H. Rajan Sharma
Dow and, by implication, UCC should not be
allowed to conduct business as usual in India without accounting for
the costs of the Bhopal havoc.
“Bhopal is also a metaphor for development as a disaster of sorts which
demands that the casualties be forgotten and dictates that a community
that fails to develop is obsolescent. An entire structure of
propaganda, erasure and amnesia on Bhopal was orchestrated by science,
government, and corporations which allowed the language of compensation
as the only avenue of expression of outrage and injustice – and even
compensation was precarious at best.”
- Arturo Escobar, Encountering Development
The victims of the world’s worst industrial disaster are on the march
again. This time they are marching to New Delhi to protest against an
official move by the Government of India to pave the way for Dow
Chemical Company to embark on a series of investments in the country,
despite the fact that its wholly owned subsidiary is Union Carbide
Corporation (UCC), the principal author of the world’s worst industrial
catastrophe, which took place in Bhopal on December 2, 1984.
Even though UCC remains a “proclaimed absconder” or fugitive from the
Indian courts where criminal charges for culpable homicide against it
remain pending and even though Dow Chemical is a respondent in a
petition in which the Indian government itself has sought clean-up
costs for the badly polluted plant site in Bhopal where thousands of
tonnes of toxins continue to poison the drinking water of approximately
20,000 residents of 16 residential areas near the plant, the Indian
government is attempting to absolve Dow from any civil and criminal
liability, clearing the way for foreign investment and even transfer of
technology from the parent company while UCC, its subsidiary, is
permitted to evade answering for those same civil and criminal
liabilities concerning its misconduct in Bhopal.
The device for accomplishing this travesty, and lending it an air of
legality, is an opinion obtained through the Right to Information (RTI)
legislation which purports to conclude that Dow cannot be held liable,
in any event, for the criminal charges stemming for the 1984 accident
or the clean-up of the toxic nuisance caused by the UCC plant site.
That opinion is based on an analysis of “successor liability” and the
law concerning the “corporate veil” between Dow and UCC. Since both are
American corporations, there is little question that United States law
controls both those legal inquiries.
Corporate veil is a legal doctrine that grants independent existence to
separately incorporated companies even if a subsidiary is wholly owned
by the parent. The liabilities of the subsidiary may not be imposed
upon the parent, despite the parent’s shareholder status, unless
certain legal requirements are met for “piercing the corporate veil”
between the two. Those legal requirements vary by jurisdiction in the
U.S., but generally require an evidentiary showing that the subsidiary
was wholly controlled or dominated by the parent company in order to
transfer liability from subsidiary to parent. Successor liability is
premised on the assumption that if a corporation acquires or merges
with another, it assumes the civil and criminal liabilities of its
acquisition target as a “successor-in-interest” standing in the shoes,
so to speak, of the company it purchased.
The opinion relies on the corporate veil and a somewhat muddled reading
of successor liability to excuse Dow for UCC’s outstanding and
unresolved liabilities concerning the Bhopal disaster and present-day
environmental pollution. But the legal analysis is fatally flawed on
both counts. One can dispose of the successor liability issue most
readily. The opinion relies heavily and tautologically on chronology to
suggest that Dow Chemical had no connection to UCC at the time of the
disaster or, indeed, at the time that decisions were made which caused
the resulting pollution of water supplies. Those facts, however, ought
to be immaterial. Successor liability is always imposed on an acquirer
of corporate assets after-the-fact when it had no factual or legal
connection with the acquired entity. If that were not so, successor
liability would not exist at all and a corporate wrongdoer could simply
evade all liability by merging with or selling its assets to a third
party. The plea that Dow’s connection to the events at issue is too
remote to impose successor liability is neither here nor there.
The question of successor liability is moot, in any event, because the
corporate veil between Dow Chemical and UCC as its wholly owned
subsidiary may be pierced on a showing of fraud or wrong alone. The RTI
opinion erroneously assumes that a third party such as the Government
of India would have to show that Dow Chemical controlled and/or
dominated UCC as its “alter ego” in order to pierce that veil. That may
have been the case if the question were governed by New York law.
Although UCC is incorporated in the State of New York, Dow Chemical is
a Delaware corporation.
