64 N.J. Eq. 415 | New York Court of Chancery | 1902
The contest here is between the general creditors of the insolvent corporation and certain persons named as preferred stockholders in the mortgage which is attacked.
The corporation was organized on October 30th, 1900, and on July 6th, 1901, it executed the mortgage in question, which was duly recorded on the 19th of July, 1901.
It recites a resolution of the directors of the corporation, adopted on the 6th of June, 1901, which recites that the company desired to increase its capital for the purpose of procuring a proper building and plant, &c., and does not desire to mortgage any part of its property, nor issue bonds for such purpose, and that Mr. Brunner, one of the defendants, has agreed to raise the sum of $18,000, as the same may be required for the purposes aforesaid, under the following conditions:
First. The company shall cause its certificate of incorporation to be amended by the unanimous consent of all the stockholders, SO' that the same may permit an issue of preferred sioclc, to an ¿mount not greater than $18,000,
*418 “said preferred stock to have a fixed dividend of seven per cent, per annum, cumulative, to be paid annually on the first day of June before any dividend is set apart or paid to the common stock, subject to redemption at par on June 1st, 1906, and in case of the dissolution- of said company before said date, to be paid first out of the assets of this company after the payment of its just debts QAid liabilities and before any distribution or payment to the holders of common stoeh shall be made.’’’
Second. Hie company shall convey to the Hobart Trust Company, of the city of Passaic, its factory site, in trust, (1) to hold the same, keep the same insured, and pay the taxes and assessments; (2) as security for the payment of the annual dividend of seven per cent, provided to be paid on the said preferred stock; (3) on default in the payment of any dividend, to sell and dispose of the property to pay said dividend, and hold the surplus to secure the payment of further dividends; (4) after June 1st, 1906, if not before disposed of,'to sell and dispose of the said property, either at public or private sale, and redeem, at par, all the preferred stock that may then be outstanding and issued to the stockholders; (5) if, on the 1st of June, 1906, the company shall have redeemed all the principal of the stock - and paid all accrued dividends, then the trustee shall reconvey.
It then recites that it was resolved that the proposition be accepted in all its. terms; that the resolution be submitted to the stockholders; that it-was so submitted and was approved by all the stockholders; that, on July 12th, 1901, the board of directors examined the instrument proposed to be executed and approved the same; that all the preferred stock had been subscribed, and that the corporation had made out certificates for one hundred and eighty shares of $100 each, giving a list of the persons whp- had subscribed the same, among whom was Mr. Brunner for $8,000. It then recites a resolution, on the 12th of July, 1901, making the Hobart Trust Company a transfer agent of tire preferred stock -authorized to be issued and secured by the trust deed, and that the trust company was requested to countersign certificates of the same; and that ■ certificates' numbered from one to- twenty-six had been countersigned, which includes all the subscriptions. : - - • ■
(1) As before stated, to keep the premises insured, and pay the taxes and ■ assessments.
(2) To hold the property as security for the payment of the annual dividend of seven per cent, upon its $18,000 of preferred stock.
(3) On default in 'the payment of the dividend for three months, to sell and dispose of the premises at public sale to pay off said dividend, and hold the surplus, properly invested, to secure the payment of future dividends as due or the redemption of the principal.
(4) After June 1st, 1906, if the premises have not been before disposed of,
41 to sell and dispose of the said property either at public or private sale, •and' out of the proceeds to redeem at pm• all of said preferred stock that may then he outstanding and issued to stockholders, together with any ■arrears of dividends that may he due wflon any of said preferred stock.”
(5) If, on the 1st day of June, 1906, all of the stock shall have been released, then to reconvey the property.
The bill further alleges that the shares of preferred stock subscribed by the twenty-six subscribers, or so much as have been paid for, are now held by twenty persons, naming them, who are defendants to the suit; and then sets out the insolvency proceedings, the order of the court to. sell, and the sale.
The answer actually filed admits all the facts alleged in the bill; sets up that the original certificate of incorporation - was ■duly amended so as to' authorize the'issuing of the stock; denies the legality of .the order that the property should be. sold free .and clear of encumbrances, and alleges- that $9,100 • only of the preferred stock has been actually'issued to the defendants' named; challenges the equity of the complainant’s bill, and asserts the rights of defendants as mortgagees.
