Glickenhaus v. Lytton Financial Corporation

205 F. Supp. 102, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3816
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedMay 4, 1962
DocketCiv. A. 2403
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 205 F. Supp. 102 (Glickenhaus v. Lytton Financial Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glickenhaus v. Lytton Financial Corporation, 205 F. Supp. 102, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3816 (D. Del. 1962).

Opinion

LEAHY, Senior District Judge.

This is a suit for $2,940,000 as damages for breach of an agreement to issue and sell to plaintiffs certain debentures of defendant. Defendant moves to transfer the action to the federal court for the Southern District of California. Since the passage of the transfer statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), there have been a number of Delaware cases, 1 , 1a yet members of the bar still appear to confuse the burden of proof required of a movant under the old forum non conveniens law with the showing required under § 1404 (a). 2

*104 In the 19 eases brought under § 1404 (a) in the District of Delaware in which transfer was requested, it was granted in 10 cases and denied in 9. In those cases in which transfer was granted, the convenience of the parties was named as one of the reasons in the 8 cases of Makela, Cinema Amusements, Bounds, Kirk, Tivoli, Paragon-Revolute, General Felt and Nocona; convenience' of witnesses was named in the 10 cases of Makela, Cinema Amusements, Bounds, Kirk, Tivoli, Paragon-Revolute, General Felt, Brownell, Nocona, and Higgins; interest of justice was considered separately as a reason for transfer in the 5 ■cases of Makela, Cinema Amusements, Bounds, Tivoli and Higgins. In 4 of the remaining 5 cases, Paragon-Revolute, General Felt, Brownell and Nocona, “justice” was not separately considered. In the remaining case, Kirk, “justice” was the key factor in Judge Rodney’s determination ; after finding that both parties and witnesses would be benefited by a transfer to Arkansas, he spent the bulk ■of the opinion refuting plaintiff’s contention that he could not receive a fair trial in Arkansas.

In cases in which transfer was not granted, the Court often considered all three factors and rejected them as reasons for transfer. This type analysis determined the issue in the 4 cases of Brown, Webster-Chicago, Busch, and Miracle Stretch.

In the 3 cases of Berk, Host and United Industrial, transfer was not granted either because the case could not have been brought in the state to which transfer was requested or because all parties could not have been served there. In Miller, transfer was denied because plaintiff had no counsel and would be unable to obtain one in the state to which transfer was requested, and because he had no funds with which to hire one there. In United Air Lines Inc., transfer was denied because consolidation of the suits was impossible in the state to which transfer was requested and excessive delay would have resulted if transfer had been granted. In both these cases, “interest of justice” was the determining factor.

In toto, “interest of justice” was considered by the court, apart from such interest as results from the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the 8 cases of Makela, Cinema Amusements, Bounds, Kirk, Tivoli, Miller, Higgins, and United Air Lines. The “interest of justice” took on no separate character apart from the convenience of parties and witnesses in the 8 cases of Brown, Webster-Chicago, Paragon-Revolute, Busch, General Felt, Brownell, Miracle Stretch, and Nocona. In the 3 cases of Berk, Host and United Industrial, the court never reached the point where separate consideration was given to the justice factor as the cases all involved some denial of transfer on grounds of impossibility of service of process in the state to which transfer was requested, or the like.

1. The complaint charges defendant refused to perform its agreement to issue and sell to plaintiffs subordinated convertible debentures of defendant in the amount of $4,200,000, and that defendant utilized the agreement in bad faith — “defendant and Bart Lytton, its President and (together with his wife, Beth Lytton) principal stockholder” schemed to escape the agreement and proposed certain amendments calculated to make it unattractive to plaintiffs. 3 The answer denies this, puts the terms of the agreement and the extent of plaintiffs’ damages, if any, in issue and includes a counterclaim for declaratory judgment that the agreement has no present or future effect.

Defendant is a Delaware corporation, but it does no business here and has the barest nexus of contact with this State. Its business life is in California where it is qualified and has its headquarters. 4 About August 16, 1961, a writing between Lytton Financial Corporation (“Issuer”) and Glickenhaus and Co. (“Underwriter”) was signed by Bart Lytton, President of defendant, and Seth *105 M. Glickenhaus, one of the plaintiffs. After negotiations which defendant claims occurred wholly in California 5 and which plaintiff claims occurred in good part in New York, 6 the memorandum was signed and delivered in Los Angeles. 7 It appears defendant’s performance was on condition it obtain a permit to issue the debentures from the Commissioner of Corporations in California. Without this Court evaluating the quality of defendant’s best efforts to obtain the permit, I find the California Commissioner of Corporations refused to issue one. 8 The necessary witnesses to this phase of the transaction are residents of California and will appear, defendant claims, only pursuant to a subpoena issued by a court having jurisdiction over them; 9 and the availability of the files and records of the California Division of Corporations will be subject to the same limitations. 10 The subpoena power of the instant Court has no such reach. Moreover, defendant states it will be necessary to call at least six other witnesses at trial to explain the written memorandum, the negotiations, the signing, and the efforts of defendant to obtain the authority to issue the debentures. These witnesses are officers of the Bank of America, the Union Bank of Los Angeles, defendant’s officers and general counsel — all of whom reside in Los Angeles. 11 Defendant’s burden and expense to bring witnesses and records to-Wilmington from Los Angeles for trial' here are also argued. 12 Plaintiffs claim they intend to call at least 9 witnesses to-various stages of the negotiations, all of whom reside in New York, and at least three expert witnesses, all of whom reside in the New York area. 13 They maintain that as coast to coast fares are the same both ways and hotel rates are no lower in Los Angeles than Wilmington. 14 no advantage can be bestowed on defendant merely because of the distance of California from Delaware.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
205 F. Supp. 102, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glickenhaus-v-lytton-financial-corporation-ded-1962.