106 N.Y.S. 801 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1907
This is an application for an order restraining the defendants from talcing any further steps toward completing a proposed merger between the defendant The. Equitable Trust Company of New York and the defendant The Mercantile Trust Company. The present action is brought by a stockholder of The Equitable Trust Company, who also alleges that he iá a policy holder of The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, which holds among its assets 14,531 shares of stock of The Equitable Trust Company. An injunction is prayed for against the defendants to restrain the completion of their proposed merger on the ground that the proposed terms of merger authorized by the directors of the defendants, and proposed to be submitted for action at a meeting of the stockholders of The Equitable Trust Company, are calculated unlawfully to injure the rights of the plaintiff and other minority stockholders and The Equitable Life Assurance Society, of which the plaintiff is a policy holder.
The Equitable Trust Company has a capital stock of $3,000,000 and a surplus and undivided profits amounting to $10,212,117.50, making a total of $13,212,117.50. The book value of a share of its stock, according to the answering affidavit of Mr. Krech, the president of The Equitable Trust Company, is approximately $440 a share. Mr. Krech states that the approximate cost of liquidating the company would.reduce by about $10 the book value of each share of stock. Accordingly, he regards the sum of $435, which is stated in the proposed terms of merger as the book value of each share of stock, to be a fair valuation for the purposes of merger. He further shows that the earnings of The Equitable Trust Company for the four years beginning 1903 and extending through 1906, computed upon the basis of the book valuation of $435 per share, averaged six and six-hundredths per cent, a year.
The Mercantile Trust Company has a capital stock of $2,000,000 and a surplus and undivided profits amounting to $6,986,861.85, making a total of $8,986,861.85. The book value of a share of its stock, according to Mr. Krech,
The plan of the proposed merger, to which the plaintiff objects, contemplates the merger of The Equitable Trust Company into The Mercantile Trust Company, the name of the merged company to be The Mercantile Trust Company, and the capital stock of the said company to be increased from $2,000,000' to $3,000,000. The stockholders of The Equitable Trust Company, at their option, may exchange two shares of their stock for one share of stock of the merged company, or may receive for each share of their present holdings $435 in cash. The stockholders of The Mercantile Trust Company may exchange their stock, share for share, for the stock of the merged company.
The meeting of the board of directors of The Equitable Trust Company, consisting of thirty-two members, at which the proposed merger agreement was authorized, was held on June 13, 1907, and was attended by twenty members of the board. Fine of such directors are also directors of The Mercantile Trust Company. Three other directors, who were present at the meeting, are officers of The Equitable Trust Company. The resolution authorizing the merger agreement was unanimously adopted.
At a meeting of the directors of The Mercantile Trust Company held upon the same day the nine directors above referred to attended and voted in favor of the resolution authorizing said merger agreement.
The Equitable Life Assurance Society, it may be noted, holds about forty-nine per cent, of the stock of The Equitable Trust Company and about sixty-seven per cent, of the stock of The Mercantile Trust Company. Three of the nine directors of The Equitable Trust Company and The Mercantile Trust Company above referred to are also directors of The Equitable Life Assurance Society.
At the outset the defendants suggest that the plaintiff
A contract made between two corporations having common directors is not absolutely void, but in a proper case and upon the objection of either corporation may be declared void by a court of equity. Burden v. Burden, 159 N. Y. 287, 307; Continental Ins. Co. v. N. Y. & H. R. R. Co., 187 id. 225, 238 ; Barr v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 125 id. 263, 277. Compare Munson v. Syracuse, Geneva & Corning R. R. Co., 103 id. 58, 74. Similarly such a contract, even though it has been ratified by the majority of the stockholders, may be declared void upon the objection of a minority stockholder, if the circumstances show that such ratification was induced by fraud or obvious disregard of the rights of minority stockholders. Gamble v. Queens County Water Co., 123 N. Y. 91, 98, 99; Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. New York &Northern R. R. Co., 150 id. 410, 434; Continental Insurance Co. v. N. Y. & H. R. R. Co., supra; Oelbermann v. New York & Northern R. R. Co., 7 Misc. Rep. 352, 357; Robotham v. Prudential Ins. Co., 64 N. J. Eq. 673, 709. This principle was well stated by Judge Peckham in Gamble v. Queens County Water Co., 123 N. Y. 91, 98, 99, as follows: “Their action (i. e., the action of the stockholders’ meeting) resulting from such votes must not be so detrimental to the interests of the corporation itself, as to lead to the necessary inference that the inter
From the doctrine thus laid down it follows that the injunction prayed for upon this motion must be granted if the proposed merger agreement of the defendant corporations is such that it cannot conscionably be ratified against the objection of a dissenting stockholder. The terms of the proposed merger agreement must be examined in the light of the principle above stated.
The capital, surplus and undivided profits of The Equitable Trust Company aggregate $13,212,117.50. According to the proposed merger agreement, $1,000,000' of the capital stock must be retired in order to effect the merger. It
The capital, surplus and undivided profits of The Mercantile Trust Company aggregate $8,986,861.85. For the purposes of the merger, therefore, the capitalization of The Mercantile Trust Company may be regarded as substantially equal to the capitalization which The Equitable Trust Company proposes to contribute to the merged company.
