Canada Southern Oils v. Manabi Exploration Co.
This text of 96 A.2d 810 (Canada Southern Oils v. Manabi Exploration 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.
Opinion
CANADA SOUTHERN OILS, Limited,
v.
MANABI EXPLORATION CO., Inc.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.
John J. Morris, Jr., Howard L. Williams and Henry Van Der Goes (of Hering, Morris, James & Hitchens), Wilmington, and Coudert Brothers, New York City, for plaintiff.
Richard F. Corroon (of Berl, Potter & Anderson), Wilmington, for defendant.
SEITZ, Chancellor.
This is the decision on plaintiff's application for a preliminary injunction to prevent the issuance, transfer, or voting of certain shares of defendant's stock.
In deciding this matter the court was confronted with a veritable Niagara of words. However, a hard core of uncontradicted facts emerged which I have relied upon in arriving at my determination. Now to those facts.
Plaintiff corporation is engaged directly and through subsidiaries in the business of producing and selling oil, etc. Plaintiff is apparently controlled by what may loosely be called the "Buckley interests". For convenience the terms will often be used interchangeably. About 1950 Cecil V. Hagan, a substantial stockholder in and President of the defendant corporation,[1] sought to interest the Buckleys in acquiring a stock interest in defendant; the defendant's business being the ownership and operation of certain oil producing acreage in Ecuador.
At all times here pertinent defendant's authorized capital stock consisted of 1,500,000 shares. The Buckleys did not buy any of defendant's shares at first but later bought a small number of shares. By subsequent purchases however, they came to own 623,628 shares out of 1,236,600 shares *811 of defendant's outstanding stock. This constituted slightly more than 50%. It appears that plaintiff was required to acquire voting control of defendant as a condition precedent to the floating of plaintiff's convertible debentures by the brokerage house involved.
In 1951 the Buckleys, impressed with Hagan, made him President of plaintiff and gave him a five year contract. In 1952 unsuccessful attempts were made to raise additional capital for defendant. Apparently the Buckleys and Hagan were not in agreement as to the best method of conducting defendant's business. In any event the question of raising additional capital continued to vex defendant's officers and was an important matter for consideration at the time of the annual meeting of defendant's stockholders noticed for May 1952. According to the notice of the May meeting one of the matters to be considered was "the advisability of the issuance of additional shares of Common Stock of the Company." At the meeting the following resolution was proposed by Hagan:
"Resolved, that the Board of Directors is hereby authorized and empowered to issue such additional shares of the Company's presently authorized but unissued Ten Cents (10¢) par value common stock to such persons and at such time and price as the Board of Directors in their sole discretion shall determine to be in the best interests of the Company."
Roy B. Kelly, a director of and attorney for defendant, and the holder of plaintiff's proxy, voted plaintiff's controlling shares for the resolution. The parties are in dispute as to whether the Buckleys were made aware, prior to the meeting, that a public issuance of such shares would result in a waiver of plaintiff's preemptive rights. I find it unnecessary to resolve this point. Immediately after the vote on the resolution a stockholder asked Mr. Kelly whether the resolution amounted to a waiver of preemptive rights. Mr. Kelly expressed the opinion that it did. Thereafter copies of the minutes of the meeting were sent to each of the defendant's seven directors, including John W. Buckley and Heath, both admittedly "representing" the plaintiff's interests. These minutes recited that the question of preemptive rights had been raised and that Mr. Kelly had given an opinion that the approval of the resolution amounted to a waiver. A memorandum attached to the copy of the minutes sent each director requested that any changes be sent within 10 days. Apparently no question concerning the correctness of the minutes or Kelly's opinion was raised by plaintiff or any of the Buckley representatives.
Plaintiff claims that it never relinquished its preemptive rights and that subsequent action by defendant in treating plaintiff's action as a waiver of its preemptive rights was not justified. Defendant argues that while plaintiff did have a preemptive right in such shares, it waived such right by voting for the quoted resolution or, in any event, by failing to object after receiving notice that the defendant considered that the voting of plaintiff's shares in favor of the resolution constituted a waiver.
I fully agree that whether it be characterized as a waiver or an estoppel plaintiff is precluded from contending that it did not give up its preemptive rights in the authorized but unissued shares of the defendant's stock under the circumstances just narrated. In addition, plaintiff was the majority stockholder and was aware that the shares were to be used for a public issuance. Plaintiff has raised certain other questions concerning the validity of the notice of meeting, the form of the resolution and the authority of its proxy to so vote, but I find no merit to any of these contentions.
After the passage of the resolution and the subsequent unsuccessful attempts to dispose of the shares by public distribution, the matter of the disposition of such shares apparently was subordinated in favor of other possible methods of raising capital for defendant.
At the same time other events of significance were taking place. As time went on the Buckley interests became dissatisfied *812 with Hagan's handling of plaintiff's affairs. Without attempting to fix blame, it appears that the Buckley interests came to feel that Hagan was not paying sufficient attention to the affairs of plaintiff corporation and was too much interested in developing defendant. The relationship between the Buckley interests and Hagan deteriorated rapidly so that by early 1953 Hagan was requested to take a leave of absence from his affairs as President of plaintiff corporation. However, Hagan resigned as President on February 26, 1953 and at or about this time sold the balance of his substantial stock holdings in plaintiff. He continued as President of defendant corporation and there is no doubt that the majority of the Board were "Hagan men".
Paralleling these events, it appears that defendant's finances were adversely affected in 1952 by declining production but even more by the substantial expense of building a gasoline plant. Attempts to raise money for defendant in late 1952 and early 1953 were unsuccessful. Early in 1953 defendant's need for immediate operating cash became more pressing. Negotiations between Hagan and Buckley with a view to raising some money for defendant were indecisive. In his deposition Hagan admits that prior to the crucial directors' meeting of March 27, 1953 he did not ask Buckley for a firm decision on the question of a loan or other method of meeting the defendant's current financial problems. He explains this failure by saying that he had asked for a short term cash loan of $35,000 and Buckley had suggested that he and Hagan each advance one half of it. Apparently this suggestion exasperated Hagan because he says he himself then advanced $25,000 to the defendant.
We come down to Monday, March 23, 1953 when, at Hagan's direction, the directors received notice by telegram that a meeting of the Board would be held in Houston, Texas on Friday, March 27 to consider defendant's financial condition.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
96 A.2d 810, 33 Del. Ch. 537, 1953 Del. Ch. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canada-southern-oils-v-manabi-exploration-co-delch-1953.