West v. Sirian Lamp Co.

42 A.2d 883, 28 Del. Ch. 328, 1945 Del. Ch. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 15, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 42 A.2d 883 (West v. Sirian Lamp 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
West v. Sirian Lamp Co., 42 A.2d 883, 28 Del. Ch. 328, 1945 Del. Ch. LEXIS 52 (Del. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Harrington, Chancellor:

In the original bill, the complainants sought to cancel the entire issue of the no par common and voting stock of the corporation:

(1) Because the original 30,000 shares of no par common stock, exchanged for the present issue of 300,000 shares, [330]*330were not authorized by the pertinent provisions of the General Corporation Law or by the charter of the Sirian Lamp Company, and were, therefore, void;

(2) Because the original 30,000 shares of no par common stock, exchanged for the present outstanding issue of 300,000 shares, were issued without “any legal or valid consideration therefor,” and were likewise void on that ground.

No pleas were filed to the first cause of action alleged, but the defendants have since demurred thereto, and the complainants concede that the demurrer must be sustained and that part of the bill dismissed.

The negative pleas filed to the second cause of action alleged specifically denied that “the thirty thousand (30,-000) shares of common or voting stock of no par value of the Universal Lamp and Wire Company (now Sirian Lamp Company) were issued without any legal or valid consideration.”

Supporting answers accompanying the pleas also alleged that the said 30,000 shares of no par common stock were issued to one John Allen Heany pursuant to a contract with him, dated May 9, 1922, and the consideration therefor was the grant by Heany to the corporation of “the exclusive license to make, use and sell in the United States and Canada, without the payment of royalty, Filament Type Incandescent Electric Lamps specially designed for lighting purposes, embodying any or all inventions of the following United States Letters Patent and the following then pending applications for United States Letters Patent.”

A copy of the Heany contract and a list of the patents and patent applications were appended to the answers.

No replications were filed to the pleas, but their legal sufficiency as a defense to the action was set down for argument by the complainants under Buie 47 of this court and was sustained. See West v. Sirian Lamp Co., ante p. 90, 37 A.2d 835.

[331]*331The proposed amendment to the bill alleges, in substance, on information and belief that the defendant corporation purported to issue the 30,000 shares of no par common voting stock to one John Allen Heany upon the execution of an instrument in writing, dated May 9, 1922, a copy of which is attached to the bill. It further alleges:

(1) That the shares so issued to Heany were assigned without consideration promptly after the execution of the agreement to others (some of whom are listed) who had brought about the organization of the company.

(2) That the agreement was employed as a means of having the shares issued without consideration to such persons in evasion and violation of the laws of the State of Delaware.

(3) That the purported license granted to the company pursuant to the agreement “was valueless and known to be by . the officers and directors of said Sirian Lamp Company at the time of said ‘agreement’; that the patents theretofore issued and referred to in said ‘agreement’ had not been exploited or proved to be of any commercial use or value; that none of the lamps, machines or said patents has ever gone into commercial use; that said patents were lacking not only in utility but in novelty and invention as well; that the said John Allen Heany had no actual consummate patent rights in the pending patent applications listed in said ‘agreement’ or in any thereof, and at the time of said ‘agreement’ it was not at all certain that any Letters Patent would issue upon said applications or any thereof, or that if any such patent or patents should issue thereon that it or they would be possessed of utility, novelty or invention indispensable to their validity; that no patent granted upon any of said applications has ever gone into commercial use.”

(4) That in and by the first paragraph of the agreement, the company agreed to provide the necessary working [332]*332capital to exploit the inventions covered by its license and would within six months from the date of the agreement provide in its treasury the sum of $150,000 to be used in the development of a lamp manufacturing business based upon Heany’s inventions and the license was made expressly subject to such term and condition; that the company did not within six months from the date of the agreement provide in its treasury the sum of $150,000 for such purpose.

(5) That in and by paragraph Sixth of the agreement, the company agreed to pay all necessary patent expenses to fully protect in the United States and Canada any and all inventions of Heany relating to filament type incandescent electric lamps until May 9, 1925, and that the company has not at any time since the date of the agreement protected in the United States or in Canada the said alleged inventions or any thereof.

(6) That the agreement contained the following express provision: “It is agreed that the license contained herein is to automatically terminate if and when any of the terms and conditions of this agreement are breached or violated by second party.”

That under such express terms of the agreement, it automatically terminated at the expiration of six months from the date thereof for failure of the company to comply with the terms and conditions set forth in paragraphs First and Sixth thereof; that the company knew at the time the agreement was entered into that even if the patents purported to be licensed thereunder possessed utility, novelty or invention, it would not be possible or practical for the company to obtain any value- by, from, or under the license within such period of six months; that the company knew, or should have known, at the time the agreement was entered into that there was little or no probability that it could provide during such period of six months in its treasury the sum of $150,000 to be used in the development [333]*333of a lamp manufacturing business based upon Heany’s alleged inventions.

(7) That according to the annual report of the company filed with the Secretary of State of Delaware on Jan-, uary 2, 1923, the amount of preferred stock then outstanding was only $11,500, and that in said report the company claimed exemption from taxation “because not as yet actively engaged in business.”

(8) That the company continuously reported in the annual reports filed with the Secretary of State that it was not actively engaged or had not started to manufacture or was not carrying on any commercial business, and that in the report filed on January 6, 1942, it was stated that the “corporation discontinued all activities about June 1, 1930 and since that time has not engaged in any experimental work or in commercial enterprise.”

A copy of the Heany contract of May 9, 1922 was also attached to the proposed amendment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 A.2d 883, 28 Del. Ch. 328, 1945 Del. Ch. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-sirian-lamp-co-delch-1945.