Hodson v. Hodson Corp.

80 A.2d 180
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 18, 1951
DocketCivil Action No. 187
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 80 A.2d 180 (Hodson v. Hodson 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
Hodson v. Hodson Corp., 80 A.2d 180 (Del. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

80 A.2d 180 (1951)

HODSON et al.
v.
HODSON CORP. et al.

Civil Action No. 187.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

April 18, 1951.

*181 William H. Bennethum, of Morford, Bennethum, Marvel & Cooch, of Wilmington, for plaintiffs.

Hugh M. Morris and George T. Coulson, of Morris, Steel, Nichols & Arsht, of Wilmington, for defendants.

WOLCOTT, Chancellor.

The complaint alleges that The Hodson Corporation issued 34 shares of its preferred stock to Jessie Blanche Price, and that the issuance of such stock was a fraud on the other shareholders. The relief sought is a preliminary injunction, an ultimate determination that the 34 shares of preferred stock are null and void, and that the certificates be ordered to be surrendered for cancellation.

The corporate defendant appeared and answered the complaint. By order, Jessie Blanche Price was directed to appear and answer the complaint or suffer judgment to be taken pro confesso. The order directed substituted service to be made in conformity with the statutes and rules. With leave of court, defendants' attorneys appeared specially for Jessie Blanche Price and moved to vacate the order for appearance and to quash and vacate the substituted service on Jessie Blanche Price.

The corporate defendant moved for summary judgment in its favor on the ground that Jessie Blanche Price is an indispensable party to the action and that this court is without jurisdiction over her because she is not within the State of Delaware, and because the shares of stock in question, the certificates therefor, or any other property of Jessie Blanche Price are not within the State of Delaware.

The two motions in effect raise the same questions and will be disposed of as though they were one.

It is the rule, long settled in this state, that the owner of shares of stock in a Delaware corporation is an indispensable party to an action to cancel such shares or to restrain the voting of or the payment of dividends on such shares. Bouree v. Trust Francais des Actions de la Franco-Wyo. Oil Co., 14 Del.Ch. 332, 127 A. 56; Chappel v. Standard Scale & Supply Corporation, 15 Del.Ch. 333, 138 A. 74; West v. Sirian Lamp Co., 28 Del.Ch. 328, 42 A. 2d 883. As the owner of the shares in controversy, Jessie Blanche Price is, therefore, an indispensable party.

Substituted service on Jessie Blanche Price was purportedly obtained pursuant to the provisions of Section 4374, R.C. 1935, but no seizure of property of the defendant has been made. Defendants argue that this action is one essentially in personam and that, therefore, substituted service of process upon a non-resident defendant is governed by the provisions of the first paragraph of Section 4374 requiring *182 seizure in limine of property of the non-resident located in Delaware in order to support jurisdiction. In the event of the failure of the non-resident defendant to appear, then sufficient of the property so seized may be sold to satisfy the demand of the plaintiff. If this action were an action in personam, the argument made necessarily would be accepted. Cantor v. Sachs, 18 Del.Ch. 359, 162 A. 73, 78.

However, the case at bar seeks a judgment declaring the stock in question to be null and void. It is an action which is directed essentially toward the validity of a res which, it is contended, is located within the state. It is true that as additional relief the plaintiffs pray that the surrender of the certificates be ordered for cancellation, but that fact does not change the fundamental nature of the action, which is quasi in rem. When that is the fact, if the property in question has its situs in Delaware, the jurisdiction of this court is clear and its power broad in compelling obedience to its judgment, whether or not seizure of the res has been made prior to substituted service by notice and publication. Section 4374 affords a method of substituted service on nonresident defendants in such cases. Perrine v. Pennroad Corp., 19 Del.Ch. 368, 168 A. 196, 203; Cantor v. Sachs, supra.

The question to be determined in the pending case, therefore, is whether or not the 34 shares of preferred stock of the defendant corporation are property located within the State of Delaware for the purposes contemplated by Section 4374, R.C. 1935 when neither the owner nor the certificates are within the jurisdiction.

Section 73, Section 2105, R.C.1935, of the General Corporation Law of Delaware provides that for all purposes of title, action and jurisdiction of courts, the situs of shares of a Delaware corporation shall be regarded as within the State of Delaware.

Pursuant to the provisions of Section 73, this court, prior to 1945, held on a number of occasions that the stock of a Delaware corporation has its situs in Delaware and may therefore be seized to compel the appearance of nonresident defendants, Bouree v. Trust Francais des Actions de la Franco-Wyo. Oil Co., supra; Wightman v. San Francisco Bay Toll-Bridge Co., 16 Del.Ch. 200, 142 A. 783; Nye Odorless Incinerator Corp. v. Nye Odorless Crematory Co., 18 Del.Ch. 179, 156 A. 176. Similarly, shares of stock of a Delaware corporation have been subjected to attachment in the law courts. Hunt v. Drug, Inc., 5 W.W.Harr. 332, 156 A. 384.

In 1945 the General Assembly enacted the Uniform Stock Transfer Act, 45 Del. Laws, c. 159, without repealing Section 73 of the General Corporation Law. The precise question, therefore, raised is the effect of the adoption of the Uniform Stock Transfer Act upon the rule of situs of shares of stock in a Delaware corporation theretofore applied in the courts of this state. If, as the defendants contend, the effect of the adoption of the Uniform Stock Transfer Act was to make the certificate the share of stock itself, then the stock in controversy does not have its situs within the State of Delaware and this court is without jurisdiction of the present cause.

Section 73 of the General Corporation Law remains as part of our law except in so far as it was modified by necessary implication by the adoption of those sections of the General Corporation Law which embody the Uniform Stock Transfer Act. The repeal of existing law by implication is not favored and only occurs when the two statutes are so inconsistent that reconciliation is impossible, Mayor & Council of Wilmington v. State, ex rel. duPont, 5 Terry 332, 57 A.2d 70. It must be presumed, therefore, that the failure of the Legislature to expressly repeal Section 73 when adopting the Uniform Stock Transfer Act means that Section 73 retains some effect if that effect is not inconsistent with the Uniform Stock Transfer Act.

It is to be observed that the instant suit is one for the cancellation of stock which, as far as the record before me shows, has not passed into the hands of *183 an innocent transferee for value. We are concerned in this case with the validity of stock as to which the corporation derivatively and the person who received the original issue are contesting.

The plaintiffs rely upon three reported decisions in support of their contention that the enactment of the Uniform Stock Transfer Act did not change the rule as to situs of shares of a Delaware corporation. In Harvey v. Harvey, 7 Cir., 290 F. 653, it was sought to cancel an agreement to deposit stock in a Wisconsin corporation, and to enjoin the voting of the stock subject to the deposit agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
80 A.2d 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodson-v-hodson-corp-delch-1951.