Essential Enterprises Corp. v. Dorsey Corp.

182 A.2d 647, 40 Del. Ch. 343, 1962 Del. Ch. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 1, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 182 A.2d 647 (Essential Enterprises Corp. v. Dorsey 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
Essential Enterprises Corp. v. Dorsey Corp., 182 A.2d 647, 40 Del. Ch. 343, 1962 Del. Ch. LEXIS 96 (Del. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

Seitz, Chancellor:

By this action, plaintiff, Essential Enterprises Corporation, sought a declaratory judgment that a certain portion of an assumption of liability agreement (“transfer agreement”) was invalid and not binding on it. Next, it sought a judgment against the corporate defendant for liabilities illegally transferred to plaintiff and a determination that defendant corporation, Dorsey Corporation [346]*346(“Dorsey”) be required to hold plaintiff harmless as to any liabilities caused by such transfer. Plaintiff also requested an accounting from the individual defendants for certain damages sustained by plaintiff in connection with allegedly improper corporate payments.

Dorsey was formerly named Allied International Investment Corporation ("Allied”). Its name was changed following a judicially approved compromise of Civil Action 1082, which was a stockholders’ action against these individual defendants. The individual defendants were directors of plaintiff. All except Massengale were also directors of Dorsey at the times complained of.

This case was tried and the court heretofore ruled in an unreported opinion that the terms of the compromise of Civil Action 1082 as implemented by the transfer agreement contemplated that Dorsey was to get the corporate shell of Allied with $300,000 cash “net”. It turned out that the assets of Allied other than the Automatic stock which it held were not sufficient to pay all liabilities and leave a net of $300,000 for Dorsey. I decided that the transfer agreement was valid and that the proper liabilities which could not be paid and leave Dorsey with $300,000 net were validly transferred to plaintiff. Unless the parties desire to argue this further, I assume that this prior holding, which I reaffirm, removes Dorsey from a position of liability on any of the items hereinafter considered.

In the unreported opinion I also ruled on certain specific items which plaintiff claimed were not proper obligations of Allied and thus not properly transferred under the transfer agreement. After the unreported opinion was released a motion was filed seeking further findings and rulings and the court in effect granted the motion by directing the filing of supplemental briefs. This is the decision thereon.

I first consider whether the legal fees paid or incurred by Allied or the individual defendants in connection with Civil Action 1082 were proper and in effect were properly transferred to plaintiff. The most substantial legal bills involved are those of a New York law firm (“Lowenstein firm”). The defendant Hotchkiss is a partner in that firm. The parties have identified the portions of the Lowenstein bills which are in dispute.

[347]*347 Defendants contend that the allegations of the amended supplemental complaint did not fairly advise them that at the trial one of the issues to be tried was whether the legal fees chargeable to C.A. 1082 were incurred for an improper purpose. The amended complaint alleged that “Included in the liabilities which defendants have attempted to impose upon plaintiff are the following which cannot properly be charged to plaintiff even under the terms of the transfer agreement.” There were then listed, inter alla, the various Lowenstein invoices under attack. The large charges in those bills are also alleged to be excessive. There was much “backing and filling” in this case as to the theory of plaintiff’s claims. It is not even now entirely free from doubt. I do believe, however, that the pleadings and trial raised more than just the issue of the reasonableness of the amount of some of the Lowenstein charges. Plaintiff made it clear that it attacked the “validity” of the charges. It follows that plaintiff is entitled to question the Lowenstein legal bills on what defendants call the “improper purpose” theory.

A portion of the Lowenstein billings was for legal services rendered prior to the institution of C.A. 1082. To the extent they were rendered in connection with the transaction subsequently attacked in C.A. No. 1082, the first question which would normally arise would be whether the defendant directors properly incurred them on behalf of the corporation. To answer this question one would expect to decide whether the proposed transaction which required the legal services was for a proper corporate purpose.

The complaint in C.A. 1082 primarily attacked the propriety of the corporate purpose of a portion of the transaction (Automatic stock distribution) and charged that it was to serve the purely personal purposes of its then president. It was also claimed that this was known to the other defendant directors.

After a restraining order had been issued, the case was settled and the settlement was judicially approved. By the terms of the settlement the defendants were permanently enjoined from carrying out the transaction as proposed, otherwise the complaint was dismissed. The settlement carried out the so-called “Dorsey deal” portion of the transaction but changed the plan dealing with the Automatic stock dis[348]*348tribution. The settlement terms did not impose any personal liability on the individual defendants.

The plaintiff says the terms of the approved settlement constituted an adjudication that the major portion of the transaction under attack was for a personal rather than a corporate purpose. Plaintiff say that it follows that the legal expenses incurred in that connection for the period prior to the institution of the action were therefore improperly incurred and the individual defendants are responsible to the plaintiff therefor.

I conclude that even though the approved settlement contained a consent permanent injunction it did not constitute a determination of. liability, at least for purposes of deciding whether the legal services were incurred in furtherance of an improper corporate purpose. I say this because a settlement is the antithesis of an adjudication. Moreover, the hard fact is that the case was never tried and many of the material facts were denied by defendants. Certainly, the restraining order was not a final determination of the issue.

Having decided that the approved settlement in Civil Action 1082 did not constitute a determination that the identified charges incurred on its behalf were improper, the next question is whether plaintiff may now have that issue decided in this action. I am satisfied that this court is not now free to litigate such issue. I say this because the court could not decide whether those charges were properly incurred until it tried and decided whether or not the transaction was for a proper corporate purpose. Yet, the transaction under attack was settled and approved. It would, in effect, impinge on the terms of the settlement to permit the plaintiff to litigate now the propriety of the individual defendants’ actions when, as here, the settlement embraced the very transaction which would have to be reviewed.

I therefore conclude that the judicially approved settlement in Civil Action 1082 precludes plaintiff from recovering from the individual defendants any money allegedly improperly disbursed for the identified legal services incurred for the period prior to the institution of Civil Action 1082. To the extent, if any, that such charges are unpaid they are the obligation of plaintiff.

[349]*349I next consider the bills for legal services to the extent they cover the period subsequent to the commencement of C.A.

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Essential Enterprises Corp. v. Dorsey Corporation
182 A.2d 647 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
182 A.2d 647, 40 Del. Ch. 343, 1962 Del. Ch. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/essential-enterprises-corp-v-dorsey-corp-delch-1962.