Wilhelm v. Consolidated Oil Corp.

11 F. Supp. 444, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1608
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Oklahoma
DecidedJune 28, 1935
DocketNo. 970
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 F. Supp. 444 (Wilhelm v. Consolidated Oil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilhelm v. Consolidated Oil Corp., 11 F. Supp. 444, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1608 (N.D. Okla. 1935).

Opinion

FRANKLIN E. KENNAMER, District Judge.

The bill discloses that, at and prior to the transactions of which they complain, the plaintiffs were stockholders of either or both the Prairie Oil & Gas Company and the Prairie Pipeline Company (now by change of name, respectively,-the Commonwealth Oil & Gas Company, and the Commonwealth Transportation Company) both Kansas corporations, and they sue as stockholders or former stockholders of such corporations for themselves and for others similarly situated who may care to join. Their complaint has for its genesis the execution of a triparty contract, dated January 14, 193.2, between the two Kansas corporations and the defendant, Consolidated Oil Corporation (then the Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corporation), a New York corporation, and includes within its sphere the subsequent transactions of the three named corporations and the other defendant corporations, all subsidiaries of the Consolidated Oil Corporation, manifest in the carrying out of said contract. This questioned agreement had for its object a merger of the three corporations by a conveyance to the defendant, Consolidated Oil Corporation, or its nominee subsidiaries, by the Prairie corporations, of all their assets and the assumption of their liabilities by the contracting defendant, which was to issue its stock directly to the stockholders of the Prairie corporations in lieu of their stock in the latter, at a fixed ratio of exchange. Some of the plaintiffs have made the stock exchange, and at the time of filing suit were holders and owners of stock of the Consolidated Oil Corporation. Some of the plaintiffs are alleged to be citizens and residents of Kansas, and others of Oklahoma. The defendant corporations, other than the Consolidated Oil Corporation, are all subsidiaries -of the Consolidated to whom some of the properties of the Prairie companies were conveyed in the consummation of the triparty contract, but none of such subsidiaries are Oklahoma corporations.

The stated objects of the suit are: To have set aside as fraudulent and void all [446]*446transfers of the assets of the Prairie companies made to the defendants; to establish that such defendants held all such assets as trustees for plaintiffs in proportion to their stock in the Prairie companies ; for a disclosure of such assets and an accounting as to the same and the earnings therefrom; to establish a lien upon the physical properties within the jurisdiction of this court formerly owned by the Prairie companies and now held by the defendants; for a receiver for such properties, and in the alternative that the defendants be required to pay plaintiffs the proportionate share of the value of all assets of the Prairie companies so conveyed, and, further, as to those plaintiffs who have exchanged their stock in the Prairie companies for stock in the Consolidated Oil Corporation,. a rescission of such exchange and the restoration of their status as stockholders of the Prairie companies.

Each of the defendants has appeared specially and moved to quash the subpoena or subpoenas issued against it and the service and return thereon.

The motions of all defendants, save the Consolidated Oil Corporation, are based upon the grounds that the court is without jurisdiction, for the reasons: (1) The venue of this suit, which is governed by section 51 of the Judicial Code (28 USCA § 112), is improperly laid in this district in which none of the defendants is a resident, since the bill presents a substantial federal question; and (2) even if no federal question is presented, and general jurisdiction is founded only on diversity of citizenship, the venue is, nevertheless, improperly laid, since all the plaintiffs are not residents of this district. The motion of Consolidated Oil Coiporation is based on the above grounds and the additional ground that the court has acquired no jurisdiction over it by the attempted service, because it is not doing business in the Northern district of Oklahoma and not found therein.

The motions have been sharply contested. The court has had the benefit of helpful oral argument and extensive briefs pro and con. Evidence, mainly by affidavits, has been submitted on the issue as to whether the Consolidated has a presence in this district, rendering it amenable to service of process therein. It is admitted that the defendants, other than the Consolidated, are present and engaged in business within the district. This is the main ground upon which plaintiffs rely to sustain the service upon the Consolidated. It is urged that the Consolidated does business in this district through the other defendants. It appears that the Consolidated owns all of the capital stock of the defendants, Sinclair-Prairie Oil Company and Sinclair Refining Company; that the Sinclair-Prairie Oil Company owns all of the capital stock of the Sinclair-Prairie Oil Marketing Company; and the Sinclair Refining Company owns all of' the capital stock of the Sinclair-Prairie Pipeline Company. While the other defendants are operating companies in different branches of the oil industry, the Consolidated is exclusively a holding company. Its properties consist solely of stocks, bonds, notes, cash, evidences of indebtedness, and choses of action of a similar character, and its income is derived from stock dividends, interest on investments and profits realized on the purchase and sale of stocks and securities ; it maintains its only office in New York, where all the meetings of both stockholders and directors are held; all of its officers, except an assistant secretary who lives in New Jersey, reside in New York; a majority of its directors also reside in New York, but three of them are residents of this district; one of its directors, Dana H. Kelsy, is also a director of the Sinclair-Prairie Oil Company, and another director, Nelson K. Moody, is president and a director of the Sinclair-Prairie Oil Marketing Company. The Consolidated has no employees outside of New York. It has never held or owned physical properties of any description in Oklahoma or elsewhere, except its furniture and equipment in its New York offices. It has maintained bank accounts in Oklahoma, but these were under the exclusive control of its office in New York, and no one in Oklahoma has ever had authority to make deposits for or withdraw from such accounts. It has numerous other subsidiaries in addition to the defendant subsidiaries. Each of its subsidiaries is a separate corporate entity, and the books and accounts of each are kept free from those of the others, and of the parent company. Each subsidiary has its own board of directors, officers, and employees, and its business affairs are conducted by them as an organization separate from any of its allied corporations; each acquires and holds properties in its own name and transacts all of its business in such manner. Each has its own money [447]*447and batik accounts, and the funds of the Consolidated are not commingled with those of any of the subsidiaries, nor are the funds of any subsidiary commingled with those of any other. It would seem that the separate corporate entity of the parent company, and that of each subsidiary, has been scrupulously maintained. It is shown that the firm of accountants makes an annual audit of the books of the Consolidated as well as those of all its subsidiaries. The Consolidated makes an annual report to its stockholders, including a balance sheet and income statement which is styled, “Report of Consolidated Oil Corporation and Subsidiaries.” The balance sheet and income statement so included is a consolidation of the balance sheets and income statements of the Consolidated and all companies of which it owns all the stock.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. Supp. 444, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilhelm-v-consolidated-oil-corp-oknd-1935.