Mayer v. Adams

133 A.2d 138
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 14, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 A.2d 138 (Mayer v. Adams) 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
Mayer v. Adams, 133 A.2d 138 (Del. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

133 A.2d 138 (1957)

Lillie S. MAYER, Plaintiff,
v.
Kenneth S. ADAMS, H. M. Addinsell, F. W. Begrisch, T. S. Gay, P. J. Parker, Paul Endacott, Rayburn L. Foster, A. M. Hughes, J. L. Johnston, W. W. Keeler, H. E. Koopman, Stanley Learned, C. R. Musgrave, Phillip R. Phillips, W. C. Smoot, B. F. Stradley, R. W. Thomas, G. P. Dimit, Don Emery, G. G. Oberfell, F. E. Rice, Charles A. Lemp, Eugene E. DuPont, Phillips Petroleum Company, Kenneth S. Adams, Jr., and Ada Oil Company, Inc., Defendants.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

June 14, 1957.

Clarence W. Taylor and Stewart Lynch, Wilmington, for plaintiff.

Robert H. Richards, Jr., and Stephen E. Hamilton, Jr., Wilmington, and Clark Clifford (of Clifford & Miller), Washington, D. C., for Phillips Petroleum Co. and all individual defendants other than Eugene E. DuPont, Charles A. Lemp and Kenneth S. Adams, Jr.

Edwin D. Steel, Jr., and Harvey S. Kronfeld, Wilmington, for defendant Ada Oil Co., Inc.

MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.

Plaintiff, who claims to be the owner of 100 shares of the capital stock of Phillips Petroleum Company and to have been a Phillips stockholder since "in or about" 1943, brings this action on behalf of herself and all other stockholders similarly situated against Ada Oil Company, Inc., its president, Kenneth S. Adams, Jr., and the officers and directors of Phillips Petroleum Company holding office during the period from 1947 to the date of the filing of the complaint.

Plaintiff complains that since 1947 or thereabouts the officers and directors of Phillips Petroleum Company have caused and allowed their corporation to transact business with the defendant, Ada Oil Company, Inc., on terms detrimental to or not *139 in the interest of Phillips. It is alleged that these business arrangements were not only not the best available to Phillips but were arranged for the benefit of Ada and its president, Kenneth S. Adams, Jr. All the Phillips directors in office from 1947 to the date of the complaint, other than Kenneth S. Adams, are alleged to have been so dominated by Adams, a director, former president and now chairman of the board of Phillips, that they went along with a conspiracy developed by Adams and his son "in or about the year 1947" for the purpose of benefiting Ada. Relief is sought in the form of an accounting and the impressing of a trust on moneys and properties received by the defendants or any of them as a result of the transactions complained of or in the alternative rescission of such transactions.

This being a shareholder's action to enforce a secondary right, plaintiff met the requirements of Chancery Rule 23(b), Del. C.Ann. by alleging in paragraph 8 of the complaint:

"8. That all of the members of the Board of Directors of Phillips, at the time of the commencement of this action, are named as defendants and are herein alleged to be persons who have been responsible for, have approved and ratified, the wrongful, wilful and illegal acts, omissions and other matters complained of herein. For that reason plaintiff has not requested the Board of Directors of Phillips to bring this action against the defendants named herein for the relief requested herein since any such request would have been useless and unavailing."

The individual defendants and Ada have attacked certain parts of the complaint on the grounds of alleged factual insufficiencies, four individual defendants relying on the statute of limitations have moved for dismissal as to them and all appearing defendants have moved to dismiss under Rule 12(b) (6) on the grounds that the complaint fails to comply with a procedural requirement of Rule 23(b). This requirement reads as follows:

"The complaint shall also set forth with particularity the efforts of the plaintiff to secure from the managing directors or trustees and, if necessary, from the shareholders such action as he desires, and the reasons for his failure to obtain such action or the reasons for not making such effort."

Prior to the adoption of Rule 23(b) Delaware did not require a stockholder plaintiff to make any effort to secure action from other stockholders as a prerequisite to bringing a derivative suit, Sohland v. Baker, 15 Del.Ch. 431, 141 A. 277, 58 A.L.R. 693, and it has been stated or assumed in certain federal cases that such is the substantive law of Delaware and controlling, Toebelman v. Missouri-Kansas Pipe Line Co., D.C. Del., 41 F.Supp. 334; Steinberg v. Hardy, D.C.Conn., 90 F.Supp. 167; Steinberg v. Adams, D.C.S.D.N.Y., 90 F.Supp. 604. Plaintiff contends that the substantive corporate law of Delaware differs in such regard from that of Massachusetts for instance (See Carroll v. New York N. H. & H. R. R., D.C.Mass., 141 F.Supp. 456) and that a mere procedural requirement cannot modify or limit a stockholder plaintiff's secondary right under Delaware law to enlist this Court's aid in rectifying a fraudulent wrong claimed to have been suffered by his corporation at the hands of its directors. It is apparently conceded that demand on the directors would be futile under the circumstances related in the complaint. Defendants insist, however, that inasmuch as Rule 23(b) is clearly procedural, plaintiff must meet its terms as to intra-corporate efforts with his fellow stockholders regardless of substantive corporate rights, and that the Delaware principle of law that a gift of corporate assets may not be made over the objection of a single stockholder should not be applied in a manner that would nullify a rule of procedure.

The theory behind the part of Rule 23 (b) here involved, namely that a stockholder *140 should exhaust his remedies within the corporate body before being allowed to sue derivatively, was discussed as early as 1843 in the English case of Foss v. Harbottle, 2 Hare 461, 67 Eng.Rep. 461, and was accepted by the Supreme Court in 1882 in the case of Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U.S. 450, 26 L. Ed. 827. Thereafter that Court's thinking on the subject was promulgated in rule form, first in Federal Equity Rule 94, later in Federal Equity Rule 27, 28 U.S.C.A. Appendix, and finally in 23(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. The portion of Chancery Rule 23(b)[1] here involved repeats verbatim language of the present Federal Rule, and I am satisfied that it lays down a procedural requirement as does its federal counterpart.

Rules governing the Court of Chancery of the State of Delaware were adopted by the Chancellor on December 29, 1947, effective January 1, 1948. They were adopted pursuant to rule making power now found in § 361(c) of Title 10 Del.C., a power[2] which cannot be seriously questioned. Rule 1 states that the rules shall govern the procedure in this Court with exceptions not here relevant, and the particular portion of Rule 23(b) with which we are here concerned governs the manner in which this particular type of action shall be brought.

The Rule does not and could not alter substantive rights such as the nature or quantum of recovery for the corporation after the establishment of liability but it does create procedural requirements which did not exist in Delaware equity practice prior to January 1, 1948. Compare Escoett v. Aldecress County Club, 16 N.J. 438, 109 A.2d 277.

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Bluebook (online)
133 A.2d 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-v-adams-delch-1957.