Empire Southern Gas Co. v. Gray

46 A.2d 741, 29 Del. Ch. 95, 1946 Del. Ch. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 4, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 46 A.2d 741 (Empire Southern Gas Co. v. Gray) 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
Empire Southern Gas Co. v. Gray, 46 A.2d 741, 29 Del. Ch. 95, 1946 Del. Ch. LEXIS 58 (Del. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

Seitz, Vice-Chancellor.

This is the decision on the complainant’s motion for a preliminary injunction to prevent the respondents from soliciting proxies purportedly pursuant to authority given them by the board of directors of the complainant corporation, and from voting proxies so solicited at the annual meeting of the stockholders to be held on April 11, 1946. The bill of complaint, in substance, charges that the respondents have fraudulently led the stockholders to believe contrary to the fact that such solicitation is pursuant to authority given by the board of directors, and that by their acts respondents have procured the advantage not only of the use of the corporate name of complainant, but the unopposed solicitation of proxies well in advance of the meeting date. The bill prays, inter alla, for a preliminary injunction enjoining the respondents from soliciting proxies in the name of the complainant, or ostensibly pursuant to the authority of its board of directors and from soliciting any proxies unless they are readily distinguishable in appearance from those which accom[98]*98parried the notice of annual meeting and proxy statement mailed by the complainant, and finally from voting for any purpose whatsoever any proxies of any kind, unless they are readily distinguishable in appearance from those which accompanied the notice of annual meeting and proxy statement mailed by the complainant.

The complainant, Empire Southern Gas Company, a Delaware corporation, filed its bill of complaint in this court on March 20, 1946, naming as respondents Harold G. Gray and James A. Davis, both nonresidents of this State. The complainant’s application for a temporary restraining order was heard on March 22, prior to service of process upon or the entry of a general appearance for the respondents, but such general appearance was entered prior to the entry of the restraining order on March 23. In accordance with the usual practice, the restraining order also fixed a date for the hearing on the application for a preliminary injunction. This hearing, based entirely on voluminous affidavits filed by the parties, was held on March 30, at which time the court also heard the legal arguments of counsel. Thereafter, briefs in support of the respective contentions of the parties were filed with the court.

The issues to be decided can best be presented by setting forth what appear to the court to be the substantial contentions advanced by the respondents:

1. Section 31 of the General Corporation Law of Delaware, Rev. Code 1935, § 2063, provides an exclusive remedy to review any phase of a stockholders’ election, and this court may not interfere under any circumstances prior to the election.

2. Assuming that this court may interfere in a proper case prior to a stockholders’ election, the corporation is not a proper complainant in such a case.

3. Assuming this action may be maintained by the corporation, nevertheless, (a) the respondents in sending out [99]*99the notices, proxy statements and proxies acted pursuant to authority given them by the resolution of the board of directors dated February 21, 1946, or (b) the notices, proxy statements, and proxies sent out by the respondents, when fairly read, do not purport to have been sent out pursuant to authority given by the present board of directors.

4. In any event, the jurisdiction of this court being so doubtful, and the facts so much in dispute, a preliminary injunction should not be issued.

As is not unusual in litigation arising from an intracorporate struggle, the issues have been somewhat obscured by the prolix and immaterial mutual recriminations and protestations of good faith. Also, I believe that the purpose of the litigation and its effect, if accomplished, will have none of the dire effects which the respondents would ascribe to it.

We turn now to the issues to be decided. Does the existence of Section 31 of our General Corporation Law preclude this court from interfering with a stockholders’ election, or more accurately, the actions of those interested in such election at any time for any reason prior to such election? I believe both precedent and practice support the right of this court to interfere prior to a stockholders’ meeting to prevent fraud in the solicitation of proxies, and to enjoin the voting of proxies so obtained. This conclusion is implicit in at least three cases involving Delaware corporations. See Aldridge v. Franco-Wyoming Securities Corporation, 26 Del. Ch. 213, (1942) 26 A. 2d 544; Bouree, et al., v. Trust Francais, etc., (1924) 14 Del. Ch. 332, 127 A. 56; Hand v. Missouri-Kansas Pipe Line Co., (D.C., 1944) 54 Fed. Supp. 649. It would, indeed, be stultifying for a court of equity to disclaim jurisdiction in all cases, no matter how flagrant the fraud, and relegate the parties to an action under Section 31 with the consequent economic waste. While courts are reluctant to interfere unduly prior to a stockholders’ election, such a reluctance is not to be considered [100]*100as equivalent to the complete absence of a remedy during such period.

I conclude, therefore, that Section 31 is not exclusive and that in a proper case this court may entertain an action to prevent fraud in the solicitation of proxies, and may enjoin such solicitation and the voting of proxies procured thereby.

Turning now to the second issue: Is the corporation a proper complainant to assert the injury alleged and to procure the relief requested, or, stated with relation to the facts here involved: May the complainant Delaware corporation maintain an action in this court seeking to enjoin the respondents from voting proxies which were procured by them after sending notices of meeting, proxy statements, and proxies purportedly pursuant to authority given by the incumbent board of directors when not in fact so authorized?

It will be assumed for the moment that the notices, proxy statements and proxies sent out by the respondents do appear to be sent pursuant to authority given by the board of directors, and it will be further assumed that no such authority existed in fact. Under this assumed state of facts, is there a remedy available in this court to the complainant corporation ? Preliminarily, I have no doubt that a respondent who misrepresents the action of the board of directors is thereby misrepresenting the action of the corporation, because under Section 9 of the General Corporation Law, Rev. Code 1935, § 2041, the directors are authorized to manage the business of the corporation.

Respondents assert, in effect, that the complainant has no remedial interest in the action asserted, and that the corporation, qua corporation, has no proper place in a struggle for control between two rival factions of stockholders.

The respondents’ assertions, it seems to me, misconceive the nature of this action., and a more extreme example tends [101]*101to demonstrate the real issue as I see it. Let us take a corporation having a stockholder who has no connection with the corporation, except that he owns one share of its stock. This stockholder decides that he wants to solicit proxies without having decided for whom he will vote them; you might even go further and assume that he will vote them for the incumbents.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A.2d 741, 29 Del. Ch. 95, 1946 Del. Ch. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empire-southern-gas-co-v-gray-delch-1946.