Dann v. Chrysler Corp.

215 A.2d 709, 42 Del. Ch. 508, 1965 Del. Ch. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 8, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 215 A.2d 709 (Dann v. Chrysler Corp.) 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
Dann v. Chrysler Corp., 215 A.2d 709, 42 Del. Ch. 508, 1965 Del. Ch. LEXIS 102 (Del. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

Seitz, Chancellor:

This court approved the settlement of two stockholders’ derivative actions in the so-called Chrysler litigation. Dann v. Chrysler Corp. and Gallo v. Ackerman, — Del.Ch. —, 198 A.2d 185. The Supreme Court of Delaware affirmed, Hoffman v. Dann, 205 A.2d 343, and certiorari was denied by the United States Supreme Court, Hoffman v. Chrysler Corp., 380 U.S. 973, 85 S.Ct. 1332, 14 L.Ed.2d 269. Thereafter the reserved issue as to the plaintiffs’ right to reimbursement for the fees and expenses of their counsel was tried and this is the decision thereon.

Plaintiffs in both actions have petitioned for sums for their Delaware counsel and out-of-state associates. The sums requested, in the aggregate, amount to about $6,000,000. Chrysler is resisting the grant of any allowance on grounds which are hereinafter delineated. Objector Hoffman, in capsule form, takes a similar position. Intervenor Koenigsberg says no benefits to Chrysler resulted directly from the settlement. It is helpful first to consider provisions of the Stipulation of Settlement which are pertinent to the present issues.

Each party defendant to the Stipulation denied all charges of wrongdoing. Plaintiffs purported to state the facts which motivated their agreeing to the settlement in the following recital:

[513]*513“Plaintiffs having considered, among other things, the significant and steady progress in all phases of Chrysler’s operations under new management, believe settlement of the litigation on the terms herein agreed, with the estimated benefits which will flow to Chrysler and its stockholders by reason of the amendment to the Incentive Compensation Plan, can fairly be considered an achievement of the objectives of the litigation and is much to be preferred to a continuation of the litigation and is in the best interests of Chrysler and its stockholders.”

The Stipulation then provides in Paragraph 1 as follows:

“Consideration for the Stipulation is the modification of the authorization for incentive compensation awards by Chrysler as hereinafter provided, together with any other matters or things, which in law or in equity may constitute consideration for the dismissal of all of the actions referred to herein and the releases to be given as hereinafter provided.”

Paragraph 9 of the Stipulation is particularly applicable to the present problem:

“It is hereby represented by each of the parties hereto that there are not, and have not been any agreements express or implied, as to the amount of attorneys’ fees to which the respective attorneys for the plaintiffs in the above actions may be entitled; except that the individual defendants hereto and Chrysler acknowledge that the aforesaid modification of the authorization for incentive compensation awards by Chrysler is the result of the bringing of the litigation and the specific suggestion of plaintiffs’ counsel. There is no further agreement as to any other causal connection between the activities of plaintiffs’ counsel and any other benefits which may have been received by Chrysler.”

Plaintiffs’ attorneys explicitly recognized in the Notice to the Stockholders of the settlement that their burden of proof was too great to promise success for the important claims in their complaints except as to the claimed improvements in the Incentive Compensation Plan (“Plan”) and except as to a few instances of personal interest and profit on defendants’ part. They also expressed therein [514]*514the belief that their claims concerning alleged past managerial shortcomings had to be balanced against the more recent successes of management and the desire not to cause interference by distracting litigation. Once again, except for the modification in the Plan, defendants denied that plaintiffs contributed to changes or improvements at Chrysler.

The rather unorthodox terms of the settlement heralded the present trouble in connection with fee allowances. In settlements generally, all considerations are spelled out in the settlement papers. Thus, the court need not look beyond the settlement papers in seeking the forms of the alleged benefit. Such is not the case here.

As I construe the terms of settlement, Chrysler did not explicitly agree that, for purposes of fee allowances, plaintiffs conferred any benefit upon Chrysler. All Chrysler conceded was that the change in the Plan was a “consideration” for the settlement, plus any other matter which might in law or equity constitute consideration. But Chrysler argues that the evaluations of the claims made in connection with the approval of the settlement show that the claims lacked merit. Plaintiffs assert that the settlement did not constitute an adjudication of the merits of the causes of action asserted. This is true in the sense that the process of approving a settlement does not require the court to determine claims on their merits as in ordinary litigation. Nevertheless, where, as here, the merits of the claims are not admitted, the plaintiffs have the burden of showing that they filed meritorious claims. In resolving that issue here the court is free to consider the evidence taken at the hearing on the fairness of the settlement as well as that adduced on the fee hearings.

As I evaluate the Stipulation of Settlement, plaintiffs were left free to try to show the basis for recovery of prelitigation investigation fees under the doctrine of Kaufman v. Shoenberg, 33 Del.Ch. 211, 92 A.2d 295. They were also, permitted to try to establish a right to fees based on changes made at Chrysler after the filing of the lawsuits and before settlement which resulted in cognizable benefits proximately related to plaintiffs’ actions. Rosenthal v. [515]*515Burry Biscuit Co., Del.Ch. —, 209 A.2d 459; Mintz v. Bohen, Del.Ch. —, 210 A.2d 569. Finally, they were free to try to demonstrate that the settlement itself produced benefits which entitled plaintiffs’ counsel to fees. It is thus apparent that plaintiffs were in a position to assert and to attempt to prove that their activities resulted in numerous legally cognizable and therefore compensable benefits to Chrysler. To what extent have they succeeded?

Before considering plaintiffs’ claims, it is appropriate to note that while Delaware courts recognize that the “benefit” for allowance purposes need not necessarily be money or property, Mencher v. Sachs, 39 Del.Ch. 366, 164 A.2d 320; Richman v. DeVal Aerodynamics, 40 Del.Ch. 548, 549, 185 A.2d 884, not every so-called benefit will support the awarding of monetary compensation to a stockholder’s attorney in this type of case.

Against this background, I turn to plaintiffs’ claimed benefits, remembering that the Gallo plaintiffs rely almost exclusively on the change in the Incentive Compensation Plan as the benefit conferred for purpose of an allowance of fees to their counsel.

I first consider the Dann plaintiffs’ claims to investigation fees under the theory of Kaufman v. Shoenberg above. They say that they made demands of substance on defendants which resulted in beneficial corrective action being taken by Chrysler before plaintiffs’ complaint was filed on August 12, 1960.

There is a factual answer to plaintiffs’ contention, regardless of the burden of proof.

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Bluebook (online)
215 A.2d 709, 42 Del. Ch. 508, 1965 Del. Ch. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dann-v-chrysler-corp-delch-1965.