108 N.Y.S. 978 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The plaintiff, a stockholder of the Equitable Trust Company of New York, brings this action in equity on his own behalf and on behalf of all other stockholders of that corporation to enjoin its proposed merger Avith the defendant, The Mercantile Trust Company, mainly upon the ground that such merger is illegal and unfair to the plaintiff.
After the commencement of the action, upon notice, he applied for and obtained an order restraining the defendants and their officers and agents, during the pendency of the action, from taking any further steps towards* carrying out the proposed merger. The defendants appeal from this order.
Second. That the Legislature had no power to sanction the merger of corporations against the protest of minority stockholders unless such merger were lawful when the corporations were formed. But the Legislature has the right at any time it sees fit to alter, suspend and repeal the charters of corporations. (1 R. S. 600 [R. S. pt. 1, chap. 18, tit. 3], § 8; rep. by Gen. Corp. Law [Laws of 1890, chap. 563], §§ 23, 26, as amd. by Laws of 1892,' chap. 687, § 34. See Gen. Corp. Law [Laws of 1892, chap. 687], § 40, added by Laws of 1895, chap. 672.) The right is reserved to the Legislature by the Constitution. (Art. 8, § 1.) The Legislature, of course, cannot confiscate property, but it is under its fiat that the corporation comes into existence and the power which creates may thereafter change or destroy. (People ex rel. Cooper Union v. Gass, 190 N. Y. 323; Mayor, etc., v. Twenty-third St. R. Co., 113 id. 311; Lord v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc., 109 App. Div. 252.) The extent and effect of the legislative reservation of the right to alter or repeal corporate charters was discussed in Hinckley v. Schwarzschild & S. Co. (107 App. Div. 470). There the plaintiff sought to restrain the defendant corporation from issuing preferred stock and subordinating the
Here, the merger of the Equitable Trust Company — if the merger be permitted to take place — will result, in the extinction of that corporation and the transfer of its assets to the new corporation but its property is not confiscated, nor is the corporation deprived of vested property rights. The property is sold to the merged corporation upon the terms provided in the merger agreement and ample provision is made under the statute authorizing the merger by which, any stockholder who is unwilling to assent to the terms can obtain the value of his stock in cash. The act provides that any stockholder who does not agree to the terms of the merger agreement may object to it and demand payment for his stock and, if not paid, he may apply to the Supreme Court for the appointment of three appraisers to fix and determine the-value of his stock and the expenses of such determination liaxie to be borne.by the corporation itself. When the plaintiff became interested in the Equitable Trust Company he did so with full knowledge of the fact that the statute commits to the majority stockholders the right to select its officers, dictate its policy, and control its management. If the acts of the majority do not meet with his approval he has no legal ground of complaint unless he can show facts which, in effect,
But in any view can it be fairly said that the proposed merger is a fraud upon or oppressive to the minority stockholders of the Equitable Company ? The learned jnstice at Special Term refused to find, as appears from his opinion, that the act of the majority was fraudulent or in bad faith, but he did find that it was “ unfair to the interests of the plaintiff.” (55 Misc. Rep. 355.) I have been unable to reach the conclusion that it is unfair to the plaintiff. Certainly it is not
The capital stock of the Mercantile Company is $2,000,000 ; its surplus about $7,000,000, making the book' value of each share approximately $452. The capital stock of the Equitable Comjiany is $3-,Ó00,000'; its surplus about $10,000,000, making the book value of its shares approximately $440. • In estimating the value for the merger, the .directors deducted $5 per share as the' estimated cost of liquidation, making the book value of the Equitable Company’s stock $435 per share/ Under the terms of the merger ■ agreement, the capital stock of the Mercantile Company is to be increased to $3,000,000, its stockholders retaining their present holdings. The stockholders of the Equitable Company, upon surrendering their stock,, are to receive, at their option, either $435 in
