Garbarino v. Albercan Oil Corporation

109 A.2d 824
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 21, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 109 A.2d 824 (Garbarino v. Albercan Oil Corporation) 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
Garbarino v. Albercan Oil Corporation, 109 A.2d 824 (Del. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

109 A.2d 824 (1954)

Mary T. GARBARINO, Guido M. Garbarino, Renata C. Treves, Gino R. Treves, Leo J. Wollemborg, George R. Miller, Lee E. Miller and Olimpia Falco, Plaintiffs,
v.
ALBERCAN OIL CORPORATION, Canada Southern Oils, Ltd., and The Catawba Corporation, Defendants.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

November 12, 1954.
On Reargument December 21, 1954.

*825 Robert C. Barab, Wilmington, and Gallup, Climenko & Gould, New York City, for plaintiffs.

Robert H. Richards, Jr., of Richards, Layton & Finger, Wilmington, for defendant Albercan Oil Corp.

John J. Morris, Jr., of Morris, James, Hitchens & Williams, Wilmington, for defendant Canada Southern Oils, Ltd.

SEITZ, Chancellor.

This is the decision on the objections of the defendants, Albercan Oil Corporation (called "Albercan") and Canada Southern Oils, Ltd. (called "Canada Southern") to plaintiffs' interrogatories. Defendants object to all the interrogatories for one or more reasons.

This is an action by certain Albercan stockholders attacking a sale of assets on the ground that the consideration paid by Canada Southern to Albercan for its assets was legally inadequate. Canada Southern owns a majority of the Albercan stock. Under the agreement of sale, Albercan was to sell its assets to Canada Southern and in turn Canada Southern agreed to deliver to or upon the order of Albercan sufficient shares of Canada Southern stock to provide each shareholder of Albercan one share of Canada Southern for every 2.444 shares of Albercan held. In order to have the sale "go through" without injunctive interference, the parties stipulated, inter alia, as follows:

"4. The chancellor will proceed to determine whether the consideration fixed in the contract of sale between Albercan and Canada Southern, dated March 27, 1953, was so inadequate as to be invalid. For the purposes of such determination, it is agreed that the value of the stock of Canada Southern on March 27, 1953, was $11.50 per share."

Defendants first object to certain interrogatories on the ground that they seek information for periods not relevant to the date to be used in judging the fairness of the sale. Obviously, the assets must be valued and compared as of a particular date. The parties are in disagreement as to the date the court should use in evaluating Albercan's assets. Defendants insist that the date is March 27, 1953, while plaintiffs contend that the date is either November 25, 1953, or February 23, 1954. The reason for the division of opinion is that the original agreement of sale was dated March 27, 1953. However on November 25, 1953, *826 an extension agreement was executed by which the closing date was further extended from earlier extension dates granted the selling corporation. The sale was consummated on February 23, 1954.

Initially, I see no reasonable basis for using February 23, 1954, the consummation date, for purposes of comparing values. There is no suggestion that it was unreasonably chosen or chosen in bad faith. As subsequently appears, it was selected soon after the tax free nature of the sale was established.

Plaintiffs next argue very vigorously that the November 25, 1953 date should be used for purpose of testing the fairness of the sale price, rather than the date of the original agreement. They point to the admitted control of the selling corporation by the purchasing corporation and say such fact rendered it necessary for Albercan's directors to re-examine the fairness of the transaction before approving the extension on November 25, 1953. This being so, they contend that the later date must be used for comparison purposes.

Defendants say that the extensions were solely for the benefit of the selling corporation in the sense that the contracting parties were waiting to see whether they could obtain a ruling that Albercan would be making a tax free sale.[1] Defendant, Canada Southern, of course, necessarily concedes that this benefit to plaintiffs would largely inure to its benefit because it is the largest stockholder of the selling corporation. However, the reason for the extension was also beneficial to Albercan's other stockholders. Indeed, a serious problem concerning the wisdom of the management's actions might have been involved had they closed the sale without assurances as to its tax free nature.

Based on the purpose of the extension and the time lapse involved, I cannot agree, on the present record, that the November 25, 1953, date is the date to be used.

Defendants vigorously contend that the provisions of the stipulation govern and that those provisions call for a determination of value as of the original sale date, namely, March 27, 1953. They point to the fact that it was stipulated, "for the purposes of such determination, it is agreed that the value of the stock of Canada Southern on March 27, 1953, was $11.50 per share."

It would not be fair or reasonable to use the agreed March 27, 1953 value of Canada Southern stock and compare it with the value of the selling corporation's assets at some other date. I am therefore convinced that by the provisions of the stipulation the parties intended that the court should use the asset value of the selling corporation as of March 27, 1953, when making the value comparison.

Plaintiffs suggest that if the stipulation requires evaluation of Albercan's assets as of the original contract date, as I have found, then plaintiffs should be relieved from the effect of the stipulation because this is a derivative action and other stockholders should not be penalized by an improvident stipulation. It is my view that the date used in the stipulation was reasonable and indeed would have been the determinative date even in the absence of the stipulation. However, the Court reserves the right to reconsider the matter if it should appear that the subsequent conduct of the parties warrants a finding of bad faith or other inequitable conduct. For the present, the comparison date is March 27, 1953, and the relevancy or reasonableness of plaintiffs' interrogatories will be judged in accordance with that conclusion.

Defendants' relevancy objection is based on the foregoing disagreement as to the crucial date. However, when we adopt the March 27, 1953, date, as I have done, it still appears that the dates used by plaintiffs in their interrogatories are not so far removed from the sale date that they can be said to seek irrelevant information. *827 When this type of value determination is involved, it is unrealistic to shut out the light shed by evidence of value coming from reasonably proximate periods.

It therefore follows that the relevancy objection based on the critical date must be overruled even though I agree with defendants' argument as to the proper date.

Defendants say that, in any event, certain of these interrogatories are irrelevant because of the information sought. These interrogatories seek such information as itemized gross receipts and disbursements of Albercan from 1949 through February 1954, identification of appraisals and other documents showing the value of Albercan's assets, etc. I think it fair to say that such information is reasonably related in time to the crucial date and is pertinent to the issue. Defendants place too narrow an interpretation on evidence relevant to a determination of the value of the assets involved. The objections on this ground must fall for that reason.

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Bluebook (online)
109 A.2d 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garbarino-v-albercan-oil-corporation-delch-1954.