Pathe Industries, Inc. v. Cadence Industries Corp.

425 A.2d 952, 1981 Del. LEXIS 275
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 2, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 425 A.2d 952 (Pathe Industries, Inc. v. Cadence Industries Corp.) 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
Pathe Industries, Inc. v. Cadence Industries Corp., 425 A.2d 952, 1981 Del. LEXIS 275 (Del. 1981).

Opinion

DUFFY, Justice.

This is an action by Pathe Industries, Inc. (Pathe) and Wissam Ezzedine against Cadence Industries Corporation (Cadence).

Pathe initiated the lawsuit in the Court of Chancery, seeking the appointment of a trustee to act on behalf of certain of its stockholders in regard to the exercise of warrants physically held by Pathe but equitably owned by such stockholders and titled in their respective names. Denied that relief, Pathe joined Ezzedine in an amended complaint to compel Cadence to issue and deliver to Ezzedine, by reason of his exercise of the warrants, valid certificates for 43,200 shares of Cadence common stock. The Court of Chancery determined that Pathe was without the power and authority to assign the warrants to Ezzedine and granted defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. Plaintiffs appeal; we reverse. 1

I

The relevant facts are these:

In 1967, Pathe and Cadence entered into an agreement through which Cadence purchased the assets and assumed the recorded liabilities of Pathe’s active subsidiary. The terms of the agreement, the total consideration for which equalled $9,751,420, called for an exchange of the assets of Pathe’s subsidiary for: (1) $3,025,000 in cash; (2) a “due bill” for 40,000 shares of Cadence corn- *954 mon stock; (3) 45,000 shares of Cadence $3.50 cumulative preferred stock, series B; (4) a warrant to purchase 209,220 shares of Cadence common stock; and (5) a “put option” requiring Cadence to repurchase the preferred stock over a twenty-year period at $100 a share.

Subsequently, differences arose between Pathe and Cadence regarding the payment of dividends on the preferred stock and the repurchase of those shares pursuant to the “put option.” Under the impetus of a Chapter XI bankruptcy proceeding involving Pathe, in 1972 Pathe and Cadence reached a second agreement to resolve those differences. The second agreement provided for the following: (1) sale to Cadence of the 45,000 shares of the cumulative preferred stock, series B, for $990,000; (2) delivery to Pathe of 40,000 shares of Cadence common stock in exchange for the “due bill” issued by Cadence; (3) payment of dividend arrearages on the preferred stock; (4) termination of the “put option”; and (5) exchange of the 1967 warrant for the purchase of 209,220 shares of Cadence common stock for a 1972 warrant for the same number of shares. As part of the 1972 agreement, Pathe promised not to exercise the warrant in its own name 2 but, instead, agreed to exchange the 1972 warrant for warrants issued to Pathe’s stockholders individually, giving them an option to by a pro rata share of the 209,220 shares of Cadence common stock.

The warrants, by their terms, were exercisable for fourteen months after their transmittal to Pathe’s stockholders. On September 22 and 23, 1977, pursuant to the agreement, Cadence mailed the warrants to Pathe’s stockholders. A substantial number of those warrants (36,238.45), however, were returned as undeliverable because the addressees were unknown at their respective mailing addresses. Those warrants were then delivered to Pathe’s president.

By November 1, 1978, thirty days before expiration date of the warrants, Pathe had been successful in locating the owners of outstanding warrants for only 4,000 shares. Seeking to preserve the value of the warrants for its other unlocated shareholders, Pathe attempted to have equivalent warrants issued in its own name in exchange for the undelivered warrants. Cadence refused to comply with that request.

Then, on November 22, 1978, Pathe filed a complaint in the Court of Chancery seeking orders which would: (1) authorize Pathe to exercise the warrants as trustee on behalf to its unlocated stockholders; (2) require Cadence to recognize the timely exercise of the warrants by Pathe as trustee; and (3) appoint Pathe as trustee for proceeds resulting from the exercise or sale of the warrants of the underlying Cadence stock. The Court denied Pathe’s request for relief, concluding that to do so would extend the stated termination date of the warrants. Since the agreement did not provide for an extension of that date, the Court reasoned that it was powerless to rewrite the agreement to provide for such relief through a trusteeship or otherwise.

In an attempt to preserve at least some benefit for its stockholders, Pathe, in the waning hours of the effective period of the warrants, transferred them to plaintiff Ez-zedine for $50,000. Late on November 30, 1978, Ezzedine attempted to exercise the warrants but, on December 4,1978, Cadence refused to honor such request.

Pathe and Ezzedine then filed an amended complaint in the Court of Chancery seeking an order to compel the transfer to Ez-zedine of the shares represented by the undelivered warrants. That relief was also denied by the Court of Chancery. Plaintiffs then docketed this appeal.

II

Although Pathe had possession of the undelivered warrants under its agreement *955 with Cadence, 3 the Court of Chancery determined that Pathe did not owe any duty to the unlocated stockholders with respect to such warrants and, therefore, refused to recognize Pathe’s authority to either seek appointment of a trustee to protect such interests or to transfer the warrants to Ezzedine and hold the proceeds of that sale for them. Our view of Pathe’s status and attendant authority is significantly different.

It is undisputed that the equity in the warrants was the property of the Pathe shareholders and that the undelivered warrants were in the nature of unclaimed property of the shareholders who could not be located. Under these circumstances, and given the relationship between Pathe and the warrant-owners, it is our view that Pathe was in the position of an escrow-holder of the then undelivered warrants. We so hold.

A.

We address initially the issue involving the Pathe-Ezzedine agreement, namely, whether Pathe, in its capacity as escrow holder, had the authority and power to sell the undelivered warrants to Ezzedine. We hold that it did not.

Ezzedine asserts that Pathe was a fiduciary for its unlocated shareholders and, as such, had implied authority to do whatever was necessary to protect its beneficiaries from substantial loss. Thus, the argument goes, Pathe’s implied authority enabled it to convey good title to the warrants to Ezze-dine and, consequently, Cadence’s refusal to honor the exercise of those warrants by Ezzedine was erroneous in law. 4

Cadence, on the other hand, adopts the reasoning of the Court of Chancery that the fiduciary duty of corporate directors to stockholders extends only to the management and control of corporate property, and not to shareholders’ personal property, such as the warrants here in question. Therefore, Cadence submits, Pathe lacked authority and power to assign the warrants to Ezzedine and, as a result, its refusal to recognize the validity of the Pathe-Ezzedine agreement and honor the exercise of the warrants by Ezzedine was proper.

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425 A.2d 952, 1981 Del. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pathe-industries-inc-v-cadence-industries-corp-del-1981.