Lewis v. Anderson

477 A.2d 1040, 1984 Del. LEXIS 327
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 18, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by150 cases

This text of 477 A.2d 1040 (Lewis v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Anderson, 477 A.2d 1040, 1984 Del. LEXIS 327 (Del. 1984).

Opinion

HORSEY, Justice.

Plaintiff appeals from an Order of the Court of Chancery dismissing his derivative action asserted on behalf of Conoco, Inc. (“Old Conoco”), a Delaware corporation, against Old Conoco’s former management. Dismissal followed Old Conoco’s merger with a wholly-owned subsidiary of E.I. Du *1042 Pont de Nemours and Company (“Du Pont”), Du Pont Holdings, Inc., renamed Conoco, Inc. (“New Conoco”). The question presented involves the effect of a corporate merger on ownership of a derivative claim and standing of the derivative claimant to pursue his claim following merger. The Chancellor ruled that plaintiff lost standing to pursue Old Conoco’s derivative claim when he ceased to be a shareholder of Old Conoco and that his underlying claim thereby became the exclusive property right of New Conoco and its sole shareholder, Du Pont. We agree and therefore affirm.

I

A

On July 17, 1981, plaintiff, Harry Lewis, filed a shareholder’s derivative action on behalf of Old Conoco against various of its officers and all of its directors. The complaint alleges that defendants, “in anticipation of a potential takeover of [Old Conoco] by outside interests”, caused the corporation to enter into employment agreements with nine of its key officers, two of whom were directors of Old Conoco. Under the terms of the agreements, the recipients (two of whom were director-defendants and the rest, officer-defendants) were to receive benefits estimated at $5,000,000 upon the happening of one of three events: (a) the common stock of Old Conoco being no longer listed on the New York Stock Exchange; (b) 207" or more of its outstanding common stock being acquired by outside interests; or (c) the nine recipient defendants’ employment with Old Conoco being terminated.

Plaintiff claims these “golden parachutes” to be: illegal, improper, without a valid business purpose, a fraud upon Old Conoco or a waste of corporate assets. The relief sought is that performance of the contracts be enjoined and that defendants account for any damages sustained by Old Conoco or profits realized by them from the agreements. Plaintiff does not attack the fairness of the merger or allege any wrongdoing by Du Pont, not a party.

B

The facts are not in dispute. On May 6, 1981, Dome Petroleum Ltd. commenced a cash tender offer for 20% of the outstanding common stock of Old Conoco. On June 17, 1981, after completion of Dome’s offer, the Compensation Committee of Old Cono-co’s Board of Directors (none of whom were officers or employees of Old Conoco) authorized and approved the disputed employment contracts. Old Conoco’s Board then authorized the company to enter into those contracts, with the two Board members — recipients of the contracts — not taking part in the discussion or vote. The remaining twelve members of Old Conoco’s Board of Directors were “outside” directors.

On June 25, 1981, after execution of the employment contracts, Seagram Company, Ltd., Du Pont and Mobil Corporation entered into a “bidding contest” for Old Co^, noco, from which Du Pont emerged as the winner. By July 1981, Du Pont, through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Du Pont Holdings, Inc., had acquired a majority interest in Old Conoco as a result of Du Pont’s cash tender offer. On September 30, 1981, Old Conoco was merged into Du Pont Holdings, Inc., the surviving corporation, which was then renamed Conoco, Inc. (“New Cono-co”).

Under the terms of the merger, the remaining shareholders of Old Conoco received common stock of Du Pont in exchange for their shares of Old Conoco. Thereafter, the merged company, Old Co-noco, ceased to exist; Old Conoco’s assets became the property of New Conoco; plaintiff Lewis became a shareholder of Du Pont; and Du Pont became the sole stockholder of New Conoco. As stated, plaintiff has not challenged the propriety of the Du Pont-Conoco merger; sought to enjoin the merger’s consummation; or asserted any claim against Du Pont. Plaintiff’s claim solely involves the pre-merger action of Old Conoco’s directors in approving the employ *1043 ment contracts which preceded Du Pont’s tender offer and merger.

C

Thereafter, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint or for summary judgment asserting three alternate grounds for relief. First, defendants claimed that by reason of the merger, plaintiff lost his status as a shareholder of Old Conoco and became a shareholder of Du Pont; as a result, plaintiff lost standing to continue the derivative suit. Second, defendants argued that plaintiff had failed to make the requisite demand upon Conoco’s Board of Directors before instituting suit and also failed to establish the futility of a demand. Third, defendants claimed that service of process under 10 Del.C. § 3114 upon the non-director defendants was insufficient as a matter of law to confer personal jurisdiction over them.

D

The Chancellor found defendants’ first ground for relief sufficient. 1 The Court held that by reason of the merger, plaintiff lost standing to pursue the action. In reaching this result, the Chancellor concluded that through the merger of Old Conoco into Du Pont Holdings, title to plaintiff’s derivative claim passed under 8 Del.C. § 259 by operation of law from Old Conoco to New Conoco, the surviving corporation. The Court also noted that through the stock-for-stock exchange, Lewis ceased to be a shareholder of Old Conoco and became a shareholder of Du Pont. The Chancellor viewed the merger as having the following consequences both to plaintiff’s right to assert Old Conoco’s direct claim and plaintiff’s standing to pursue his derivative claim:

[T]he right to a pending cause of action is an asset of a merged corporation which passes to the corporation surviving the merger. Under the facts of this case, any right to equitable relief possessed by the original Conoco against the individual defendants, as its officers and directors, passed to Du Pont Holdings, and thus to the present Conoco, by virtue of the merger. Likewise, by the terms of the same merger, the plaintiff Lewis ceased to be a shareholder of Conoco — either new or old — and instead became a shareholder of Du Pont. The company of which the plaintiff is now a shareholder, Du Pont, now owns all of the stock of the present Conoco and, if the original Conoco had a claim for relief against its former officers and directors for the reasons set forth in the complaint in this action, that claim is now owned by the present Conoco. The shareholder beneficiary of such a claim is now Du Pont, and not the plaintiff Lewis and the other shareholders of the original Conoco as was the situation when the suit was filed.
Given this scenario brought about by the merger, what logical justification can there be for permitting the plaintiff Lewis, who is no longer a shareholder of the entity possessing the claim, to continue to prosecute the action on behalf of the new Conoco without regard to the feelings of its present 100 percent shareholder, Du Pont? Offhand, I can think of none.

453 A.2d at 479.

E

Plaintiff’s argument for reversal has as its centerpiece 8 Del.C.

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Bluebook (online)
477 A.2d 1040, 1984 Del. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-anderson-del-1984.