| Page 1274 431 A.2d 1274
Hyman KATZ, Plaintiff,
v.
Robert B. BREGMAN, John Arghyris, Alexander
Grass, L. Eliel
Fritz, Alan M. Morrison, Thomas E. Singer,
Jonathan
Churchill, Lawrence E. Brinn, Serge C.
Naggar, Connie A. Cox
and Plant Industries, Inc., a Delaware
Corporation, Defendants. Court of Chancery of Delaware, New
Castle County. Submitted April 15, 1981.
Decided April 20, 1981. William Prickett and Michael J.
Hanrahan of Prickett, Jones, Elliott,
Kristol & Schnee, Wilmington, for plaintiff.
Jack B. Jacobs and Richard A.
Levine of Young, Conaway, Stargatt & Taylor,
Wilmington, and Shea & Gould, New York City,
for defendant Plant Industries, Inc.
MARVEL, Chancellor:
The complaint herein seeks the
entry of an order preliminarily enjoining
the proposed sale of the Canadian assets of
Plant Industries, Inc. to Vulcan Industrial
Packaging, Ltd., the plaintiff Hyman Katz
allegedly being the owner of approximately
170,000 shares of common stock of the
defendant Plant Industries, Inc., on whose
behalf he has brought this action, suing not
only for his own benefit as a stockholder
but for the alleged benefit of all other
record owners of common stock of the
defendant Plant Industries, Inc. However, it
is contended by defendants that Mr. Katz
having been a former chief executive officer
of Plant Industries, Inc. and allegedly
involved in litigation with present
management of the corporate defendant is
accordingly disqualified to sue derivatively
or for a class. Nonetheless, he would appear
to be qualified to sue individually as a
stockholder
Page 1275 of Plant Industries, Inc. for the relief
sought. Significantly, at common law, a sale
of all or substantially all of the assets of
a corporation required the unanimous vote of
the stockholders, Folk, The Delaware General
Corporation Law, p. 400.
The complaint alleges that during
the last six months of 1980, the board of
directors of Plant Industries, Inc., under
the guidance of the individual defendant
Robert B. Bregman, the present chief
executive officer of such corporation,
embarked on a course of action which
resulted in the disposal of several
unprofitable subsidiaries of the corporate
defendant located in the United States,
namely Louisiana Foliage Inc., a
horticultural business, Sunaid Food
Products, Inc., a Florida packaging
business, and Plant Industries (Texas),
Inc., a business concerned with the
manufacture of woven synthetic cloth. As a
result of these sales Plant Industries, Inc.
by the end of 1980 had disposed of a
significant part of its unprofitable assets.
According to the complaint, Mr.
Bregman thereupon proceeded on a course of
action designed to dispose of a subsidiary
of the corporate defendant known as Plant
National (Quebec) Ltd., a business which
constitutes Plant Industries, Inc.'s entire
business operation in Canada and has
allegedly constituted Plant's only income
producing facility during the past four
years. The professed principal purpose of
such proposed sale is to raise needed cash
and thus improve Plant's balance sheets. And
while interest in purchasing the corporate
defendant's Canadian plant was thereafter
evinced not only by Vulcan Industrial
Packaging, Ltd. but also by Universal Drum
Reconditioning Co., which latter corporation
originally undertook to match or approximate
and recently to top Vulcan's bid, a formal
contract was entered into between Plant
Industries, Inc. and Vulcan on April 2, 1981
for the purchase and sale of Plant National
(Quebec) despite the constantly increasing
bids for the same property being made by
Universal. One reason advanced by Plant's
management for declining to negotiate with
Universal is that a firm undertaking having
been entered into with Vulcan that the board
of directors of Plant may not legally or
ethically negotiate with Universal. But see
Thomas v. Kempner, C.A. 4138, March 22,
1973.
In seeking injunctive relief, as
prayed for, plaintiff relies on two
principles, one that found in 8 Del.C. § 271
to the effect that a decision of a Delaware
corporation to sell "* * * all or
substantially all of its property and assets
* * *" requires not only the approval of
such corporation's board of directors but
also a resolution adopted by a majority of
the outstanding stockholders of the
corporation entitled to vote thereon at a
meeting duly called upon at least twenty
days' notice.
Support for the other principle
relied on by plaintiff for the relief
sought, namely an alleged breach of
fiduciary duty on the part of the board of
directors of Plant Industries, Inc.
allegedly found in such board's studied
refusal to consider a potentially higher bid
for the assets in question which is being
advanced by Universal, Thomas v. Kempner,
supra.
