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3 Bull. Sec. Corp. Banking & Bus. L. 1 (1964)

handle is hein.journals/txjbus3 and id is 1 raw text is: 




                                     BULLE TIN


                           OF   THE   SECTION ON CORPORATION, BANKING & BUSINESS LAW


VOLUME 3                                          FEBRUARY, 1964                                         NUMBER  1


                                          RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
                                          By  SPENCER LErrs of Houston
               Corporations - Right  to Assert Privilege for Communications   with Counsel. Certiorari in
          the Radiant Burners case, reported in the January, July and November, 1963 issues, has been denied
          by the  United States Supreme  Court.
              Radiant Burners, Inc. v. American Gas Association, 32 Law Week  3205.
              Corporations -  De  Facto  Merger.  In two recent cases, Delaware courts have  rejected the
          de facto merger doctrine, under which  different kinds of corporate combinations may be treated
          as mergers and successfully attacked because no provision is made for appraisal rights. In the first
          case, Hariton v. Arco Electronics, Inc., 188 A.2d 123 (Del. Sup. Ct. 1963), Arco Electronics, Inc.
          agreed to sell all of its assets to Loral Electronics Corporation for stock in the latter corporation,
          and also to liquidate to its shareholders all of the stock received from Loral. Plaintiff, in seeking to
          block the transaction, argued that the agreement to liquidate, which deprived the shareholders of
          the selling corporation of the right to elect whether the corporation would survive as a holding
          company, changed  the agreement from a simple sale of assets into a de facto merger. He then argued
          that since no notice was given of appraisal rights, the vote on the proposed transaction could not
          be valid. The court held to the contrary, however, stating: We now hold that the re-organization
          here accomplished through  [a sale of assets] . . . and a mandatory plan of dissolution is legal.
              In the two leading cases in which the de facto merger doctrine has been recognized in other
          states there were indications that the method chosen for combining the corporations was a planned
          evasion of appraisal rights both under the merger statutes and under the applicable sale-of-assets
          statute. See Farris v. Glen Alden Corporation, 143 A.2d 25, (Pa. Sup. Ct. 1958) and Applestein v.
          United Board and  Carton Corporation, 159 A.2d 146 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1960). The Delaware sale-of-
          assets statute (Delaware Corporation Law Sec. 271) does not grant appraisal rights either to share-
          holders of the selling corporation or to those of the purchasing corporation. Thus, the court could
          have applied the de facto merger doctrine only by totally ignoring the provisions of the sale-of-assets
          statute.
              The Hariton case has been followed in a more recent case, Orzerk v. Engelhart, 195 A.2d 375
          (Del. Sup. Ct. 1963), which might have proven  difficult in a case of first impression. In this case,
          an inactive airplane company, Bellanca Corporation, purchased all of the capital stock of seven
          different corporations, each engaged in the egg business, and, as part of a predetermined plan,
          merged  its seven new subsidiaries into itself under Section 253 of the Delaware Corporation Law.
          Section 253 provides that a parent and wholly-owned subsidiary may merge without giving rise to
          any appraisal rights. The plaintiff apparently argued a step transaction theory that the purchase
          of stock and merger were broken down into two steps solely for the purpose of avoiding the appraisal
          provisions of the Delaware statutes dealing with mergers of independent corporations. In rejecting
          this contention, the Delaware Supreme Court  reiterated its position, earlier stated in the Hariton
          case, that actions taken in accordance with different sections of [the Delaware Corporation Law] . . .
          are acts of independent legal significance even though the end result may be the same under different
          sections. The application of this principle where it appears that the indirect method employed for
          consummating  the transaction probably was chosen solely for evasive purposes, indicates that the
          de facto merger doctrine has no place in Delaware  law.

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