It is worth while just here to state the provision of -the statute under which this stock was issued. It is section 18 of the Corporation act of 1896 (P. L. of 1896 p. 283), as amended by the act of 1901 (P. L. of 1901 p. 245; Dill Corp. 40), and is in these words:
“Every corporation organized under this act shall have power to create two or more kinds of stock, of such classes, with such designations, preferences and voting powers or restrictions or qualifications thereof as shall be stated and expressed in- the certificate of incorporation or in any certificate of amendment thereof; and the power to increase or decrease the stock as in this act elsewhere provided shall apply to all or any of the classes of stock; but at no time shall the total amount of the preferred stocks issued' and outstanding exceed two-thirds of the capital stock paid-for in cash or property, and such preferred stocks may, if desired, be made subject to redemption at any time after three years from the issue thereof, at a price not less than par, and the holders thereof shall be entitled to receive, and the corporation shall be bound to pay thereon, dividends at such rates and on such conditions as shall be stated in the original or amended certificate of incorporation, not exceeding eight per centum per annum, payable quarterly, half-yearly or yearly; and such dividends may be made payable before any dividends shall be set apart or paid on the common stock, and such dividends may be made cumulative; provided, the corporation shall set apart or pay the said' dividends to the holders of non-cumulative preferred stock before any dividend shall be paid on the common stock; and' in no event shall a holder of preferred stock be personally liable for the debts of the corporation; but in case of insolvency, its debts or other liabilities shall be paid, in preference to the preferred stoeh; the terms ‘general stock’ and ‘common stock’ are synonymous.”
I have gone through most of them carefully, and while they do, in a measure and to a certain extent, sustain his position, I am of the opinion that they do not meet the present case.
In the first place, the section of the statute under which the preferred stock was in this case issued expressly provides that, in case of insolvency, its debts or other liabilities shall be paid in preference to- the preferred stock. And it will be perceived that the defendants have taken advantage of the provisions of that section to- give them a valid claim against the company to receive cumulative dividends at the rate of seven per cent, per annum. Upon obvious principles, they are prevented from taking advantage of a part of the act and ignoring the remainder. They must take the act as a whole.
But, in the next place, the teams of the mortgage itself, when carefully examined, are, as it seems to me, fatal to the defendants. The mortgage or trust deed recites that Mr. Brunner, the principal preferred stockholder, has agreed to raise the s-um of $18,000 (and this is asserted to be true by the unfiled answer), upon certain conditions, and among them is this: That there should be issued therefor preferred stock, which shall have
“a fixed dividend of seven per cent, per annum, cumulative, -to be paid annually on the first day of June, before any dividend is set apart or paid to the common stock, subject to redemption at par on June 1st, 190G, and in case of the dissolution of said company before said date,- to be paid first out of the assets of this company after the payment of its just debts and liabilities and before any distribution or payment to the holders Of common stock shall be made.”
That provision, obviously, was made for the purpose of issuing preferred stock in accordance with the terms of the section of the act above quoted.
Now, if we look further through the mortgage, we find noth
“After June 1st, 1906, if the premises have not been before disposed'of, to sell and dispose of the said property, either at public or private sale, and out of the proceeds to redeem, at par, all of said preferred, stock that may then be outstanding and issued to stockholders, together with any arrears of dividends that may be due upon any of said preferred stock.”
It is thus seen (1) that it was onty after the 1st of June, 1906, if the property was not previously disposed of,.that the stockholders were to 'be paid the principal amount of their stock; and (2) that it fails to- state that they were to1 be paid before the creditors of the conrpany. It is entirely silent as to the status of the mortgagees, as against general creditors: a significant circumstance in view of the previous statement of the creditors" priority.
In point of fact, the company had been dissolved, and the property disposed of long before the 1st of June, 1906, so that the contingency mentioned in that fourth paragraph of' the trust has not happened.