The present book value of the stock of The Equitable Trust Company is conceded by Mr. Krech to be $440 per share. The stockholders of that company who exchange two of their shares for one of the merged company will give up two shares of the aggregate book value of $880 and receive in exchange therefor one share in .the merged company of a book value, estimated by Mr. Krech, of $600. At the outset, therefore, there appears to be an apparent loss in book value of $140 for each share of stocky which the stockholders of The Equitable Trust Company exchange pursuant to the merger agreement.
The argument in favor of the merger which is made to the stockholders of The Equitable Trust Company by The Mercantile Trust Company and by the promoters of the proposed merger may be stated substantially as follows: The Equitable Trust Company upon its capitalization has been able during the last four years to earn only six and six-hundredths per cent, per annum. The Mercantile Trust Company upon its capitalization has been able during the same period to earn eleven and fifty-two hundredths per cent, per annum. The amount of capitalization which each company purposes to contribute to the merged company is approximately the same. The Mercantile Trust Company, however, has been able to earn upon its capitalization almost
Such an arrangement, it is conceded, is not uncommon between individuals where the skill, experience and good will of one are deemed equal to the amount of the capital of the other, and both contribute an equal amouqt of capital. Good will is an asset, a piece of property. People ex rel. Johnson Co. v. Roberts, 159 N. Y. 70; Lindemann v. Rusk, (Wisconsin) 104 N. W. Rep. 119, 126; Washburn v. Nat. Wall Paper Co., 81 Fed. Rep. 17.
Furthermore, good will is an element of the property of a corporation which contributes to the value of a share of the corporate stock. Compare People ex rel. Union Trust Co. v. Coleman, 126 N. Y. 433, 438.
It is not inconceivable that two corporations having equal amounts of capital might be so situated that the item of good will in the case of one equaled its capital, while the other corporation really had no good will and no asset other than its actual capital. In the instance of such corporations it might well be held that a merger upon terms similar to- those proposed in the present case might be entirely fair to the stockholders of both corporations, provided that the merged corporation seemed likely to earn more upon the capital contributed by the less prosperous corporation than that corporation had hitherto earned.. The justification for such a merger, from the standpoint of the stockholders of the less prosperous corporation, would consist in the probability of a greater return upon their capital
The proposed merger of the defendant corporations, however, is not analogous to the arrangement just mentioned. The prospective earnings of the merged corporation, as announced by Mr. Krech in the letter to the stockholders of The Equitable Trust Company recommending the merger, are as follows:
“ The average annual net earnings of The
Mercantile Company for the years 1903,
1904, 1905 and 1906 were........... $956,858 45
“ Estimated earnings of 4 per cent, on approximately $9,000,000 of additional capital and surplus to be acquired from
The Equitable Trust Company........ 360,000 00
“ Estimated profits on deposits and other business to be taken over (say)........ 150,000 00
“ Total estimated annual net earnings
of the merged company..........$1,466,858 45.”
TJpon analysis it appears that the promoters of the merger hope to earn upon a capitalization contributed by The Mercantile Trust Company the same per cent, that that company has earned during the past four years; but upon the capitalization contributed by The Equitable Trust Company they hope to- earn somewhat less than that company has proved itself able to earn during the past four years without the assistance of The Mercantile _ Trust Company. In
Thus far the examination of the proposed merger agreement .has been confined to the prospect held out to the plaintiff and his fellow stockholders of The Equitable Trust Company. They are promised no more than their investment has earned while in their own control, and that promise is made payable in earnings based upon expectation rather than upon experience. In consideration of this exchange of earnings based upon past performance for an equal amount of earnings based only upon future contingencies the stockholders of The Equitable Trust Company are further asked to give over the complete control, which they now exercise over their investment, to a new corporation in which they will be a hopeless minority, outnumbered two to one. It is not difficult for the court to perceive that the latter end of the stockholders of The Equitable Trust Company may, in such an event, be worse than their present condition.
The considerations above mentioned are sufficient to characterize the proposed merger agreement as apparently unfair, j The obvious advantage to the present stockholders of The ¡Mercantile Trust Company is clear. They will receive, as
The examination to which the court has subjected the proposed merger has been especially close, and the strictures which it has made upon it have been particularly definite because of the close interrelation of the defendant corporations having nine directors in common and also because of the virtual domination of both corporations by a single stockholder, The Equitable Life Assurance Society. Under the authority of the decisions above mentioned it is the duty of a court of equity under such circumstances to scrutinize with vigilant care a contract between two corporations, especially when the contract has the effect of extinguishing the corporate life of one of the contracting parties. The court is not convinced that the proposed merger agreement was conceived in fiaud. It is not prepared to say that the agreement is one which, if entered into by two corporations not so interrelated as the defendants or dominated by a single interest, would necessarily and as a matter of course be held so unfair as to be unconscionable. It holds, however, that under all the circumstances here presented an agreement is proposed which is so unfair to the interests of the plaintiff and his fellow stockholders that a court of equity may well hesitate before denying a prayer for interposition.
An interim, injunction has already been granted herein. Under the circumstances above outlined the duty of the court
Unless the status quo of this case can be preserved the relief which the plaintiff prays for, and which upon the trial he may prove to be entitled to, will be irrevocably lost by reason of the merger of the defendant corporations and the extinction of The Equitable Trust Company.
Since the reasons hereinbefore discussed seem controlling upon this motion, it becomes unnecessary to discuss the other points raised by the plaintiff.
Accordingly, the motion for an injunction is granted.
Motion granted.