Turning to the possible
application of 8 Del.C. § 271 to the
proposed sale of substantial corporate
assets of National to Vulcan, it is stated
in Gimbel v. Signal Companies, Inc.,
Del.Ch.,
316 A.2d 599 (1974) as follows:
"If the sale is of assets
quantitatively vital to the operation of the
corporation and is out of the ordinary and
substantially affects the existence and
purpose of the corporation then it is beyond
the power of the Board of Directors."
According to Plant's 1980 10K
form, it appears that at the end of 1980,
Plant's Canadian operations represented 51%
of Plant's remaining assets. Defendants also
concede that National represents 44.9% of
Plant's sales' revenues and 52.4% of its
pre-tax net operating income. Furthermore,
such report by Plant discloses, in rough
figures that while National made a profit in
1978 of $2,900,000, the profit from the
United States businesses in that year was
only $770,000. In 1979, the Canadian
business profit was $3,500,000 while the
loss of the United States businesses was
$344,000.
Page 1276 Furthermore, in 1980, while the Canadian
business profit was $5,300,000, the
corporate loss in the United States was
$4,500,000. And while these figures may be
somewhat distorted by the allocation of
overhead expenses and taxes, they are
significant. In any event, defendants
concede that "* * * National accounted for
34.9% of Plant's pre-tax income in 1976,
36.9% in 1977, 42% in 1978, 51% in 1979 and
52.4% in 1980."
While in the case of Philadelphia
National Bank v. B.S.F. Co., Del.Ch.,
199 A.2d 557 (1969), rev'd on other grounds,
Del.Supr.,
204 A.2d 746 (1964), the question
of whether or not there had been a proposed
sale of substantially all corporate assets
was tested by provisions of an indenture
agreement covering subordinated debentures,
the result was the same as if the provisions
of 8 Del.C. § 271 had been applicable, the
trial Court stating:
"While no pertinent Pennsylvania
case is cited, the critical factor in
determining the character of a sale of
assets is generally considered not the
amount of property sold but whether the sale
is in fact an unusual transaction or one
made in the regular course of business of
the seller * * *".
Furthermore, in the case of
Wingate v. Bercut (C.A. 9)
146 F.2d 725
(1945), in which the Court declined to apply
the provisions of 8 Del.C. § 271, it was
noted that the transfer of shares of stock
there involved, being a dealing in
securities, constituted an ordinary business
transaction.
In the case at bar, I am first of
all satisfied that historically the
principal business of Plant Industries, Inc.
has not been to buy and sell industrial
facilities but rather to manufacture steel
drums for use in bulk shipping as well as
for the storage of petroleum products,
chemicals, food, paint, adhesives and
cleaning agents, a business which has been
profitably performed by National of Quebec.
Furthermore, the proposal, after the sale of
National, to embark on the manufacture of
plastic drums represents a radical departure
from Plant's historically successful line of
business, namely steel drums. I therefore
conclude that the proposed sale of Plant's
Canadian operations, which constitute over
51% of Plant's total assets and in which are
generated approximately 45% of Plant's 1980
net sales, would, if consummated, constitute
a sale of substantially all of Plant's
assets. By way of contrast, the proposed
sale of Signal Oil in Gimbel v. Signal
Companies, Inc., supra, represented only
about 26% of the total assets of Signal
Companies, Inc. And while Signal Oil
represented 41% of Signal Companies, Inc.
total net worth, it generated only about 15%
of Signal Companies, Inc. revenue and
earnings.
I conclude that because the
proposed sale of Plant National (Quebec)
Ltd. would, if consummated, constitute a
sale of substantially all of the assets of
Plant Industries, Inc., as presently
constituted, that an injunction should issue
preventing the consummation of such sale at
least until it has been approved by a
majority of the outstanding stockholders of
Plant Industries, Inc., entitled to vote at
a meeting duly called on at least twenty
days' notice. Compare Robinson v. Pittsburg
Oil Refining Company, Del.Ch., 126 A. 46
(1933).
In light of this conclusion it
will be unnecessary to consider whether or
not the sale here under attack, as proposed
to be made, is for such an inadequate
consideration, viewed in light of the
competing bid of Universal, as to constitute
a breach of trust on the part of the
directors of Plant Industries, Inc.,
Robinson v. Pittsburg Oil Refining Company,
supra.
Being persuaded for the reasons
stated that plaintiff has demonstrated a
reasonable probability of ultimate success
on final hearing in the absence of
stockholder approval of the proposed sale of
the corporate assets here in issue to
Vulcan, a preliminary injunction against the
consummation of such transaction, at least
until stockholder approval is obtained, will
be granted.
On notice, an appropriate form of
order in conformity with the above may be
submitted. |