147 A. 604 | Pa. | 1929
Argued May 20, 1929. A number of banking institutions were merged into the Phila. National Bank. The trust estate, now under consideration, held two hundred shares of stock in one of these institutions. As a result of the merger, it received two hundred shares of stock of the Philadelphia National Bank. The book value of this stock exceeds, by $10,924, the book value of the original shares at the time of testator's death. The life tenant, who is to receive the income from this trust, claims that this excess was income payable in stock or cash and immediately distributable to her; the court below denied the claim.
The Act of Congress (November 7, 1918, c. 209, section 1, 40 Stat. 1043, U.S.C.A. Title 12, section 33), empowering national banks to consolidate, permits a dissenting shareholder to elect to take "the value of the shares so held by him" in cash, or, alternatively, shares of stock of the new corporation. The rules of law governing the rights of shareholders in the merger of national banks do not differ from the rules governing shareholders in the merger of other corporations. (See Koehler v. St. Mary's Brewing Co.,
The merger of two or more corporations is neither a sale nor a liquidation of corporate property, but a consolidation of properties, powers, and facilities of the constituent companies, forming a new corporate entity. Merger is a method of incorporation by two or more companies into a single corporate body. While the constituent companies are deemed dissolved, their powers and privileges, to the extent authorized by the merger contract or the law, are vested in the merged company as a new corporation. This entity is distinct from that of its constituents, but it draws its life from the act of consolidation. To ascertain what powers and privileges the new company has one must be referred to what existed in the old companies: Penna. Utilities Co. v. Pub. Ser. Com.,
The new conception was not on the basis of sale, but of a merger or consolidation of assets, which is opposed to sale. To have effected a sale by the old company to the company created by merger must of necessity have meant a severance of all rights in the shareholders. But those rights that once existed as to the property of the old company prior to the merger still continue in the new company, including in addition an interest in the property of the other constituent company. If a sale *542 cannot be predicated on such acts, then a liquidation of assets is further removed from consideration. All the assets of the company involved continue intact in the new enterprise, representing a substantial value which is reflected in the price of the shares. This is not a liquidation.
From a consideration of the foregoing, it is apparent that a merger of two corporations cannot be considered as a sale of their property by the constituent companies, and the issuance of the new capital stock is merely the issuance of new evidence of ownership to the shareholders. Accepting shares of stock in the merged company is not tantamount to a distribution or division of assets which calls for an apportionment between a life tenant and remainderman.
It is urged that the trustees should have availed themselves of the option given by the act of Congress, and insisted on receiving the value of the stock, instead of the new shares, citing Thompson's Est.,
When the trustee accepted the two hundred shares of stock, the life tenant immediately claimed an apportionment of them by reason of the increase in the value of *543
the stock over that fixed at testator's death. In Nirdlinger's Est.,
The court below did not err in refusing to direct the apportionment requested by the life tenant. The life tenant is not entitled to any division until (1) the increased value is declared as a cash dividend, or (2) distributed in the form of a stock dividend, or (3) the affairs of the bank are wound up so that assets are distributed to those entitled to receive them, or (4) there is a sale of this stock so that the connection of shareholder is entirely severed.
Decree affirmed at cost of appellant.