Elster v. American Airlines

128 A.2d 801
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 24, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 128 A.2d 801 (Elster v. American Airlines) 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
Elster v. American Airlines, 128 A.2d 801 (Del. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

128 A.2d 801 (1957)

William ELSTER and Ray Wolf, Plaintiffs
v.
AMERICAN AIRLINES, Inc., et al., Defendants.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

January 24, 1957.

*802 William E. Taylor, Jr., Wilmington, and William E. Haudek, of Pomerantz, Levy & Haudek, New York City, for plaintiffs.

Richard F. Corroon, of Berl, Potter & Anderson, Wilmington, and Debevoise, Plimpton & McLean, New York City, for defendant American Airlines, Inc.

*803 MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.

On August 26, 1952 William Elster filed his complaint against American Airlines, Inc., alleging that stock options granted and to be granted to a large number of executive and supervisory employees under a company plan were void. Plaintiff contended that such options as granted constituted gifts of corporate assets which had not been authorized by unanimous stockholder vote.

American's stockholders meeting on May 16, 1950 had approved by an overwhelming majority vote the issuance of options for 250,000 shares of American common stock to approximately twenty-five executives to be selected by a committee of directors, and on September 12, 1950 options with respect to 143,000 such shares were granted to thirty such corporate executives. At a meeting held on May 15, 1951 American's stockholders again by an overwhelming vote approved the allotment by committee of options for the remaining 107,000 shares "* * * among additional executive and supervisory personnel generally * * *"[1] and on May 29, 1952 options for such shares of stock were granted to two hundred and and eighty nine such employees. The complaint prayed for injunctive relief against the issuing and honoring of any options and for the cancellation of unissued options, however, no effort was made to obtain a preliminary injunction, and all unexercised options expired by their own terms on June 1, 1955.

Elster admittedly had not become a stockholder of American Airlines until June 1951 and so could not comply with the requirements of Rule 23(b), Del.C.Ann. insofar as his complaint attacked the 1950 options.[2] An effort was made to remedy this situation by adding Anne F. Cohen, a stockholder of longer standing, as a party plaintiff on March 1, 1953. It was conceded, however, on judicial disposal of American's motions to dismiss and for summary judgment that Mrs. Cohen had no standing to attack either set of options inasmuch as her shares had been voted in favor of the grant of options authorized at both meetings of stockholders. Summary judgment was then granted against Mrs. Cohen, and insofar as Elster's complaint attacked the 1950 options, it was dismissed.[3]

Thereafter on December 8, 1953 American answered and moved for judgment of dismissal for plaintiff's failure to name the optionees as parties defendant and for summary judgment on the grounds that consideration for the options had been found by the directors to be legally adequate pursuant to action taken under the provisions of § 157 of Title 8 Del.C.[4] On June 14, 1954 the motion to dismiss for failure to join the optionees as defendant parties was granted and decision was reserved on the motion for summary judgment, however, the then trial judge stated[5] that before an order of dismissal would be signed, plaintiff would be given "* * * an opportunity, should he so desire, to bring in some or all of the optionees as parties defendant."

There matters rested, except for the filing of interrogatories by the then plaintiff and the corporation's answers thereto, until on July 10, 1956 I entered an order[6] permitting *804 the filing of a second amended complaint which named the optionees as parties defendant and added as a party plaintiff, Ray Wolf, who claims to have been a stockholder of American since 1935. A sequestrator was appointed by order of the same date. On July 26, 1956 American moved to rescind the orders of July 10 contending that it was entitled to judgment under its pending motion of December 1953 on which the Court had reserved decision. American's motion also set forth as grounds for cancellation of the Court's order of July 10 the contentions that plaintiff's effort to amend and bring in new parties was made after the running of the bar of the three year Delaware statute of limitations,[7] and in the alternative, if such statute does not directly apply, that plaintiff's attempted amendment is barred by laches. On September 20, 1956 American completed its pleadings to date by filing an amended answer which incorporates all its defenses.

Two principal questions are accordingly before the Court: first, does plaintiff's latest amendment with its adding of additional parties come too late, and, if not, is the corporate defendant on the basis of the undisputed material facts entitled to summary judgment?

While the second amended complaint differs somewhat in form from the original complaint and seeks an accounting from the individual defendants, such altered form and the added prayer for an accounting are attributable to the adding of additional parties, the passage of time and shifts of position made since 1952 and not to any change in the basic theory of the case. The gravamen of the action remains unchanged in that it seeks a decree to the effect that employee stock options issued by the corporate defendant in 1951 and 1952 were granted without legal consideration. Accordingly, if it appears from the papers before me that the options when granted were in effect gifts of corporate assets or if proof as to the consideration furnished by the optionees in return for the grant of options is inconclusive, American's motion must be denied unless it appears that plaintiff's amendment was filed too late.

American Airlines Inc. contends that inasmuch as the options under attack were issued in 1951 and 1952 and expired on June 1, 1955, since which dates a substantial portion of the optioned stock has been sold by former optionees, plaintiff's present cause of action, while admittedly seeking rescission, is essentially one for damages against new parties and is therefore barred by the Delaware three year statute of limitations, § 8106, Title 10, Del. C., Rule 15(c) of this Court, Henis v. Compania Agricola de Guatemala, D.C.Del., 116 F.Supp. 223 and Messelt v. Security Storage Company, D.C.Del., 14 F.R.D. 507. The corporate defendant quite logically takes the position that if the amendment adding new parties is barred by the applicable Delaware statute of limitations, the suit must fail inasmuch as it is the law of this case that the presence in it of the individual defendants is a prerequisite to the affirmative relief sought.

I cannot agree, however, that the provisions of the Delaware three year statute of limitation[8] here operate directly to bar what I consider to be in essence an equitable suit for rescission. Admittedly damages may be the only relief available against many of the individual optionees if the corporate defendant is to be made "whole" *805 according to plaintiff's gift of corporate assets theory, but this aspect of the case is subsidiary to what now appears to be an equitable cause[9] of action. At this stage[10] of the proceedings it is impossible to determine which option holders have sold or otherwise effectively disposed of optioned stock.

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Bluebook (online)
128 A.2d 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elster-v-american-airlines-delch-1957.