270 F. 1008 | D. Del. | 1920
The only question of moment necessary to be decided in this suit, the purpose of which is to set aside the sale by the Pacific Timber Company, a Delaware corporation, one of the defendants, of all its assets to the other defendant, West Coast Timber Company, is whether the plan of reorganization of the first-named company which involved such sale was fair or fraudulent as to the minority stockholders of the Pacific Company, of whom, the plaintiff is one. The question arises on final hearing of the cause.
The Pacific Company was organized in 1907, with an authorized capitalization of $3,000,000. Its shares of stock, both preferred and common, have a par value of $100 each. By express provision of the charter the holders of the preferred stock became entitled, upon liquidation or dissolution of the corporation, to be paid the amount paid upon their shares before the payment of any amount to the holders of the common stock. About 3,780 shares of preferred stock are outstanding, each of which was paid for in cash at par. The Pacific Company, in keeping^ with the purpose of its organization, became the owner of timber lands and timber leases in Mexico. Warfare in that country stopped development of those properties in 1911, and has since then not only prevented further development and operations, but has resulted in the destruction of improvements theretofore made for the cutting and sale of the timber. The company is now insolvent; but, should order be restored in Mexico, it is conceded that its assets would probably be very valuable. A plan of reorganization was in March, 1920, submitted to and approved at a stockholders’ meeting. It provided for the organization of a new company, having shares of stock, both common and preferred, with a par value of $10 each; the transfer of all the assets from the old company to the new company; the exchange, share for share, of common stock in the old company for common stock in the new; the exchange, share for share, of the preferred stock upon the payment of $10 (being the par value thereof) for each share of the preferred stock so acquired in the new company, such
“One who held both preferred and common stock could not exchange his common stock in the old company for that of the new, receiving the latter without the payment of any money therefor, unless and until he had surrendered his preferred stock and had paid for the preferred stock in the new company so issued to him.”
The authorized number of shares of preferred stock of the new company exceeded the number of outstanding shares of the preferred stock of the old company. The evidence warrants the inference that the shares of preferred stock in the new company would be sold generally to any one at par. The plan also contemplated the issuance of capital stock or certificates of indebtedness of the new company for a large part of the indebtedness of the old company.
The plaintiff and other minority stockholders, including the inter-veners, opposed the proposed plan when it was presented at the meeting of stockholders, and they have at all times since been consistent in their opposition. The West Coast Timber Company was organized. An instrument of writing purporting to transfer the assets of the Pacific Company to the West Coast Company pursuant to corporate authority was made on or about the 30th day of March of the present year. The bill of complaint was filed on July 7th. The transfer of the assets must, under the circumstances, be considered as a step in the reorganization of the Pacific Company, and not merely as a sale of its assets. Fletcher, Cyc. Corp. § 4866.
The sale of the assets must therefore be set aside, unless the defendants’ contention that the action of the plaintiff in delaying the institution of this suit until July 7th amounted to laches can be sustained. In; my opinion this contention is not well founded.
A decree in .accordance with this opinion may be submitted.