Blaustein v. Pan American Petroleum & Transport Co.

56 N.E.2d 705, 293 N.Y. 281, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1315
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 56 N.E.2d 705 (Blaustein v. Pan American Petroleum & Transport Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blaustein v. Pan American Petroleum & Transport Co., 56 N.E.2d 705, 293 N.Y. 281, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1315 (N.Y. 1944).

Opinions

Lewis, J.

This is a stockholders derivative action. It was instituted by Louis Blaustein and his son Jacob Blaustein who, at the commencement of the action, were not only substantial minority stockholders of Pan American Petroleum and Transport Company — to which reference will be made as Pan Am” — but also were directors and respectively its president and executive vice-president. The subsequent death of Louis Blaustein led to the substitution of his executors as plaintiffs. Other plaintiffs in the action and the interveners, Haas and Barry, are also minority stockholders of Pan Am.

The defendant Standard Oil Company (Indiana) —hereinafter referred to as Indiana ” — is a foreign corporation which at the time of the trial owned approximately 78% of the outstanding stock of Pan Am. The defendants Jackson and *287 Bullock were not served with process. Of the remaining individual defendants Seubert is a director and chairman of the Board of Directors of Pan Am and is president and a director of Indiana; Barkdull is a director' of Pan Am and is executive vice-president and a director of Indiana; Stephens is a director of Pan Am and a director and general counsel of Indiana; Wilson, McKeever and Carroll, Jr., are directors and respectively the president, vice-president and treasurer of Pan Am. The defendant Teagle was not a director of Pan Am but was the president of the defendant Standard Oil Company (N. J.) when the present action was instituted.

The complaint sets forth three causes of action. In the first cause of action it is alleged in substance that, as the majority stockholder, Indiana exercised a dominating influence over Pan Am and caused the defendant directors to breach duties alleged to be fiduciary by failing to cause Pan Am to carry out the terms of a “ definitive agreement,” presently to be described, which “ reinforced, defined and emphasized ” the duty of Indiana and the defendant directors to conduct the business of Pan Am in good faith and in the sole interest of Pan Am and its body of stockholders; that in violation of such duty the defendant directors and Indiana, with the knowledge and connivance of the defendant Teagle and the defendants Standard Oil Company (N. J.) and Standard Oil Company of N. J. (Del.), in bad faith had fraudulently and intentionally-wasted the assets, profits and business opportunities available to Pan Am, diverted the same to the uses of the corporate defendants Indiana and its affiliate Standard Oil Company (N. J.) and have conducted the business of Pan Am contrary to its best interests with the purpose of suppressing competition which otherwise would have been practiced by Pan Am against these corporate defendants. The second cause of action alleges that the acts of the defendants set forth in the first cause of action were done pursuant to a conspiracy. The third cause of action, under sections 60 and 61 of the General Corporation Law, is by Louis Blaustein and Jacob Blaustein as directors and officers of Pan Am and for its benefit against the individual defendants who were officers and directors of Pan Am. The plaintiffs demand that an accounting be had of all assets and profits of Pan Am alleged to have been illegally *288 paid out, wasted or diverted by the acts of the defendants; that a constructive trust be impressed upon moneys, oil leases or property acquired by the defendants as the result of acts committed in bad faith and in breach of the alleged fiduciary obligations owed to Pan Am and that injunctive relief of a specified character be granted.

Upon this appeal we review a judgment entered upon an order of the Appellate Division which reversed on the facts and law an interlocutory judgment in favor of the plaintiffs entered at Special Term and dismissed the complaint on the merits.

Before reference is made to the judgment now before us for review a preliminary statement of the factual background of this controversy may serve to make clear the points upon which the decision at Special Term and the decision at the Appellate' Division diverge:

The decedent Louis Blaustein and his son Jacob Blaustein were pioneers in the marketing of petroleum products. In 1910 they were distributing kerosene to customers in Baltimore by a single horse-drawn tank wagon. During the ensuing thirteen years, by skillful marketing methods, including the installation of “ visible ” gasoline pumps and the production of Amoco ”, a premium gasoline designed to reduce motor “ knock,” they extended their sale of petroleum products into large areas in the eastern seaboard States. In 1922, when the Blausteins incorporated their business into two corporations of which they were the sole owners — Lord Baltimore Filling Stations, Inc., and The American Oil Company — their gross annual receipts had increased to approximately $4,000,000. However, they found further progress retarded by the fact that they had no crude oil properties, no pipe lines and no refinery. Their ' gasoline and other products were purchased from competitors. At that time Pan Am, then an independent company, owned in abundance in foreign countries and in the United States the crude oil reserves and oil producing facilities which the Blausteins lacked. It was in those circumstances that in 1923 the Blausteins sold to Pan Am a one-half interest in the stock of The American Oil Company and in Lord Baltimore Filling Stations, Inc. At the same time The American Oil Company entered into a contract with Mexican Petroleum Company, a *289 Pan Am subsidiary, to supply until December 31,-1933, the entire gasoline requirements of The American Oil Company and Lord Baltimore Filling Stations, Inc., at a price of 5% cents per gallon “ under the prevailing tank-wagon market price ” in Baltimore, Norfolk and Philadelphia at the time of delivery. The performance of this contract — which is known in the record as the “ umbrella ” contract — was guaranteed by Pan Am. Then followed a period of wide expansion in the business of The American Oil Company. Profits rose from $353,-017 in 1923 to $4,149,200 in 1932, in which latter year the surplus had increased to a figure in excess of $18,000,000 after payment of dividends ranging from 8% in 1927 to 100% in 1932. In the meantime, between 1927 and 1930, Indiana had acquired 96% of the stock of Pan Am. Toward the end of that period the management of Pan Am became concerned by an agitation in Congress which in 1932 led to the imposition of a tariff on the importation of petroleum products and had the effect of seriously curtailing such importation. We are told by the defendants that it was the threat of a high tariff on the importation of petroleum products which caused Pan Am in 1932 to sell its foreign crude oil reserves and oil producing facilities to the defendant Standard Oil Company (N. J.). The plaintiffs assert that the sale by Pan Am to Standard Oil Company (N. J.) of its foreign properties was prompted by a desire by Indiana to stifle competition by Pan Am. In-any event, it was in connection with that sale and because of the prospect that a high tariff would prevent Pan Am from receiving from foreign sources a supply of crude oil sufficient to meet the demands of its domestic market, that an arrangement was made by which the defendant Standard Oil Company (N.

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Bluebook (online)
56 N.E.2d 705, 293 N.Y. 281, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaustein-v-pan-american-petroleum-transport-co-ny-1944.