Cross appeals from an order and judgment of the Supreme Court (O’Brien, III, J.), entered March 31, 1998 in Cortland County, which, inter alia, determined the fair value of a share of common stock of petitioner.
In December 1981, petitioner commenced this appraisal proceeding pursuant to Business Corporation Law § 623 to ascertain the value of the shares. The dissenting shareholders commenced a separate action in January 1982 against petitioner challenging the legality of the merger. After their unsuccessful attempt to prevent or annul the merger (see, Beard v Ames,
During trial, petitioner’s expert, William Edwards, a vice-president and director of Arthur D. Little Company, testified that based on the net asset value method of stock evaluation, the shares in question had a negative or zero value on the date of the merger because petitioner’s liabilities exceeded its assets. He also reached the same conclusion employing the investment value method, which was based on a determination of the corporation’s earning power.
In contrast, respondent’s expert, Paul Grier, an associate professor of finance and economics at the State University of New York at Binghamton, opined that the discounted cash flow approach, with its emphasis on future earnings, was the preferable means to value petitioner’s stock, claiming that the market value, net asset value and investment value methods were inadequate to value the stock of this corporation due to the lack of comparable transactions and because the value of the company’s real estate and machinery was not properly reflected in its book value. Using his preferred method, Grier assigned a value of $1.95 per share for petitioner’s common stock. Since
Business Corporation Law § 623 (h) (4) currently permits the subsequent economic impact of the merger to be considered in the process of stock appraisal to determine the intrinsic value of the shareholders’ interest in the corporation (see, Matter of Friedman v Beway Realty Corp.,
Petitioner also contends that Supreme Court erred as a matter of law because it failed to take into account a discount to reflect the lack of marketability of the corporate stock in its calculation of value. In valuing the shares of a private or close corporation, a discount for unmarketability should be applied “because those shares cannot readily be sold on a public market” (Matter of Seagroatt Floral Co. [Riccardi],
In the absence of articulation of the unmarketability discount applied in the assessment of value of petitioner’s stock and in light of the valuation accepted by Supreme Court which took into consideration the affect of the merger, this matter must be remitted to Supreme Court for further proceedings to determine the fair value of the stock.
Notes
A group of five shareholders owned 78% of petitioner’s shares, each of whom owned more than 250,000 shares. The remainder of the shareholders, who numbered in excess of 400, were required to relinquish their shares.
