Jr., of Potter, Anderson &
Corroon, Henry M. Canby, of Richards, Layton
& Finger, Wilmington, and C. Lansing Hays,
Jr., of Hecht, Hadfield, Hays, Landsman &
Head, New York City, for appellees.
WOLCOTT, C.J., CAREY, J., and
CHRISTIE, Judge, sitting.
WOLCOTT, Chief Justice.
These are two actions,
consolidated for argument, brought
derivatively by a stockholder of Tidewater
Oil Company to recover money damages for
Tidewater Oil Company from Getty Oil. The
appeals are from the grant of summary
judgment in both actions for the defendants.
The first action was started on
December 29, 1961 and the second on February
6, 1964. Named as party defendants in both
actions were Getty Oil Company and certain
officers and directors of Getty Oil, among
them J. Paul Getty, President of Getty Oil
and controlling stockholder. No attempt was
made by sequestration to acquire
jurisdiction over J. Paul Getty until August
10, 1967 following stockholder approval of a
merger of Tidewater into Getty Oil.
Following the sequestration, J. Paul Getty
appeared in the actions on September 19,
1967.
Throughout the period during
which the events took place of which the
plaintiff complains, Getty Oil, controlled
by J. Paul Getty and his family, owned
control of Mission Development Company
which, in turn, owned control of Tidewater
Oil Company.
The complaints in the two actions
are substantially the same, and charge
basically that Getty Oil, through its
control of Tidewater, caused it to invest
large amounts of money for the construction
of foreign refineries and marine terminals
to receive large amounts of foreign crude
oil sold to it by Getty Oil at an inflated
price. All of this, it is charged, resulted
in a consequent loss to Tidewater.
The two actions basically seek
recovery of damages from Getty Oil for
profits it allegedly received as a result of
its illegally overcharging of Tidewater, and
for the sums it allegedly wrongly caused
Tidewater to invest in the foreign
refineries.
On September 20, 1967, Tidewater
and Mission Development were merged into
Getty Oil after approval of the merger
agreement by their respective Boards of
Directors and ratification by their
stockholders. Plaintiff voted her shares
against the merger but subsequently
exchanged her shares in Tidewater for shares
in Getty
Page 249 Oil. She made no active effort to oppose the
merger.
It was only after the receipt of
proxy material concerning the proposed
merger that plaintiff amended her complaints
to allege the nonresidence of J. Paul Getty,
and to seek sequestration of his stock in
Getty Oil to coerce his appearance in the
actions. Getty actually appeared thereafter.
With respect to the two actions
it is clear, we think, that they are
derivative in nature, and are brought for
the benefit of Tidewater. Indeed, in
paragraph 2 of both complaints it is
alleged, 'Plaintiff brings this action on
her own behalf and on behalf of all other
shareholders of TIDEWATER similarly
situated, derivatively and in the right and
for the benefit of TIDEWATER.'
While plaintiff argues that in
her complaints she meant to state a class
claim as well as a derivative claim,
conceding the class claim is imperfectly
stated, we thing it clear that the claims
stated are derivative in nature. Basically,
they seek money damages for improper
management of Tidewater. As such, the claims
belong to Tidewater and not to its minority
stockholders. When an injury to corporate
stock falls equally upon all stockholders,
then an individual stockholder may not
recover for the injury to his stock alone,
but must seek recovery derivatively in
behalf of the corporation. 13 Fletcher,
Corporations (Perm.Ed.), § 5913.
Nor will the charge that the
Getty Oil-induced policy of nonpayment of
dividends on Tidewater common stock was part
of a scheme to effect a reduction in the
market price of Tidewater common stock so as
to induce the exchange of Tidewater's common
stock for preferred nonvoting stock, serve
to create a class action. Mismanagement
which depresses the value of stock is a
wrong to the corporation; i.e., the
stockholders collectively, to be enforced by
a derivative action. 3 Fletcher,
Corporations (Perm.Ed.), § 1282.
These, then, are derivative
actions seeking to recover damages from
Getty Oil for the benefit of Tidewater. As
such, if the actions had merit, they were
assets of Tidewater which, under 8 Del.C. §
259, passed on the merger to Getty Oil along
with Tidewater's other assets.
The action against Getty Oil has
therefore been made moot by the merger, for
if this were not so, the anomalous situation
of a corporation suing itself for its own
benefit would be presented.
Braasch v. Goldschmidt, 41 Del.Ch. 519, 199
A.2d 760. This results from the nature
of a derivative action which is to be
considered as though the injured
corporation, itself, was suing the
defendants.
