Adams v. CLEARANCE CORPORATION
This text of 116 A.2d 893 (Adams v. CLEARANCE CORPORATION) 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.
Opinion
A. F. ADAMS, Alice E. Adams and Almera Electric Company, a Delaware corporation, Plaintiffs,
v.
CLEARANCE CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation, Allen S. Crane, Ranford Dunlap, Theodore S. Gary, G. L. Grawols, F. S. Spring, Emmett Swanson, E. C. Blomeyer, C. S. Cadwell, A. E. Carlson and V. E. Chaney, said Individuals as Voting Trustees of a certain Voting Trust Agreement dated April 1, 1954, covering voting stock of General and Telephone Investments, Inc., General and Telephone Investments, Inc., a Delaware corporation, and R. E. Williams, Defendants.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.
*894 John Van Brunt, Jr. (of Killoran & Van Brunt), Wilmington and Miller Walton (of Walton, Lantaff, Schroeder, Atkins, Carson & Wahl), Miami, Fla., for plaintiffs.
Richard F. Corroon (of Berl, Potter & Anderson), Wilmington and Thomas R. Mulroy (of Hopkins, Sutter, Halls, Owen & Mulroy), Chicago, Ill., for corporate defendants.
MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.
The individual plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Adams, who are respectively chairman of the board and president of the corporate plaintiff, are also the holders of a majority of the voting stock of such corporation. The plaintiff, Almera Corporation, a Delaware corporation, holds voting control of Clearance Corporation, also a Delaware corporation, which latter corporation controls a third Delaware corporation, namely General and Telephone Investments, Inc. The last named corporation in turn owns most of the issued and outstanding stock of Theodore Gary and Company, a foreign corporation not a party to these proceedings.
The individual defendants other than R. E. Williams are ten of the eleven voting trustees of a voting trust agreement of April 1, 1954, under the terms of which Clearance Corporation deposited its General and Telephone Investments, Inc.,[1] stock in a voting trust for a term of ten years as authorized by § 218 of Title 8, Del.C. The res of this Delaware trust is 6,015 shares of General and represents voting control of General which corporation, as has been noted, controls Theodore Gary and Company.
Gary proposes to merge with General Telephone Corporation, a New York Corporation, and the stockholders of these corporations will meet on September 29th to vote on a plan of merger which has been approved by the directors of both corporations. Gary owns some 600,000 telephones operated in seventeen states and General Telephone Corporation owns almost 2,000,000 telephones which are operated in twenty-one states. The merger, if consummated, will allegedly lead to more efficient telephone service in the areas in which the two systems operate.
Plaintiffs seek a temporary injunction against the voting of the Gary stock controlled by the General voting trust, a form of relief which, if granted, would prevent stockholder approval of the merger recommended by the directors of the merging corporations. Plaintiffs also request a review under § 225 of Title 8, Del.C., of the election of individual defendants as directors and officers of the defendant, General and Telephone Investments, Inc., at meetings held on January 10th and 18th, 1955, but the matter now to be decided is the validity of the so-called General voting trust.
Plaintiffs concede that A. F. Adams, one of the named trustees, signed the trust agreement of April 1, 1954, but Mr. Adams alleges under oath that he has no recollection of having executed the document in question and if he did sign the document he was tricked into so doing by the defendant, Spring. It is plaintiffs' position, however, that it is unnecessary to determine Mr. Adams' competency at this stage of the proceedings inasmuch as they take the position that directors of a Delaware holding company, substantially all of the assets of which consist of voting control of its subsidiary, may not lawfully delegate their management duties to trustees. Plaintiffs also contend that the 1954 trust is void for another reason, namely because its effect is to encumber trust property beyond the term fixed by an earlier trust and beyond the ten year period permitted by the Delaware statute governing voting trusts.
*895 First, have the directors of Clearance unlawfully delegated their duties? Section 101 of Title 8, Del.C., permits incorporators generally to form a corporation "* * * for the transaction of any lawful business, or to promote or conduct any legitimate objects or purposes * * *." The charter of Clearance permits legal title to corporate property to be vested in the name of, or to be operated by others in trust. Section 123 of Title 8, Del.C., specifically permits a Delaware corporation to hold shares of stock of any other corporation. Finally § 218 of Title 8, Del.C., permits stockholders of Delaware corporations to deposit stock in a voting trust for an initial term not exceeding ten years. In my opinion Clearance not only had the legal right under Delaware law to own stock of General, but also had the legal right to deposit this stock in a voting trust. Compare H. M. Byllesby & Co. v. Doriot, 25 Del.Ch. 46, 12 A.2d 603.
Plaintiff argues forcibly that notwithstanding the Delaware statutes and the fact that six out of seven Clearance directors serve as trustees of the General voting trust, the creation of the trust has effected an improper delegation of authority, citing § 141 of Title 8, Del.C., Knickerbocker Inv. Co. v. Voorhees, 100 App.Div. 414, 91 N.Y.S. 816, Kennerson v. Burbank Amusement Co., 120 Cal.App.2d 157, 260 P.2d 823. While the maxim delegatus non potest delegare has been a principle of Anglo-Saxon law since the dim beginnings of modern times, it has lost its force as a result of the impact of the management problems of big business and government. I conclude that the broad powers granted by the Delaware Corporation Law, permit for a limited time the divorce of control from ownership which plaintiffs here attack, Perry v. Missouri-Kansas Pipe Line Company, 22 Del. Ch. 33, 191 A. 823, and that the persons availing themselves of the provisions of the Delaware voting trust statute may expect to have it applied literally.
The fact that a literal interpretation of the Delaware voting trust statute permits in the present case a possible perpetuation of executive power on the part of individual directors and trustees does not in my opinion invalidate the General voting trust in the absence of any showing of statutory violation, fraud or overreaching. In fact, plaintiffs make no charge of actual fraud as to the purpose of the trust merely asserting that the individual defendants are seeking to retain corporate power and the normal emoluments of office that go with such power. I am satisfied by a reading of defendants' affidavits concerning the individual defendants' past, present and future positions in the Gary system and the general presumption that directors act honestly that the General trust was formed as a result of the exercise of sound business judgment for the purpose of ensuring continuity of corporate management and is in the best interests of the stockholders of Clearance Corporation.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
116 A.2d 893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-clearance-corporation-delch-1955.