Allaun v. Consolidated Oil Co.

147 A. 257, 16 Del. Ch. 318, 1929 Del. Ch. LEXIS 22
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 147 A. 257 (Allaun v. Consolidated Oil Co.) 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
Allaun v. Consolidated Oil Co., 147 A. 257, 16 Del. Ch. 318, 1929 Del. Ch. LEXIS 22 (Del. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The Consolidated Oil Company, a Delaware corporation, is a holding company and will be referred to as such. Its assets consist solely of the entire outstanding stock issue of ten thousand shares of Consolidated Oil Company of Texas, a corporation of the State of Delaware. Consolidated Oil Company of Texas is an operating company and will be referred to as such. The bill charges and it is admitted that the holding company has entered into a contract with Huff Oil Company, a corporation of this State, to sell all of its assets, being the outstanding shares of the operating company’s stock, to the Huff Oil Company for the consideration of fifty thousand dollars in cash less expenses of sale. The purchaser is to assume debts in the amount of seven hundred thousand dollars, making the purchase price seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars. A matter of interest charges runs the price up to something in excess of seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars, in fact, as contended by the defendants, to about eight hundred thousand dollars.

The complainant is a minority stockholder in the holding company, owning 49,908 shares of its outstanding issue of about two hundred thousand shares. How many of the authorized shares are outstanding is not stated; nor is it material to know, since the bill goes on the assumption that a sufficient number of the outstanding shares have voted' for the sale to satisfy' the requirements of the statute.

The bill attacks the proposed sale as in fraud of the complainant’s rights because the consideration to be paid is grossly inadequate and the controlling directors who are also the majority stockholders of the selling company, have in substance entered into an agreement with the purchaser whereby they will be admitted to participate with the purchaser in the advantages of the bargain which the allegedly low priced sale affords.

The latter allegation, viz., that the majority stockholders are themselves to share with the purchaser the alleged advantages of the sale, may be disregarded, because not only do the affidavits of the complainant fail to show any facts from which the truth of the allegation can be inferred, but the affidavits filed by the defendants completely rebut the suggestion.

The complainant points out one fact which he contends [321]*321gives color to the charge of personal participation in the benefits of the sale. The fact is admitted. But it is of exceedingly slight if any value. I refer to the fact that the bankers who undertook and then abandoned.the sale of an issue of stock by the purchaser to finance its needs stated in a prospectus that Knight, who is the president of both the holding company and the operating company and a large stockholder in the former, would be in charge of the purchasing company’s field management of the property. Knight by his affidavit denies that he has been employed by the purchaser, admits that he is willing to be, but states that the terms of his employment, • as field manager must be negotiated on a basis satisfactory to him or he would refuse to further consider the matter. It would seem that the bankers, in their prospectus, were expressing not a fact agreed upon but one that was contemplated. Granting that Knight’s stock was necessary to secure a majority in favor of the sale, I yet can see nothing in the circumstances just detailed which would justify the conclusion that Knight’s favorable attitude towards the sale is inspired by a vitiating motive.

Another circumstance upon which the complainant relies as showing such personal advantage accruing to members of the majority as taints their action in voting for the sale with a fraudulent motive, has to do with the defendants Famum, Hixon and Glore, owners of fifty-five thousand shares of the holding company’s stock. It appears that the complainant and Knight were prior to October, 1926, the owners of practically all the holding company’s stock, each having ninéty-eight thousand, five hundred shares. The company was in need of financial assistance. An agreement dated October 18, 1926, was made by the complainant and Knight with Famum, Hixon and Glore whereby the latter agreed to loan to the operating company four hundred and fifty thousand dollars to be secured by four hundred and fifty thousand dollars of its Ten Year First Mortgage Sinking Fund Convertible Seven Per Cent. Gold Bonds, upon condition that certain representations made by the complainant and Knight were true. The complainant and Knight agreed also to deliver fifty-five thousand shares of the holding company’s stock to Farnum, Hixon and Glore. A further agreement between the same parties was entered [322]*322into on November 10, 1926, by which provision was made for a temporary loan by Farnum, Hixon and Glore of four hundred and fifty thousand dollars to the operating company due in one year and evidenced by three one year notes of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars each secured by a trust indenture. A part of this second agreement provided that of the fifty-five thousand shares of the operating company’s stock which the complainant and Knight were to deliver to the lenders, one-half should be returned to the complainant and Knight if and when the operating company paid its notes at their maturity on November 10, 1927. The one year loan of four hundred and fifty thousand dollars was made as agreed and the fifty-five thousand shares of stock delivered. The payment date was extended for one year to November 10, 1928. The notes are now due and unpaid. It is claimed by the defendants that the loan of four hundred and fifty thousand dollars was made before the investigation of the truth of the representations made by the complainant and Knight had been made, and that when such investigation was later made it revealed that the representations were false. Whereupon, Farnum, Hixon and Glore refused to go forward with the plan of October 18, 1926, which contemplated a ten year bond issue program. As a result of certain losses which the defendants contend the operating company suffered by reason of an unwise expenditure of a large portion of its borrowed funds, dissensions arose between the complainant and Knight, and the farmer’s connection with the company was severed except as a director. In May, 1927, the operating company obtained a loan of fifty thousand dollars from a Chicago bank through the efforts of Farnum, Hixon and Glore, giving therefor its note secured by the endorsements of Farnum, Hixon and Glore along with the complainant and Knight. This note is unpaid.

If the sale of the assets goes forward to completion, the purchaser will assume the obligation of paying the notes as well as all other debts of the operating company. Presumably of course the four hundred and fifty thousand dollars of notes held by Farnum, Hixon and Glore and the fifty thousand dollar note endorsed by them with others will be duly paid. Thus, argues the complainant, Farnum, Hixon and Glore stand to be benefited [323]*323by the sale. The notes they hold will be paid as well as the note on which they are endorsers. Inasmuch as Farnum, Hixon and Glore are said to be the dominating and controlling factors in committing the corporation to a sale, it is argued that the personal advantage which they thus will derive is of such character as would warrant a court of equity in restraining the use of their controlling power in order to effectuate its enjoyment.

In considering this argument, the first observation to be made is that the bill does not assume to base the case in any of its aspects upon it.

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Bluebook (online)
147 A. 257, 16 Del. Ch. 318, 1929 Del. Ch. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allaun-v-consolidated-oil-co-delch-1929.