Territory of the United States Virgin Islands v. Goldman, Sachs & Co.

937 A.2d 760, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 186
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedDecember 20, 2007
DocketC.A. 2505-VCS
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 937 A.2d 760 (Territory of the United States Virgin Islands v. Goldman, Sachs & 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
Territory of the United States Virgin Islands v. Goldman, Sachs & Co., 937 A.2d 760, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 186 (Del. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

In this decision, I grant the motion of defendant Goldman, Sachs & Co. to dismiss a complaint against it by the U.S. Virgin Islands. The Virgin Islands seeks to recoup from Goldman Sachs distributions made to it from a dissolved corporation, Panex Industries, Inc., in 1984 and 1985, and in 1987 from a liquidating trust established during Panex’s dissolution, the Liquidating Trust. The Virgin Islands’ theory is that Goldman Sachs is liable, to the extent of its receipt of distributions *764 from Panex and the Liquidating Trust, for any liabilities owed by Panex and the Liquidating Trust, regardless of whether those liabilities were known at the time the distributions were made. In this case, the first claims that certain operations of Pa-nex had caused environmental damage to the Tutu aquifer on St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands were asserted in 1992, and the Virgin Islands itself did not assert such claims until 1996, nine years after the last distributions to Goldman Sachs were made. In fact, as of the time the distributions to Goldman Sachs were made, the Virgin Islands itself had owned and controlled for fifteen years, the former Panex facility that it later alleged was a source of pollution.

More than a generation’s worth of corporate and judicial process precedes this ruling and is summarized in the pages that follow. That history is important to the conclusions I reach, which are as follows.

First, I conclude that §§ 278 and 325(b) of the Delaware General Corporation Law bar the Virgin Islands from seeking to hold Goldman Sachs responsible for distributions it received from Panex itself. Because the Virgin Islands never brought suit against Panex, it could not secure a judgment against Panex, a pre-requisite to claiming over against Panex’s former stockholders. The reason that the Virgin Islands never brought suit against Panex is that by the time the Virgin Islands got around to bringing a claim for environmental damage, the Third Circuit had already correctly determined that Panex lacked the capacity to sue and be sued at that time by operation of § 278 of the DGCL. Alternatively, even if §§ 278 and 325(b) do not preclude common law making, I would, for reasons I detail, decline to recognize a common law cause of action for a later arising corporate claimant against a stockholder who received a prior distribution in good faith.

Second, because the Virgin Islands did not file a claim against the Liquidating Trust until 1996, well after the Liquidating Trust’s original term expired, it has no right to demand that Goldman Sachs return the distributions it received in 1987. After September 12, 1988, the Liquidating Trust only continued in existence to deal with the discrete issue of potential environmental liabilities related to a facility in New York, and not to address unknown claims, such as those later made by the Virgin Islands.

Finally, I conclude that the Virgin Islands is barred in any case by the doctrine of laches. In practical effect, it seeks to hold Goldman Sachs liable for activity undertaken by Panex’s predecessors in the 1970s. The Virgin Islands bought the facility in question in 1981 but first raised environmental claims in 1996. In that 1996 suit, the Virgin Islands sued Goldman Sachs, raising essentially the same claims it now raises, but dismissed that suit without prejudice in 1998. Then, the Virgin Islands waited another eight years to sue Goldman Sachs.

The Virgin Islands has filed its claims long after the analogous statutes of limitation require. As important, its late filing puts Goldman Sachs, a passive stockholder of Panex who acquired its shares as compensation for creditor claims in a bankruptcy, in the unfair position of having to defend environmental claims, when it was never an operator of the facility in question, when many key witnesses are dead or have faded memories, and when the Virgin Islands itself has controlled the facility since 1981. And if the Virgin Islands claims that it can recover against Goldman Sachs simply because it obtained a default judgment in 2005 against the successor trust of Panex, which had no funds to *765 defend itself, the inequity Goldman Sachs faces as a result of the Virgin Islands’ torpor is made even plainer.

I. Facts

These facts are drawn from the amended complaint, the documents referenced and incorporated therein, and numerous judicial decisions since Panex’s dissolution. The facts relevant to deciding this motion are complicated because they involve numerous entities and span several decades.

A. The Predecessor Corporations

Laga Industries, Ltd., a U.S. Virgin Islands corporation, was organized in 1968 with Paul Lazare and Andreas Gal as its initial stockholders and officers. Laga built and operated a textile manufacturing facility in the Tutu region of St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands (the “Laga Facility” or “Laga”). In 1970, Lazare and Gal sold Laga to the Duplan Corporation, a Delaware corporation, and Duplan began dry-cleaning operations at the Laga Facility. Dry cleaning was the final step in the manufacturing process for certain Duplan textile products. 1 In 1976, Duplan filed for bankruptcy reorganization. Duplan ceased all operations at the Laga Facility in late 1978. 2 As part of the bankruptcy process, Panex Co., a New York partnership formed by Lazare and Gal, purchased the Laga Facility from Duplan’s bankruptcy trustee in 1979. Panex Co. sold the Laga Facility to the Virgin Islands Department of Education in 1981. That same year, Duplan emerged from bankruptcy as Panex Industries, Inc. (“Panex”), a Delaware corporation.

B. The Post-Bankruptcy Owners Of Panex

Panex arose from bankruptcy in 1981 with over 800 stockholders; 3 however, most of Panex’s stock was held by three groups of stockholders. Lazare and Gal owned approximately 27% of Panex’s common stock, Firmanco Associates 4 owned 40%, and Goldman Sachs owned 13%. 5 Lazare and Gal, Firmanco, and Goldman Sachs received shares of Panex stock as part of the bankruptcy process because they were creditors of Duplan before its bankruptcy. 6 Firmanco, in building up to its 40% ownership, also acquired shares of Panex on the open market. 7

Of the three primary groups of Panex stockholders, Goldman Sachs was the only entirely passive stockholder. Goldman Sachs did not participate in the management of Panex as either a director or officer. Indeed, it appears that Goldman Sachs was never even an eager equity holder. Rather, it received its equity in Panex as compensation for its creditor claims in the Duplan bankruptcy. By contrast, Lazare, Gal and Firmanco actively participated in the management of Panex. Lazare and Gal, who were the initial officers of Laga and served as officers of *766

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Bluebook (online)
937 A.2d 760, 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-the-united-states-virgin-islands-v-goldman-sachs-co-delch-2007.