Gettler v. Cities Service Co.

1987 OK 57, 739 P.2d 515, 1987 Okla. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 30, 1987
Docket61000
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1987 OK 57 (Gettler v. Cities Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gettler v. Cities Service Co., 1987 OK 57, 739 P.2d 515, 1987 Okla. LEXIS 204 (Okla. 1987).

Opinion

DOOLIN, Chief Justice.

On June 17, 1982, Cities Service Company and Gulf Oil Corporation entered into a Stock Purchase Agreement and Merger Agreement in an effort to thwart a hostile takeover of Cities Service by Mesa Petroleum Company. The agreement provided that Gulf would purchase Cities Service common stock at a cash price of $63.00 per share. For reasons not pertinent to this appeal, Gulf terminated the Offer to Purchase and repudiated the Merger Agreement on August 6,1982. Three days later, Cities Service and two individual stockholders brought an action against Gulf in Tulsa County District Court for breach of contract, fraud, specific performance, and for declaratory judgment, seeking damages of approximately $3 Billion.

*517 Shortly thereafter, five stockholder class actions were brought against Gulf in Oklahoma. Twenty other class actions were brought in New York and Pennsylvania, making a total of twenty-two class actions in federal courts and three in New York State Courts. All of the federal class actions have since been consolidated in federal district court in the southern district of New York.

The appellant [Gettler] filed a Motion to Intervene in the cause of action between Cities Services and Gulf. The Motion to Intervene was heard on August 4, 1983 and was denied. From his final order Gettler appeals.

Subsequent to the enaction of the new Code of Civil Procedure, Gettler filed a brief with this Court to apply the new Civil Procedure Code, 12 O.S.Supp.1984, §§ 2019, 2024 in resolution of this appeal, relying on Rule 1 of our Order Adopting and Withdrawing Rules for the District Courts, published in 55 OBAJ 2242 (1984). Under Rule 1, the new code applies to all actions pending on the day the new Pleading Code went into effect. Here, however, Gettler appeals a final order handed down while the old Pleading Code was in effect, and the trial judge in making his determination to deny the Motion to Intervene relied on the authorities arising from that Code. We, therefore, apply the old Pleading Code and authorities in resolving this appeal, because no application for intervention or joinder was pending under the Rules of the new pleading code at the time of denial.

Gettler raises two issues on appeal: first, that he should have been joined as a real party ⅛ interest, either individually or as a representative of a class; second, that he should have been permitted to intervene under mandatory or permissive intervention.

Gettler makes much of the assertion that he is a real party in interest as a stockholder. Inasmuch as two of the original plaintiffs, Bader and Friel, are also stockholders suing for the value of their individually held shares, we will assume for the purposes of this appeal that the requirements of 12 O.S.1981, § 221 have been satisfied. Once the parties in the cause of action are in place, however, the status of a third party as a real party in interest is merely a threshhold question that opens the courthouse doors but does not grant automatic entry into a cause' of action. For that determination we turn to our joinder and intervention statutes, 12 O.S.1981, §§ 231, 232, 236 and 237.

In applying our joinder and intervention statutes, our policy is to balance four countervailing interests: 1) the interest of the plaintiff in controlling the scope and extent of his cause of action and in not having new claims or parties complicate and confuse the determination of his case; 2) the interest of the defendant in having all parties and claims joined in the same action to prevent vexatious suits and to prevent possible inconsistent judgments; 3) the interest of third parties in having access to a forum when there is a possibility that stare decisis, res judicata or collateral estoppel may subsequently prevent them from seeking redress if not made a party to the original action; and 4) the general policy of this Court to apply joinder and intervention statutes liberally in the interests of justice and judicial economy by having the full subject matter of any controversy settled in one action.

In the past, we have construed our joinder and intervention statutes together, 1 resulting in some merger between the principles of joinder and intervention. 2 In join-der, the parties already in place seek to reach out and bring a third party into their controversy. Only if that party is necessary or indispensable is joinder mandatory; otherwise joinder is permissive and within the sound discretion of the trial judge. In *518 intervention, on the other hand, a third party is seeking to -thrust his way into the cause of action. If the intervenor “claims a lien or interest in the specific property involved and within the exclusive jurisdiction of the court in which the action is pending and his lien or interest therein can be established, preserved, or enforced in no other way than by determination and action of that court.... [then] the petitioner has an absolute right to intervene.” 3 In all other cases, intervention is permissive and within the sound discretion of the trial court. 4 For intervention to be mandatory, the controversy must concern specific real or personal property; actions for money damages only do not qualify for mandatory intervention. 5

An intervenor is not permitted to enlarge the issues or compel an alteration of the proceedings, 6 or to include matters not germane to the issues presented, 7 but once admitted, the intervenor’s rights are as entitled to protection as the original parties. 8 Denial of a petition for mandatory intervention by the trial court is an appealable final order. 9 Although intervention is not normally permitted at the appellate stage, once admitted to an appeal, the intervenor becomes a party litigant with the right to raise and litigate independent issues. 10

None of the parties to this action sought to join Gettler. At the hearing on the Motion to Intervene, the plaintiffs, the defendants, and the amicus curiae representing the plaintiff stockholders in the consolidated class action pending in federal district court, all opposed Gettler’s entry into this suit. The primary objection to joinder of Gettler as a representative of a class of stockholders was the action between Cities Service and Gulf was based upon theories of state contract and tort. Joinder of Gettler as a class representative would introduce questions of federal securities law more appropriately addressed in federal court. Further objections revolved around 12 O.S.1981, § 14, concerning the desirability of concentrating the litigation of the class action in the class action already pending in federal court, and the difficulties in managing same. Based upon consideration of 12 O.S.1981, § 14(4), (5), the trial court denied Gettler’s joinder or intervention as a class representative.

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Bluebook (online)
1987 OK 57, 739 P.2d 515, 1987 Okla. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gettler-v-cities-service-co-okla-1987.