Subers v. Continental Securities Co.

111 A. 433, 12 Del. Ch. 236, 1920 Del. Ch. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 28, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 111 A. 433 (Subers v. Continental Securities Co.) 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
Subers v. Continental Securities Co., 111 A. 433, 12 Del. Ch. 236, 1920 Del. Ch. LEXIS 14 (Del. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

" The question for decision is whether a plea to the effect that a necessary party has been omitted is sufficient in law. The complainant is Lawrence A. Subers, who described himself as a stockholder of the American Rubber Products Company, one of the defendants, herein called Products Company. There are three defendants, the Continental Securities Company, herein called Securities Company; the American Rubber Products Company, herein called the Products Company; and the American Tire Corporation, herein called Tire Corporation; and all of the defendants are described as corporations of the State of Delware. [238]*238Pleas have been filed by the last two defendants, and no appearance . made for the first named corporation.

An abstract of the bill is as follows: Subers, the complainant» owning certain patent rights granted certain rights of user thereof on June 27,1914, to the Subers Fabric & Rubber Company (herein called Rubber Company), and later a bankruptcy receiver was appointed for the company. In March, 1918, the Securities Company, Subers and the Rubber Company made an agreement, among other things, that the Securities Company should bring into existence a corporation to be known as the above mentioned American Rubber Products Company (herein called Products Company), to take over the assets of a certain New Castle Rubber Company, the stock of the Products Company, to be made up of two kinds of preferred stock and twenty-nine thousand shares of common stock of no par value; that all the second preferred stock and twenty-one thousand shares of common stock be issued to New Castle Rubber Company in payment for its assets; that Subers should assign to a trust company all his patents granted in the Western Hemisphere, the patents to be transferred to the Products Company when it should be earning and paying a certain dividend; and that Subers should receive inter alla two thousand shares of common stock of the Products Company. That pursuant to the agreement the Products Company was incorporated, voting power being given to the common stock only. The New Castle Rubber Company conveyed to the Products Company its assets and received the preferred and six thousand shares of common stock of the Products Company; that Subers assigned his patents to the Guardian Savings & Trust Company of Cleveland to be held in escrow under' the agreement; that the Products Company took possession of the assets of the New Castle Rubber Company, but because the latter could not comply with the terms of the agreement the sale was abandoned. That the preferred stock and six thousand shares of common stock of the Products Company had already been delivered to the New Castle Rubber Company, and these were returned to the Products Company after the failure of the transfer; that in some way unknown to the complainant, Subers, fifteen thousand shares of common stock of the Products Company - were issued to the Securities [239]*239Company, and notwithstanding the failure of the consideration for said shares the Securities Company retains them; that the Securities Company distributed gratis part of the common stock of the Products Company, but still retains in its name on the books of the Products' Company twelve thousand five hundred and twenty-one shares of common stock and votes them, thereby controlling the Products Company, for only seventeen thousand shares of its common stock are outstanding; that the fifteen thousand shares were issued illegally and should by appropriate proceedings be cancelled, though there is no prayer to that effect in the bill; that prior to January 12, 1920, a supposed agreement in writing was made between the Products Company and the Tire Corporation by which the latter should take over all Suber’s patents and the tangible property of the Products Company; and that the Tire Corporation represented that it owned such patents, etc.; that the Tire Corporation was organized at the instance of the Securities Company to,,take over the patents, etc., and deprive the complainant, Subers, of his patents, and that the directors and officers of the Tire Corporation are largely members of the Products Company; that the Products Company has not earned such dividend as to entitle it to a transfer of the patents from the Trust Company, and that by the "transfer of the patents, etc., to the Tire Corporation the Products Company has put it out of its power to comply with the conditions respecting the assignment of the patents to the Trust Company; and that the contract between the Products Company and the Tire Corporation was void and a fraud on the rights of the complainant and of the stockholders of the Products Company.

The prayers of the bill were (1) for a subpoena; (2) for answers; (3) that the contract between the Products Company and the Tire Corporation be adjudged void and set aside; (4) that the Tire Corporation and the Products Company be enjoined from disposing of the patents and licenses; (5) that the Securities Company be enjoined, until the further order of the Chancellor, from selling any common stock of the Products Company held by the Securities Company. There were also prayers for the production of books, etc., of the three defendant corporations both before and at the hearing of the cause.

[240]*240Separate pleas were filed by the Products Company and the Tire Corporation, and each declared that the above mentioned Continental Securities Company, a Delaware corporation, named as a defendant, had no part or connection in or with the matters referred to in the bill, but that the Continental Securities Company, a corporation of Ohio, took part in and was concerned with the matters referred to in the bill, without admitting that the Securities Company of Ohio did anything wrong.

Two distinct and separate subject-matters are set forth in the bill as grievances. The first complaint is, in substance, that the Securities Company holds unlawfully twelve thousand five hundred and twenty-one shares of common stock of the Products Company and votes them, thereby controlling the Products Company and manages it so disadvantageously that no dividends are earned by it. The relief sought against the Securities Company, as shown by the prayers is, (a) an injunction against disposing of the said shares of the Products Company until the further order of the Chancellor; and (b) that it produce its minute books or any other books of record it may have, for examination and inspection by the complainant as to entries, resolutions or data of any kind as to its officers and directors and the time of their service. The Tire Corporation has no interest in this subject-matter.

The second complaint is, that the contract between the Products Company and the Tire Corporation was a fraud on the rights of the complainant and stockholders of the Products Company and void, and that by the making of the contract the Products Company had put it out of its power to conform to the conditions under which the patents were assigned in escrow, or to carry on the business for which it was incorporated. The relief sought against the Products Company and the Tire Corporation is, (a) that the contract be set aside; and (b) that the Tire Corporation be enjoined from using or disposing of the property acquired from the Products Company and the patents, applications for patents and trade-marks; and (c) that they produce their minute books, or any other books of record they may have, for examination and inspection by the complainant as to entries, resolutions or data of any kind as to their officers and directors and the time of their service.

[241]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 A. 433, 12 Del. Ch. 236, 1920 Del. Ch. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/subers-v-continental-securities-co-delch-1920.