Oberly v. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

472 A.2d 366, 1984 Del. Ch. LEXIS 410
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 6, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 472 A.2d 366 (Oberly v. Howard Hughes Medical Institute) 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
Oberly v. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 472 A.2d 366, 1984 Del. Ch. LEXIS 410 (Del. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

BROWN, Chancellor.

This is an action which seeks to determine who is lawfully entitled to be in control of the defendant Howard Hughes Medical Institute, a nonstock charitable corporation formed under the Delaware General Corporation Law. The action was filed jointly in 1978 by the Attorney General and by William H. Lummis, the Delaware Ancillary Administrator of the estate of the late Howard R. Hughes. The original complaint alleged that the certificate of incorporation of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (referred to hereafter as “the Institute”) required that the corporation be managed and controlled by a Trustee, that Howard R. Hughes had been the sole Trustee from the time of the formation of the corporation in 1953 until the time of his death in 1976, and that he had failed to designate a Successor Trustee to succeed himself. The complaint asked the Court to designate a Successor Trustee and it sought to have the co-plaintiff Lummis so named.

Shortly after the suit was filed, the Executive Committee of the Institute as it was then composed, acting under what are claimed to be the existing bylaws of the corporation, amended and restated the certificate of incorporation of the Institute so as to eliminate the position of Trustee, the purpose being to thereby render the Executive Committee the governing body as well as, to the extent required by law, the member of the Institute. 1 Thereafter, the At- *368 tomey General and Lummis filed an amended and supplemental complaint seeking also to have the amendments to the certificate declared to be invalid, the basis being that the Executive Committee lacked the power to amend the certificate of incorporation.

Along the way the complaint was dismissed as to Lummis, the grounds being that he lacked standing to maintain such an action since under the rules of contemporary practice only the Attorney General has the exclusive power to bring actions to enforce charitable trusts. Wier v. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Del.Ch., 407 A.2d 1051 (1979). Trial of the matter has now been held between the Attorney General and the Institute, and this represents the decision thereon.

In a sense, the issue in this case is a simplistic one, but it is one which bodes of substantial consequences. The issue centers around a simple sentence that has existed in the bylaws of the Institute since 1971. It is a sentence composed of a mere 20 words. The primary question to be determined from the evidence presented at trial is whether or not this one simple sentence actually constitutes a part of the bylaws of the Institute. If it does, then control of the corporation is reposed in its Executive Committee and its action in amending the certificate of incorporation was properly taken. If it does not, the action of the Executive Committee in amending the certificate of incorporation under the authority of the bylaws so as to eliminate the position of Trustee is void and, unless the Executive Committee can establish an independent right to have taken such action by statute regardless of the bylaws, then it apparently becomes the unwanted, and perhaps undesirable, duty of this Court to appoint a Successor Trustee or Trustees to govern the affairs of the corporation.

This simple issue for decision is largely a question of fact, or, perhaps better stated, a question of the inferences to be drawn from what, in the main, are the undisputed facts. It is a decision that must be drawn from circumstantial evidence measured in the light of certain evidentiary and substantive law presumptions. The matter is made difficult by virtue of the fact that death and serious illness have rendered certain key players in the controversy unavailable. Moreover, the case has been presented for decision on the basis of a paper record consisting solely of numerous exhibits and extensive deposition testimony. Thus, to the extent that the credibility of witnesses is a factor, the inability of the Court to actually hear their testimony and to view their demeanor works an added disadvantage.

In short, it would be difficult to perceive of a matter of such far-reaching ramifications as this being presented in a less desirable format from the standpoint of the Court as the trier of the facts. However, having no choice, I approach the task as I find it. The bylaw sentence in issue will be set forth hereafter as it appears in the chronology of events.

I

Some background is necessary in order to place the controversy in proper perspective. It would be unlikely to believe that anyone in contemporary business and legal communities has not heard of the name of Howard R. Hughes. He was a man of vast wealth and business enterprise, not to mention eccentricity and intrigue. In 1953 Howard Hughes established and funded the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. It was formed as a tax-exempt, nonprofit, nonstock Delaware corporation. The purpose of this corporation, at least according to its charter, was and is “the promotion of human knowledge within the field of the basic sciences (principally the field of medical research *369 and medical education) and the effective application thereof for the benefit of mankind.”

In 1953, in order to fund the Institute, the electronics division of Hughes Tool Company, a corporation then solely owned by Howard Hughes, was spun off and formed into a new corporation known as Hughes Aircraft Company. In effect, Hughes personally donated all of the stock of Hughes Aircraft Company to the Institute. In the process of this transaction, the Institute became the sole owner of all of the outstanding common stock of Hughes Aircraft Company. The Institute has maintained this position of sole ownership of Hughes Aircraft Company (hereafter “Hughes Aircraft”) from 1953 to the present. This investment continues to be the sole source of funding for the Institute’s work.

Over the years since 1953 Hughes Aircraft is said to have developed into one of the United States most important and valuable aerospace and defense companies. According to its 1982 annual report to its employees (it apparently makes no formal report to shareholders since it has only the one), Hughes Aircraft had during that year some 64,300 employees, had sales of $4.4 billion, had new orders of some $7.9 billion and an order backlog of $11.2 billion. Since the Institute is the sole owner of Hughes Aircraft, the control of the Institute is equivalent to the control of Hughes Aircraft. Thus does the decision in this case take on a certain amount of significance.

The decision is also significant from the standpoint of the Institute itself. The work of the Institute is in the area of medical research, with the current focus being in the fields of genetics, immunology, and metabolic regulation. This work is done largely in association with and at the facilities of teaching hospitals at various universities, including, among others, those at Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University, Duke, Yale, Vanderbilt, Stanford, Baylor and the University of California. Research work is performed through medical and scientific “investigators” approved and retained on a periodic or project basis under the supervision of a corporate Medical Advisory Board. Under this format the Institute expended some $39 million on medical research during 1982.

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Bluebook (online)
472 A.2d 366, 1984 Del. Ch. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oberly-v-howard-hughes-medical-institute-delch-1984.