The “corporate veil” that is sought to be pierced is that of Dow
Chemical, not that of UCC. Thus, Delaware law, and not New York law,
controls the issue of veil-piercing and successor liability under
well-settled choice-of-law rules governing this question. The
conclusions advanced by the opinion are, therefore, erroneous as a
matter of law.
Under Delaware law, the corporate veil may be pierced “in the interest
of justice, when such matters as fraud, contravention of law or
contract, public wrong, or where equitable consideration among members
of the corporation require it, are involved”. See Pauley Petroleum Inc.
v. Continental Oil Co ., 43 Del. Ch. 516, 521, 239 A.2d 629, 633
(1968); Geyer v. Ingersoll Publications Co., 621 A.2d 784, 793 (Del.Ch.
1992). (“[A] court can pierce the corporate veil of an entity where
there is fraud or where a subsidiary is in fact a mere instrumentality
or alter ego of its owner.”)
In contrast, New York courts disregard a party’s corporate veil more
“reluctantly”. New York law requires a party seeking to pierce the
corporate veil to show domination of the subsidiary by the parent and
that the domination was used to commit a wrong or fraud. The opinion
assumes, incorrectly, that the latter New York-style showing would be
required in order to impose UCC’s liabilities on Dow. Controlling
Delaware law mandates otherwise; that is, that a party seeking to
pierce the corporate veil between UCC and Dow need only show evidence
of fraud or wrong.
There is, sadly, plenty of evidence of such fraud in the sorry history
of the Bhopal travesty. At the time that Dow acquired UCC on or about
2001, UCC was a “proclaimed absconder” from India’s criminal
prosecution. The Second Circuit has itself acknowledged that UCC’s
tender of its shares in Union Carbide India Limited (UCIL) to the
so-called Bhopal Memorial Hospital Trust “was a fraudulent conveyance
designed principally to avoid prosecution” in India.
Before Dow’s acquisition of UCC, the latter had been selling products
in India through undisclosed third-party agents in order to avoid
subjecting itself to the lawful jurisdiction of Indian courts. In the
recent case of MM Global Services, Inc. v. Dow Chemical Co., 404 F.
Supp. 2d 425, 428-9 (D.Conn. 2005), those undisclosed third-party
agents sued Dow as UCC’s parent alleging that Union Carbide and its
affiliates ceased acting consistently with their alleged contractual
and legal obligations and, in particular, undertook efforts to
establish Dow, untainted by the Bhopal tragedy, in place of the
plaintiffs as a direct seller of products to end-users in India.
That is a classic fraud and abuse of the corporate form. Dow is
perpetrating a prototypical corporate shell-game on India’s courts and
government. This type of conduct is precisely the sort of “fraud” or
“public wrong” that permits a court applying Delaware law to pierce the
corporate veil to hold Dow liable for UCC’s liabilities.
Even if no fraud could be shown, it is enough under Delaware law to
show that the corporate form has been used to commit a wrong. Central
and State authorities in India have continued to demand that UCC be
liable for the remediation of the badly polluted plant site. The Madhya
Pradesh High Court case was commenced against UCC and Dow, both of
which have claimed that they are not subject to the jurisdiction of
India’s courts. Aiding and abetting a subsidiary to escape the lawful
jurisdiction of Indian courts while planning to carry out that
subsidiary’s business in the very jurisdiction whose laws it flouted is
a sufficient wrong or “abuse of the corporate form” to warrant
veil-piercing. It is no different in essence from a parent stripping
the assets of a subsidiary to render it judgment-proof, conduct which
has been held sufficient to warrant veil-piercing in numerous cases.
The Indian government would be well advised not to rely on the
proffered opinion, whatever its source or provenance. The Bhopal
survivors and their activists are prepared to challenge vigorously any
attempt to excuse Dow from accepting its full share of UCC’s liability
in courts both in the U.S. and in India, to say nothing of the public
arena. Dow and, by implication, UCC should not be allowed to conduct
business as usual in India without accounting for the full costs of the
havoc they have caused in Bhopal while a veil of legalistic deception
is cast over their liability, a liability that India’s taxpayers will
have to shoulder if the corporate wrongdoers are given a free pass.
India's position as an emerging economy gives it considerable leverage
over foreign investors such as Dow and UCC who want to do business in
its markets. It is high time that the Indian government learnt to use
it to advance the nation's interests, instead of betraying them.
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