Again, it is .argued that this mortgage was duly on record before any of these debts were incurred. And, for present purposes, I am taking that statement to be true, although I am aware that it may do an injustice to' the creditors who are represented by the receiver to so hold, because, in point of fact, that may not be true. The mortgage was recorded in July, 1901, and the corporation became, insolvent in November, .as we have seen; and it is quite possible that, some-of the-debts which the company owed' at the time the mortgage was -recorded were not paid before tlje insolvency, and are rejpresented by some of the existing creditors. But be that-as it may, the persons dealing with the corporation had a right to1 rely- upon the' section of tire statute which I have quoted, and upon the recital in the .trust deed, if they saw it on'record, which provided that the preferred'stockholders were'to* be paid after the creditors:
It is argued with much force that this construction of the trust deed renders it’of little or’nó valué,"and enables the pro
But -be that as it may, it seems to me that the general creditors of the corporation are not affected by that fraud. They had a right, as I have said, to rely upon the terms of the statute, and of the mortgage as found on the record,' and it was the duty of the persons advancing their money on the strength' of this mortgage to scan with great care the instrument which secured them this high rate of interest; and it is not the first time that-persons, in their eagerness to' secure high rates of interest, have lost their principal. ' ' - - '
‘ Now1, turning to the authorities cited by the counsel for the defendants, I find the one most in point in his favor to be Burt v. Rattle, 31 Ohio 116 (1876). That case would be 'precisely in point if the statute authorizing the mortgage and the- terms of the mortgage were similar to those before the'court; but they are not. 'The'statute allowing- preferred stock to be issued in that case did -not declare that the right of the holders should be subject to the right of creditors, and the mortgage did'not so provide, as in this case. The arguments of the counsel on either side, as reported, are 'elaborate ’and thorough, and well worth perusal;' and', after all, the decision in favor of the priority of the lien of the. preferred stockholders in that case-was by a divided court; and put upon the distinct' ground that the
The text of Jones Corp. B. & M. (2d ed.) § 627, is based on Miller v. Ratterman, 47 Ohio 141. The question there arose, not between the preferred stockholders and general creditors on a winding-up' of an insolvent corporation, but between preferred stockholders and common stockholders of a solvent corporation, on a question of taxation. As in the previous case in 31 Ohio, the argumentation, as printed, is thorough and elaborate. The court held in that ease, under the special provisions of the act there involved, that the preferred stockholders were real stockholders, and not creditors; and, as far as it is authority at all, it is authority in favor of the complainant.
The case of West Chester and Philadelphia Railroad Co. v. Jackson, Administratrix of Gray, 77 Pa. 321 (1875), cited by the defendants' counsel, was an action of assumpsit, by holders of preferred stock against the railroad company, to recover dividends under the terms of certificates of stock. The only question seems to have been the right to maintain an action, and the solution of that question depended upon the construction of divers acts of the legislature of Pennsylvania; and it was held that the action would lie. The case presented no question between preferred stockholders and general creditors, such as arises in that now under consideration.
The subject is discussed by Mr. Thompson (2 Thomp. Corp. §§ 2278, 2279), referring to the case of King v. O. & M. R. R. Co., 2 Fed. Rep. 36, and, on appeal, sub nom. Warren v. King, 108 U. S. 389, which directly supports the view I have taken in favor of the complainant in this case.
The subject is also discussed by Mr. Cook (Cook Stock & S. (3d ed.) § 271), where a collection of the authorities will be found, and I heartily concur in what he says in that section, as follows:
“Occasionally, however, a mortgage is given by the corporation to secure the payment of dividends on preferred stock and to give it a preference in payment over subsequent debts of the corporation upon insolvency or dissolution. It is difficult to see how such a mortgage would be legal, except where it is issued under express statutory authority. It is diffi*425 cult to see how stockholders can contrive legally tO' obtain a preference over corporate creditors secured or unsecured, as they would do by such a mortgage. Certain it is that the courts will not readily give the stockholders a preference over creditors, even though the preferred stock is by its terms to be a first claim on the property.”
In this case I think the position taken by the counsel for the defendants, namely, that the question in all cases is, are the parties actual stockholders, or are they creditors? is the true one. But I am of opinion that they cannot occupy both positions, of stockholders and secured creditors. In this case they have attempted to do so, under a statute which forbids them to occupy the position of secured creditors. Hence their case fails, and I shall advise a decree in favor of the complainant as prayed for in his bill.