Keenan v. Eshleman, 23 Del.Ch. 234, 2 A.2d
904, 120 A.L.R. 227. See, also,
Vine v. Beneficial Finance Company, 374 F.2d
627, cert. denied, 389 U.S. 970, 88
S.Ct. 463, 19 L.Ed.2d 460.
The plaintiff argues that this
result opens wide the door to unscrupulous
management to play fast and loose with the
rights of minority stockholders. But we
think to the contrary. If a proposed merger
is sought to be used for the coverup of
wrongful acts of management, a Court of
Equity in an action making a direct attack
on the merger can and will protect the
innocent stockholder victim. Courts of
Equity uniformly have used their broad
powers to prevent fraud by corporate
management when those powers are properly
invoked. This plaintiff, however, took no
direct action to restrain or to attack the
merger of Tidewater into Getty Oil.
Plaintiff relies on a number of
decisions in other jurisdictions, but we
think they do
Page 250 not help her.
Ramsburg v. American Investment Co., 231
F.2d 333, the 7th Circuit Court of
Appeals allowed a derivative suit on behalf
of the old company to continue despite its
merger into the defendant. However, the
plaintiff had proceeded promptly to seek to
restrain the merger and while an appeal from
the denial of a temporary injunction was
pending, the merger was pushed through to
completion. Under these circumstances, the
Court held it had jurisdiction to compel
restoration if the facts required
restoration. No similar circumstances appear
in the case at bar.
Perlman
v. Feldman, 219 F.2d 173, 50 A.L.R.2d 1134,
cert. denied, 349 U.S. 952, 75 S.Ct. 880, 99
L.Ed. 1277, if it holds that stockholders in
a derivative action are entitled to recover
in their own right, is not persuasive, for
such is not the law of Delaware. Keenan v.
Eshleman, supra;
Taormina v. Taormina, 32 Del.Ch. 18,
78 A.2d 473.
We will not extend this opinion
by a detailed discussion of all the
decisions of other jurisdictions cited to
us. They all are cases in which particular
circumstances existed to justify permitting
the stockholder plaintiff in a derivative
action to continue the suit in his own
right, or they are simply in opposition to
the law of this State.
We therefore hold that Getty Oil
is the present owner of the claims
derivatively made against it, and therefore
the claims have become moot. Summary
judgment was accordingly properly entered in
favor of Getty Oil.
This conclusion, however, does
not mean that the claims asserted against
the individual defendants, among them J.
Paul Getty, have likewise been made moot.
Such is not the case. However, they may not
be asserted against them at this time and in
these actions. The reason is that they are
barred by the applicable Delaware three-year
statute of limitations, 10 Del.C., § 8106.
The claims sought to be asserted
against these individuals are for the
payment of money, essentially damages.
Actions seeking such damages must be
instituted within three years from the time
the causes of action accrued.
Glassberg v. Boyd, 35 Del.Ch. 293,
116 A.2d 711.
To be sure, these actions were
instituted within the three-year period, the
first complaint having been filed in 1961
and the second in 1964. Since the first and
second complaints are essentially identical,
it must be assumed, we think, that the
causes of action had accrued by 1961.
Ordinarily, the filing of an
action will commence the tolling of the
appropriate statute of limitations. This,
however, is subject to the requirement that
when there is a means of bringing a
defendant into court and subjecting him to
its jurisdiction, the statute of limitations
will not be tolled.
Hurwitch v. Adams, 2 Storey 247, 155 A.2d
591. In the cases at bar there was such
a means; i.e., sequestration of the
individual's stock to coerce appearances.
Actually, sequestration was
finally sought only against J. Paul Getty,
and was obtained on August 10, 1967,
apparently by reason of the announcement of
the proposed merger. Pursuant to the
sequestration, J. Paul Getty appeared and
submitted to the jurisdiction of the Court
of Chancery. It is to be noted, however,
that jurisdiction over J. Paul Getty was
obtained in the first action more than five
and one-half years after it was commenced,
and in the second action more than three and
one-half years after its inception. Whether
or not, therefore, the two actions be
considered as separate causes of action, or
as one, it is obvious that in each,
jurisdiction over J. Paul Getty was obtained
Page 251 after the passage of more than three years,
although plaintiff may have coerced his
appearance at the onset.
The relief sought in these
actions is primarily the recovery of money
from Getty Oil by reason of management's
alleged wrongdoing, which J. Paul Getty is
alleged to have acquiesced in and profited
from as a stockholder of Getty Oil. The fact
remains, however, that in the last analysis
the plaintiff seeks money damages which is
legal relief.
