Chasin v. Gluck

216 A.2d 142, 42 Del. Ch. 538, 1965 Del. Ch. LEXIS 105
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 14, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 216 A.2d 142 (Chasin v. Gluck) 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
Chasin v. Gluck, 216 A.2d 142, 42 Del. Ch. 538, 1965 Del. Ch. LEXIS 105 (Del. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

MARVEL, Vice Chancellor:

Plaintiffs claim to be stockholders of the defendant A. S. Beck Shoe Corporation and sue derivatively in the alleged right and for the benefit of the corporate defendant and its stockholders. On the filing of their suit on June 23, 1964, an order of se-. questration was entered which directed the seizure within the jurisdiction of the Court of designated property of the individual defendants Maxwell H. Gluck, Eugene Roth, James M. Johnston and Saul Schiff. Such order identified the property to be seized as shares of common stock of A. S. Beck Shoe Corporation and of Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Long Island, Inc., both of which are Delaware corporations. Thereupon, the sequestrator appointed by the Court notified the above corporations that he had seized shares of stock standing in the name of each of the individual de *143 fendants whether owned directly or indirectly or in which they had any interest, beneficial or otherwise or “ * * * in, of, or to which all or any of them may have or hold any right, title or interest with all the rights belonging or appertaining , to said shares * * * ”, In response to said notice, the transfer agent for A. S. Beck Shoe Corporation reported that the defendant Saul Schiff was the record holder of 28,500 shares of its stock, that the defendant Maxwell Gluck was the record holder of 71,000 such shares, and that no shares of the corporation were registered in the names of Eugene F. Roth and James M. Johnston. Also reported was the following: “For further information, said records also show that there are 71,053 shares issued to Robert M. Gottschalk and Eugene F. Roth, as nominees under agreement dated October 15, 1963 between Saul Schiff and Maxwell H. Gluck (Certificate No. CO 8585, issued February 26, 1964)”.

The transfer agent for Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Long Island reported no shares held in the names of the defendants Gluck, Schiff and Roth; that 109 of its shares were registered in the name of James M. Johnston, and that 7,191 of its shares were registered in the name of Johnston, Lemon & Co. As to the latter holdings it added: “We have no information whatsoever as to whether or not these shares are owned individually, beneficially or otherwise by the said James M. Johnston”.

The defendants Maxwell H. Gluck, Saul Schiff and James M. Johnston having been granted leave to appear specially, proceeded to file a motion to vacate the purported seizure of the above designated shares of stock as to all of them on the grounds that the order which had purported to seize their property violated the provisions of 10 Del.C. § 366 in that the complaint failed to allege that such defendants were nonresidents of the State of Delaware as required by statute.

Such motion further contended that as to the defendant Johnston such order violated 6 Del.C. § 1525(b) (3) insofar as it purported to seize stock standing “ * * * in the name of Johnston, Lemon & Co. * * * ”, a business partnership. The last cited statute provides that: “A partner’s right in specific partnership property is not subject to attachment or execution, except on a claim against the partnership.”

That portion of defendants’ motion which sought to vacate seizure of property in Delaware on the grounds of plaintiff’s failure to comply with 10 Del.C. § 366 was summarily denied. However, that part of the motion which sought to vacate seizure of shares of stock registered in the name of Johnston, Lemon & Co. was denied without prejudice. See Chasin v. Gluck (Del.Ch.) 207 A.2d 30.

An appeal having been taken, the part of the Court’s order of January 13, 1965 which had denied the notice to vacate seizure of property in Delaware as to all of the specially appearing defendants was reversed by the Supreme Court of Delaware and the case remanded, the grounds for reversal being that plaintiffs had not met the express requirements of 10 Del.C. § 366(a) in that they had failed to include in their complaint statutory language to the effect that “ * * * the defendant or anyone or more of the defendants is a non-resident of the State of Delaware * * * Such an allegation was held to be a statutory prerequisite to the issuance of an order “ * * * directing such nonresident defendant or defendants to appear * * *

Plaintiff then moved to amend her complaint by adding to it an allegation to the effect that the individual defendants “ * * * are non-residents of the State of Delaware * * * ”. Simultaneously, plaintiffs moved for the entry of an alias order of sequestration on the basis of the allegations of the amended complaint. The motion to amend was granted and an alias *144 order entered which directed the defendants Gluck, Schiff and Johnston to appear and also appointed a sequestrator to seize “ * * * property of each said defendants in the State of Delaware, consisting of shares of common stock of A. S. Beck Shoe corporation and Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Long Island, Inc. * * * A notice of seizure was again addressed to such corporations, the language used being identical to that used in the original sequestration order, such notice being designed to effect a seizure of any and all of the interest held by the defendants in question in shares of the named corporations whether of a direct or indirect nature. The transfer agent for A. S. Beck Shoe Corporation, in response to the notice, certified that there was no stock on its hooks registered in the names of Maxwell H. Gluck, Saul Schiff or James M. Johnston, hut that: “ * * * The records do show, however, that there are 71,053 shares registered in the name of Robert M. Gotts-chalk and Eugene F. Roth as nominees U/A Dtd., the 15th day of October, 1963, between Saul Schiff and Maxwell H. Gluck. The shares are represented by a single certificate No. CO 8585 issued February 26, 1964”. The agent further stated that it had made a notation on its books that no transfer of said shares was to be recognized without notice from the seques-trator or until further order of the Court.

The transfer agent for Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Long Island again reported that none of its stock was held in the names of Maxwell H. Gluck and Saul Schiff, but that James M. Johnston held 109 shares in his own name. Also noted was the fact that the number of shares registered in the name of Johnston, Lemon & Co., had been reduced from 7190 to 1979. Such corporation again disclaimed any knowledge as to whether or not these shares were owned “ * * * individually, beneficially or otherwise by the said James M. Johnston * * *",

The defendants Gluck, Schiff and Johnston, having again been given leave to appear specially, have moved to vacate the second order of sequestration. Counsel for Messrs. Gluck and Schiff, in an unsupported motion paper, contends that “* * * the purported seizure of their shares of stock in this action * * *” should be vacated “ * * * on the ground that these defendants have no interest subject to seizure in the 71,053 shares registered in the name of Robert M. Gottschalf and Eugene F. Roth as nominees under an agreement dated October 15, 1963 * * * ”. As to the defendant Johnston alone the motion asks that the seizure of stock registered in the name of Johnston, Lemon & Co. be vacated on the grounds asserted in the earlier motion, namely that sequestration of such shares is violative of the partnership law provision found in 6 Del.C. § 1525 (b) (3).

As to the shares of A. S.

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Bluebook (online)
216 A.2d 142, 42 Del. Ch. 538, 1965 Del. Ch. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chasin-v-gluck-delch-1965.