Tisch Family Foundation, Inc. v. Texas National Petroleum Co.

326 F. Supp. 1128, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12986
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJune 4, 1971
DocketCiv. A. No. 2895
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 326 F. Supp. 1128 (Tisch Family Foundation, Inc. v. Texas National Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tisch Family Foundation, Inc. v. Texas National Petroleum Co., 326 F. Supp. 1128, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12986 (D. Del. 1971).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT and CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

CALEB M. WRIGHT, Chief Judge.

This case was tried to the Court without a jury during September 1970. After extended post-trial briefing and oral argument, the matter is now ripe for decision. Based on the stipulations of counsel the documents and pleadings submitted and the admissible and credible evidence presented to the Court during the trial, the Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The plaintiff, Tisch Family Foundation, Inc. (“the Foundation”), is a Florida corporation (Tr. 4) and the defendant, Texas National Petroleum Co. (“the Company”), is a dissolved Delaware corporation. (Tr. 16)

2. The amount in controversy exceeds $10,000 exclusive of interests and costs. (Tr. 21)

3. The Company filed a Consent to Dissolution on April 15, 1963, and the Delaware statute extends the life of the dissolved corporation for three years for the purpose of suing or being sued. (Tr. 16) This suit was filed within that period.

4. On January 1, 1960, the defendant Company and several underwriters entered into a Stock Warrant Agreement (Defendant’s Exhibit 5) which provided that bearers of the Warrant Certificates were entitled to purchase the stated number of shares of the Company’s Common Stock at varying prices per share up until 1975. The Warrant Certificates so stated. (Tr. 16-17, Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2)

5. Paragraph 3(a) of the Stock Warrant Agreement provided in part as follows:

Warrants may be exercised at any time up to and including January 1, 1975, except that if notice has been given as provided in Section 8(c) in connection with a distribution in a liq[1130]*1130uidation, dissolution or winding up of the Company, the right to exercise Warrants shall expire at the close of business on the third full business day before the record date specified in such notice. (Tr. 17)

6. Paragraph 8(c) of the Stock Warrant Agreement provides in part:

In the event the Company pays any dividend or makes any distribution upon its Common Stock (other than a dividend payable in Common Stock or in cash out of earnings or out of surplus legally available for dividends under the laws of the State of Delaware), or offers to the holders of its Common Stock for subscription or purchase by them any shares of stock of any class or any other rights, the Company shall mail or cause to be mailed to each of the Underwriters, each transfer agent and registrar for the Common Stock, and each registered holder of any of the warrants, at least thirty days prior to the record date or determination date hereinafter specified, a notice stating the record date fixed for the determination of holders of Common Stock entitled to receive such dividend, distribution or rights or, if no record date is fixed,, the date as of which holders of Common Stock of record to be entitled to such dividend, distribution or rights are to be determined. (Tr. 17-18)

7. On or about May 9, 1962, the Company sent a notice and an enclosure to the holders of the Warrants advising them that the Board of Directors had approved a plan for the liquidation of the Company involving a sale of its assets, a distribution of the proceeds of this sale to the stockholders and a dissolution of the Company. (Defendant’s Exhibit 6) The notice also advised the holders that if the liquidation and related matters were approved by the stockholders, the Company expected that the sale of assets would be consummated during the summer of 1962, and that in order to participate in the distribution thereafter Warrant holders would have to exercise their warrants and become stockholders pursuant to paragraphs 3(a) and 8(c) of the Warrant Agreement and that all unexercised warrants would expire at the close of business on the third full business day prior to the record date. (Tr. 18-19,126-28)

8. The plan of liquidation and related matters were approved by the stockholders of the defendant Company on May 29, 1962. (Tr. 19)

9. On June 26, 1962,' the Foundation, acting on the advice of a broker and through the offices of a brokerage house, purchased on the open market 80 Warrants of the Company, each of which carried the right to purchase 100 shares of the Company’s Common Stock at a specified price depending on the date of exercise. The total cost of the Warrants, including a commission of $500, was $28,000. (Tr. 19-20)

10. Mr. Lawrence Tisch, President of the Foundation, and Mr. Richard Donovan, who was in charge of its records and operations, did not have actual notice of defendant’s proposed dissolution prior to the record date nor did they have actual notice thereafter until early in 1964. (Tr. 38-9, 47, 215, 218, 231-32)

11. Based on the advice of the broker and a reading of the Warrant Certificate, Mr. Tisch and Mr. Donovan considered the Warrants a long range investment. (Tr. 32-33, 217-19, 230)

12. During July 1962 the defendant Company, acting as its own transfer agent issued to the plaintiff in care of Mr. Lawrence Tisch, and the plaintiff thereafter received (they came to Mr. Tisch who gave them to Mr. Donovan) 80 Warrant Certificates entitling plaintiff to purchase 8,000 shares of defendant’s Common Stock. (Tr. 20, 31-32, 130, 216, Defendant’s Exhibit 2)

13. The Warrant Certificates received by plaintiff did not state, nor did any other communication sent to the plaintiff by the defendant prior to October 31, 1962, state the facts concerning the impending dissolution and distribu[1131]*1131tion of the Company’s properties. (Tr. 170-79, 217, Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2) '

14. On October 31, 1962, the defendant Company caused to be printed and mailed a certain number of notices to holders of the Warrants stating that November 30, 1962, had been fixed as the record date for determination of stockholders entitled to participate in the distribution and that Warrants not exercised on or before November 27, 1962, would expire “and will be of no value thereafter.” (Tr. 150, Plaintiff’s Exhibit 5)

15. On October 31, 1962, the Sorg Printing Company, at defendant's request, printed a number of notices to the holders of the Warrants and placed them in envelopes addressed and provided by defendant and metered 810 of said envelopes as to postage. (Tr. 127, 144-45, 150-51, Flaherty Deposition, Defendant’s Exhibit 7)

16. No credible and admissible evidence was presented to the Court to establish the actual number of Warrant holders on October 31, 1962,1 ******that an envelope addressed to plaintiff was stuffed with a notice, or that such a stuffed envelope was metered and/or mailed to plaintiff.

17. The employee of defendant responsible for the keeping of transfer records, the addressograph plates for the Warrant holders (including plaintiff),2 and the running total of Warrant holders and who performed and/or supervised the addressing of the October 31, 1962, notices was one Mrs. Bobbie Goldberg, who did not testify. (Tr. 165-66, 190-93, 207-09)

18. Neither Mr. Lawrence Tisch nor Mr. Richard Donovan actually received the October 31, 1962, notice of record date which was alleged by defendant to have been mailed to plaintiff. (Tr. 38, 74-78, 217-18)

19. Had either Mr. Tisch or Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
326 F. Supp. 1128, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12986, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tisch-family-foundation-inc-v-texas-national-petroleum-co-ded-1971.