A superficial examination of the proposed merger would seem to indicate it was unfair, to the Equitable stockholders. ■ The two companies contribute substantially the same amount of capital, and yet the Equitable stockholders will get in return for each two shares of their stock — whose book value is about $870—one share .of stock of the new company — whose book value will be about $600 — while the Mercantile stockholders will get two-tliirds of the stock of the new company, and the shares they now hold will be increased in book value from $452 to $600. This apparent unfairness, how- *■ ever, disappears when the condition and earning capacity of the two companies are critically examined. The Mercantile Company earns annually about twelve per cent on the book value of its shares'—• that is about fifty-one per cent on each share—while the Equitable Company earns less than six per cent on its book value or about twenty-five per cent on each share. A further fact which is not disputed, and which in determining the value of the shares is a very pertinent subject of inquiry, is that the Equitable Company has suffered quite seriously from recent business conditions. Its relations with the Equitable Life Assurance Society are not now and, it is not difficult to see, will not in the future be nearly so profitable as formerly, and its earning capacity thereby is and will be largely diminished. The directors estimate the annual earnings of the new company — taking the annual earnings of the Mercantile Company and adding thereto the estimated earnings at four per cent on the $9,000,000 to be obtained from the Equitable Com-
It is argued that no allowance is made for the good will of the Equitable Company and that this is an asset taken from the Equitable stockholders without compensation. Good will is unquestionably an asset, but its value is a variable and uncertain quantity. It may exist .to-day and disappear to-morrow. In case of a dissolution — either forced or voluntary — it adds but little, if anything, to the assets of the dissolved corporation. In this connection it may not be out of place to .call attention to the fact that it does not seem to be seriously claimed that if the Equitable Company were to be dissolved, and its property distributed among its stockholders, they would realize more, than $435 a share. If a large majority of the stockholders of the Equitable Company deemed it foT their respecinterests to liquidate the company and proceedings in good faith about to be taken in accordance with the statute for that purno one, I take it, would seriously contend that a court of equity to interfere and prevent such liquidation. (Windmuller v.
After a careful consideration of the record, I do not think it can be said the proposed agreement is unfair to the plaintiff. It has been approved, as the statute requires, by the State Superintendent of Banks, and the fact is not disputed that the holders of over 27,000 shares of the Equitable Company’s stock out of a total of 30,000 shares have signified their assent and approval of the merger. The Equitable Life Assurance Society holds some 15,000 of these shares, but it appears that other holders of 12,914 shares have signified their intention to vote for the' merger, while only the plaintiff, who holds 300 shares, and one other stockholder, who holds 6 shares, have signified their disapproval. Ho director of the Equitable has opposed the merger. It is resisted by the holders of barely one per cent of the stock, while the holders of over ninety per cent have signified their approval. Every stockholder of a corporation holds his stock subject to the execution of all the .powers conferred by law upon the corporation and he must abide by the decision of the directors or stockholders, as the case may be, upon all matters which the law commits to their determination and control. (Morawetz- Corp. [2d ed.] §§ 413-417; Cook Corp. [5th ed.] § 684.) The Legislature has seen fit, in the exercise of the powers conferred upon it, to provide the conditions upon which existing trust companies may merge. I know of no principle'which justifies a court of equity in interfering with a large majority of the stockholders proceeding strictly in ‘accordance with the statute siihply because some of the minority stockholders think the proposed agreement is unsatisfactory or unfair. That question must necessarily under the statute be determined by the stockholders themselves, and once their decision has been made, in the absence of fraud or bad faith or of facts clearly showing that the proposed acts will' be oppressive or unfair to the corporation, the court cannot and ought not to interfere. If it did so,- it would in effect repeal the statute and subject the control of the majority to the will of the minority.
Finally it is urged that the order should be affirmed so as to preserve the status quo until after the trial of the action; that if it is reversed, any relief to which the trial might determine the plaintiff entitled would be unavailing. There would be force in this sug
' If I am right in this conclusion,, then it follows that the order e appealed from must be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to Continue the injunction denied, with ten dollars costs.
Patterson, P. J., Laug-hlin, Clarke and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
See Laws of 1869, chap. 185; Laws of 1870, chap. 121, and Laws of 1880, chap. 425.— [Rep.