When the relief sought in
Chancery is legal in nature, it is clear
that Chancery will apply the statute of
limitations rather than the equitable
doctrine of laches. Perkins v. Cartmell,
Adm'r, 4 Harr. 270;
Cochran v. F. H. Smith Co., 20 Del.Ch. 159,
174 A. 119. This being so, the statute
bars the claims against J. Paul Getty since
jurisdiction over him was not obtained
within the three-year period from the
accrual of the cause of action.
Plaintiff argues that the acts
complained of were concealed and that
therefore Chancery should not apply the
period of limitations or, in the
alternative, at least commence the time of
its application to the time plaintiff's
rights were discovered.
Bovay v. H. M. Byllesby & Co., 27 Del.Ch.
381, 38 A.2d 808, 174 A.L.R. 1201.
The difficulty with the argument
is that from the complaints, themselves, it
is apparent that at the time of the filing
of the first one, December 29, 1961, all of
the acts complained of against J. Paul Getty
were alleged. If these acts had been
concealed prior to that date, it is apparent
that they had come to the plaintiff's
knowledge at least by that date. Assuming
concealment, therefore, it is apparent that
the time of the period would have commenced
running at least by December 29, 1961. It
follows, therefore, that summary judgment
was properly entered in favor of J. Paul
Getty.
In the argument before the Vice
Chancellor on the motions for summary
judgment, plaintiff sought to amend her
complaints to allege a class claim against
the defendants, and after the Vice
Chancellor's decision formally renewed her
motion to amend. Both applications were
denied.
The theory of the class action
sought to be asserted by amendment to the
original complaints is that the defendants
failed to include in the merger ratio any
amount for the value of these actions, which
should have been included and distributed
Pro rata to former Tidewater stockholders.
The proposed amendments to
plaintiff's complaints seek in part to
reassert her derivative claims which, as we
have pointed out, she may not assert in
these actions, and also seeks to assert an
additional claim designated as a claim for a
class. This additional claim is that Getty
Oil and J. Paul Getty, as part of their
scheme to effect the merger, deliberately
refused to assign any value to the claim
alleged in these lawsuits, allegedly worth
in excess of $30,000,000, thus arriving at
an unfair merger ratio for the exchange of
Tidewater stock for Getty Oil stock.
A motion for leave to amend a
complaint is always addressed to the
discretion of the trial court. While leave
to amend should be granted freely when
justice requires it, it is always, however,
a discretionary matter with the trial judge,
and is reviewable on appeal solely for abuse
of discretion.
Bellanca Corp. v. Bellanca, 3 Storey 378,
169 A.2d 620.
Ordinarily, at least, the purpose
of allowing an amendment to a complaint is
to include matters which occurred prior to
the filing of the original complaint which
for some excusable reason were not included
in the original complaint. 1(a) Barron &
Holtzoff, Federal Practice and Procedure, §
441.
Since the new class claim grows
out of the terms of the merger, it is
obvious
Page 252 that it did not arise prior to the filing of
the original complaint, and thus could not
have been inadvertently omitted from it. In
addition, however, the proposed amendments
would present an entirely new and different
cause of action which, under common
fairness, these defendants, at this late
date, should not be made to defend in these
actions. Particularly is this so in the case
of J. Paul Getty who made his decision to
appear in defense of the original causes of
action with no expectation of being forced
to defend a new and entirely distinct cause.
Townsend Corporation of America v. Davidson,
40 Del.Ch. 295, 181 A.2d 219;
Tenney v. Jacobs, Del., 240 A.2d 138.
Plaintiff, however, argues that
since the defendants have not filed answers
in the second action, she has an absolute
right under Chancery Rule 15(a), Del.C.Ann.
to amend her complaint. It is the fact that
no answers had been filed in the second
action when plaintiff, herself, sought to
amend the complaint by leave of court and
informally moved for leave to amend at the
time of argument on the motions for summary
judgment. We are of the opinion that,
because of the extraordinary combination of
circumstances here present, plaintiff had by
then waived her right to amend the complaint
without leave.
Epstein v. Mittelman, 2 Storey 474, 160 A.2d
368. The matter of an amendment was
within the court's discretion.
The Vice Chancellor in his
discretion refused leave to amend the
complaints. In review, we find no abuse of
that discretion. We think the following
adequately justify his refusal to permit
amendment: (1) the plaintiff never attacked
directly the merger allegedly giving rise to
the amendments, and now seeks to attack the
merger by a backdoor method; (2) the
amendment would inject an entirely new cause
of action at this late date; and (3) J. Paul
Getty appeared to defend the original action
and not a new and separate one, and (4)
plaintiff and her alleged class were put on
notice that her lawsuits were given no value
in the merger ratio by the proxy statement
sent to all stockholders.
The judgments below are affirmed. |