Henderson v. Plymouth Oil Co.

136 A. 140, 15 Del. Ch. 231, 1926 Del. Ch. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 27, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 136 A. 140 (Henderson v. Plymouth Oil Co.) 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
Henderson v. Plymouth Oil Co., 136 A. 140, 15 Del. Ch. 231, 1926 Del. Ch. LEXIS 15 (Del. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This cause was before me on another occasion when a motion for preliminary injunction was heard and disposed of, ante p. 40, 131 A. 165. The showing then made was upon affidavits. The case as now presented on final hearing is, according to the contentions of the complainants, a different one in its fact aspects from that which appeared on the affidavits and therefore is entitled to a disposition of a different character from that which the opinion filed at the preliminary injunction stage would indicate.

I shall not burden this opinion with a repetition of the facts and circumstances which were recited in some detail in the statement of facts preceding the opinion heretofore filed and above referred to. That recital of facts and such fact statements and assumptions of fact as appear in the opinion itself are now accepted as the facts found in the case on final hearing except in so far as the same may be supplemented or altered by the statements of fact herein made.

When the Stearns group acquired the Pickerell interests, they planned to organize a corporation (which turned out to be the Plymouth Oil Company) to take over the interests thus acquired and tentatively planned its corporate structure in which a preferred stock issue of one hundred and fifty thousand shares was projected to be sold to raise working capital. The personnel of officers, [233]*233and directors of the proposed company was at that time almost, if not entirely, agreed upon by the promoters.

The contract between Stearns and Pickerell was agreed upon on October 5, 1923, but not formally executed until October 8, 1923, the interval being required to reduce its terms to writing and to such formal shape as would meet the desires of all the parties concerned.

When the contract of sale was made between Stearns and the Plymouth Oil Company on October 22, 1923, Davenport for himself and Laing, had prior thereto agreed to invest $50,000 in stock of the corporation. At that time neither Davenport nor Laing was informed of the fact that Stearns and his associates were to receive the amount of common stock they did, though Davenport, who was acting for both, knew that the Stearns group had acquired the Pickerell interests and proposed to turn them over to the corporation. Neither Davenport nor Laing is complaining in this suit.

All the other subscribers to the preferred stock came into the corporation subsequent to the date of the Stearns-Plymouth Oil contract; that is, subsequent to October 22, 1923, the earliest one being the complainant, Lockhardt, who subscribed on November 2, 1923.

When Stearns made his offer to the Plymouth Oil Company on October 22, 1923, he had a present right to the Big Lake Oil Company’s stock which the offer referred to, but he did not at that time hold any contracts and rights affecting the 12,280 acres of oil and gas properties in Pecos and Upton Counties, Texas, referred to in the offer. The Pecos County rights were not actually acquired until November 29, 1923, the contract evidencing such rights being ante-dated to September 29, 1923. It is claimed by the defendants that while the Pecos County rights were not evidenced by writing until November 29, yet there was a paroi agreement covering such rights prior thereto. But the weight of evidence does not support this claim. The Plymouth Oil Company as a matter of fact, however, did eventually acquire from Stearns all the rights to the Pecos and Upton Counties properties which the Stearns letter offered. But before- the Plymouth Oil Company actually received these rights, preferred stockholders, including [234]*234some if not all of the complainants and interveners, had subscribed and paid for stock.

Though the Stearns offer was made on October 22 and accepted that day, yet the common stock of the Plymouth Oil Company was not actually issued to him or his nominees until November 19, 1923, prior to which date, but after the offer and acceptance, some of the complainants and interveners had become subscribers to, and had paid for, shares of the preferred stock.

Some at least of the complainants and of the interveners did not know of the amount of common stock which was issued to Stearns and his associates at the time they subscribed for their stock, their first knowledge thereof being obtained at the stockholders’ meeting held in June, 1925. They did know, however, that Stearns and his associates would receive some common stock.

The foregoing statements of fact include all that need be made by way of addition to or alteration of the fact situation as disclosed by the affidavits filed at the preliminary injunction stage.

On the facts as now found, what is the effect which the law attributes to them? This question will now be answered.

As I view the case, it is not necessary for me to discuss the question of the right of future stockholders contemplated by promoters of the corporation to be brought into its membership to call the promoters to an account for so-called profits made by the promoters in connection with a sale by them to it at a time when the corporation was composed entirely of themselves and was in their complete control. I say this because I shall assume for the purpose of this case that the point of view of the complainants on this point is sound, viz., that the complainants and interveners, though they came into the corporation after the Stearns-Plymouth contract was entered into, have such standing in equity as entitles them to maintain their bill in behalf of the corporation if on the facts a good cause of action is otherwise shown.

Whether such good cause of action against the defendants as promoters of this corporation is shown depends of course on whether there was a breach by the defendants of any fiduciary duty owed by them to the corporation. Before this question is answered, the primary inquiry must first be made — what is the nature of that duty, the breach of which is complained about?

[235]*235In answering that question, it is of the utmost importance to fix the point of time in the various steps of the promoters’ activities when the duty may be said to arise. If the promoters were under fiduciary obligations to a proposed corporation at the moment they acquired properties or rights to property which the corporation was to take over, and the circumstances are such as to show that they were acting in the capacity, actual or quasi, of agents purchasing for and on behalf of the proposed corporation, then considerable and very respectable authorities hold that the rules obtain which are applicable to the dealings of an agent for his principal. The promoters in such case are bound to account according to the settled principles of law attaching to that relationship. Among these principles is the familiar one that any profit or personal advantage gained by the agent at the expense of the transaction which he puts through in behalf of his principal belongs to the principal, no matter how profitable for the principal the transaction, even after subtracting from it the agent’s gain, may in point of fact prove to be. This is the rule which the complainants contend for as governing this case. In support of it they cite the following cases: Plaquemines Tropical Fruit Co. v. Buck, 52 N. J. Eq. 219, 27 A. 1094; Woodbury Heights Land Co. v. Loudenslager, 55 N. J. Eq. 78, 35 A. 436; Arnold v. Searing, 78 N. J. Eq. 146, 78 A. 762, 767; Burbank v. Dennis, 101 Cal. 90, 35

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Related

Henderson v. Plymouth Oil Co.
141 A. 197 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1928)
Henderson v. Plymouth Oil Co.
19 F.2d 97 (Third Circuit, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
136 A. 140, 15 Del. Ch. 231, 1926 Del. Ch. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-plymouth-oil-co-delch-1926.