Abelow v. Symonds

173 A.2d 167
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 28, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 173 A.2d 167 (Abelow v. Symonds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abelow v. Symonds, 173 A.2d 167 (Del. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

173 A.2d 167 (1961)

Aida ABELOW et al., Plaintiffs,
v.
Gardner SYMONDS, Midstates Oil Corporation, a Delaware Corporation, Middle States Petroleum Corporation, a Delaware Corporation, Tennessee Gas Transmission Company, a Delaware Corporation, et al., Defendants.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

July 28, 1961.

Daniel O. Hastings and 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.

Aida Abelow and Helen G. Hamburg as stockholders of Midstates Oil Corporation instituted this suit on December 29, 1958 for the purpose of enjoining a proposed sale of all of the assets of such corporation to its parent corporation, Middle States Petroleum Corporation, pursuant to a contract which by its terms was to be consummated on or before January 1, 1959. While a motion for an order restraining the consummation of such proposed sale was denied on December 29, 1958, a hortatory rule simultaneously issued directing Midstates to show cause why consummation of the proposed sale should not be enjoined. However, the interested parties defendant proceeded as planned, and after the sale was carried through the net assets of Midstates *168 reduced to cash were speedily made available to its stockholders including plaintiffs.

Thereafter the case was dismissed inasmuch as the sole relief originally sought by plaintiffs had been the enjoining of a transaction which had since been consummated. Leave to amend having been reasonably sought, plaintiffs were granted a limited time for taking appropriate action under Rule 15, Del.C.Ann. and thereafter prepared and filed several motions to which were attached proposed amendatory and supplemental pleadings in which additional parties plaintiff were named. Plaintiffs' case as redesigned in their revised pleadings was no longer conceived of as a derivative suit brought for the benefit of their corporation but rather as an action of individual stockholders to recover personal money judgments for themselves and other members of their class, Lebold v. Inland Steel Co., 7 Cir., 125 F.2d 369. Their motions were granted after argument, and in conformity with the Court's opinion of November 25, 1959, Del.Ch., 156 A.2d 416, an order was entered on January 13, 1960 granting leave to plaintiffs to file their proposed amendments and supplements to the original complaint.

Midstates and Tennessee Gas Transmission Company thereupon filed their answers. Midstates denied plaintiffs' broad allegation that the boards of Midstates and Middle States were made up of the same or interlocking directors at any time from 1930 until Midstates' dissolution but conceded that one, and at times, two directors served on both boards. It also admitted that at the time of Midstates' dissolution there were outstanding 22,175.6525 shares of its common stock of which 21,270.685 shares or approximately 95.93% were owned by Middle States, leaving outstanding in the hands of others 904.9675 shares or approximately 4.07% of its shares outstanding. Midstates also admitted that Middle States had on December 5, 1958 offered to buy the assets and properties of Midstates and that on June 20, 1958, Tennessee Gas had offered to exchange 1,084,054 shares of its own stock for the then outstanding shares of Middle States, said stock having at that time a market value of $30,859,539. It was further admitted that as a result of this latter proposal Tennessee Gas stock was exchanged for approximately 93% of the outstanding shares of Middle States, a percentage which by August 8, 1958 had resulted in 95.75% of the stock of Middle States being deposited with Tennessee Gas. These allegations were also set forth in the answer of the latter corporation filed the same date, and the case moved into the pre-trial discovery stage.

On August 18, 1960, plaintiffs moved for summary judgment, supporting such motion with an affidavit of one of their counsel, Daniel O. Hastings, to which were attached numerous exhibits. Countering such motion, the corporate defendants also moved for summary judgment, a motion which they in turn supported with a number of counter affidavits. Briefs having been thereafter filed and argument had, such opposing motions for summary judgment are now before the court for decision.

While plaintiffs concede that § 271, Title 8 Del.C. permits a Delaware corporation to sell its assets in a proper case, they contend that in the transaction here under attack they and others of their class have not received an adequate sum of money for their shares in liquidation, having suffered such injury as a result of actionable breaches of fiduciary duty on the part of directors common to the boards of Middle States and Midstates as well as on the part of the stockholder in control of Midstates, namely Middle States, which at the time of the sale owned 95.93% of the corporate stock of Midstates. Plaintiffs argue that the directors of each such corporation, who though named as parties to this suit have not appeared, as well as Middle States as the controlling stockholder of Midstates owed a high degree of fiduciary duty to plaintiffs and their class not to profit at the expense of plaintiffs and other minority stockholders of Midstates in the transaction *169 under attack, and accordingly the Court must scrutinize such transactions with great care. Plaintiffs insist that as a result of the disregard of the rights of the minority stockholders of Midstates by those in control of the transactions under attack the assets of such corporation were unfairly acquired by Middle States for the benefit of Tennessee Gas. They claim that the record discloses that plaintiffs and others of their class have not received what they are clearly entitled to, namely amounts in liquidation equivalent to what the stockholders of Middle States received in the overall transaction which culminated in the merger of Middle States into Tennessee Gas Transmission Company. Plaintiffs claim this deficiency in payment to be the sum of $733.36 per share, pointing out that the unfairness of the treatment accorded them and their class is demonstrated by a cursory consideration of the price indirectly placed by Tennessee Gas Transmission Company on the assets of Midstates at the time a purchaser for such assets was being sought in the summer of 1958. In conclusion, plaintiffs contend that in the final analysis Tennessee Gas through its subsidiary, Middle States, owed the same type of fiduciary duty to plaintiffs and members of their class as was owed to them by Middle States.

The appearing defendants reply that while the price for the Middle States shares set in the exchange transaction is irrelevant to plaintiffs' claims, the same ratio applied to a hypothetical contemporaneous exchange of the shares of Tennessee Gas and Midstates would have netted the stockholders of Midstates less than they actually received on their corporation's liquidation. They further contend that the only way in which Tennessee Gas could be successfully charged with having improperly benefited itself through its instrumentality, Middle States, would have been to have caused such corporation to pay less for the assets of Midstates than they were worth, a result which such defendants contend was carefully avoided.

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Related

Rosenblatt v. Getty Oil Co.
493 A.2d 929 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1985)
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173 A.2d 626 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
173 A.2d 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abelow-v-symonds-delch-1961.