182 A. 804 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1935
Argued October 16, 1935. These appeals raise the same legal questions. They were argued together and will be disposed of in one opinion.
The two cases were tried together before a judge of the municipal court without a jury. The pleadings are substantially the same in both cases. The differences between them are not of material consideration in this court.
The statements of claim filed do not make it clear whether the plaintiffs, who were shareholders of the Adelphi Building and Loan Association, who had given notice of intention to withdraw their shares prior to its merger with Cooperative Building and Loan Association under the name, Greater Adelphi Building and Loan Association, brought these actions against the *324
new or consolidated association as withdrawing stockholders of the Adelphi Association, or as stockholders who had voted against and dissented from the merger. The learned trial judge was of the opinion that the actions were brought by plaintiffs as withdrawing stockholders, and that the evidence sustained findings in their favor in that capacity. Our reading of the record does not support this view. In the first place the several amounts sued for were not the respective withdrawal values of their stock, or the amounts which the plaintiffs had respectively paid into the Adelphi Association as dues, but represented only fifty per cent of the paid in value of their stock, which was the proportionate value of the Adelphi Association stock at the time of the merger, as fixed by the agreement of merger. If the association is insolvent, (in the sense referred to in Kurtz v. Bubeck,
But the judgment need not be reversed, if it is sustainable as an action by a dissenting shareholder to the merger, and the evidence raises no dispute of fact but only a question of law. If the issue was rightly decided the judgment will not be reversed because the trial judge may have given a wrong reason for its entry.
The judgments are admittedly sustainable in favor of the plaintiffs as dissenting shareholders, if they are not *326 barred by the Act of May 15, 1933, P.L. 794, which is printed in the margin.1
On a cursory reading of the Act we were inclined to agree with the contention of the appellants, that as this merger became effective on February 27, 1933,2 and the actions were not brought until June 4, 1934, they *327
were begun more than six months after the effective date of the Act (May 15, 1933) and more than six months after the merger became effective (February 27, 1933) and each plaintiff was, in consequence, "barred from exercising any rights which he shall have as a non-assenting or as a dissenting shareholder, whether at law or in equity." But a more careful reading of the whole statute has led us to a different conclusion. If Section 1 of the Act is referring to the exercise of rights "at law or in equity" which the dissenting shareholder may have against the new or consolidated association, which resulted from the merger and consolidation, how can it be reconciled with the provision in Section 2, that "This act shall not be construed . . . . . . (2) to affect any right which a shareholder of either or any of the merging or consolidating associations, who has voted against . . . . . . the merger and consolidation may have in the building and loan association resulting from the merger and consolidation"? If he dissented from the merger and consolidation, and persists in such dissent, he does not become a member of the new or merged association: Weinroth v. Homer B. L. Assn., supra;3 Friedman v. Southern Co-Op. B. L. Assn.,
Giving full effect to the exception in Section 2 (2), unless the whole Act is to be declared inoperative as in irreconcilable conflict, the provisions of Section 1 must be limited to actions at law or in equity (See Weinroth v. Homer B. L. Assn., supra, p. 272; Merwine v. Mt. Pocono Light Improvement Co.,
We believe this is the only reasonable construction if the Act is to be preserved.
We therefore hold that the limitation in the Act of May 15, 1933, supra, does not apply to these actions *329 brought by the plaintiffs as dissenting shareholders to enforce the rights which they respectively have in the association resulting from the merger and consolidation aforesaid, and that the judgments were properly entered.
The court will, of course, so control the collection of the judgments that the plaintiffs will not be permitted to gain any advantage over creditors having paramount rights, or other dissenting or withdrawing stockholders having equal rights with them: Hall v. Greater Adelphi B. L. Assn., supra; Rosenblatt v. Potential B. L. Assn.,
No. 311 October Term, 1935. Judgment affirmed.
No. 312 October Term, 1935. Judgment affirmed.
Section 1. Be it enacted, c., That where a building and loan association has, or shall become, a party to an agreement of merger and consolidation prior to the third day of July, one thousand nine hundred thirty-three, any shareholder of such association, who has voted against, or who has not voted for or against, such merger and consolidation at the meeting of shareholders at which the merger and consolidation was adopted, shall be forever barred from exercising any rights which he shall have as a non-assenting or as a dissenting shareholder, whether at law or in equity, unless he shall commence, or shall have commenced, proceedings, at law or in equity, to enforce such rights either within six months after the effective date of this act, or within six months after the date upon which the merger and consolidation has, or shall become effective.
Section 2. This act shall not be construed (1) to lengthen the period within which a shareholder who has objected to, and voted against, a merger and consolidation may, under section five of the act, approved the third day of May, one thousand nine hundred nine (Pamphlet Laws, four hundred eight), entitled `An Act authorizing the merger and consolidation of certain corporations,' petition the court of common pleas to appoint appraisers to estimate and appraise the damages, if any, done to him by the merger and consolidation, nor (2) to affect any right which a shareholder of either or any of the merging or consolidating associations, who has voted against, or who has not voted for or against, the merger and consolidation may have in the building and loan association resulting from the merger and consolidation.
Section 3. This act shall be effective immediately upon its approval by the Governor."