5 Misc. 2d 817 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1955
The present proceeding under section 21 of the Stock Corporation Law was instituted by minority stockholders possessing' 477 shares of the 5,932 outstanding shares of preferred stock, par value $100, and 5,674 shares of the 40,000 outstanding shares of common stock, par value $25, of the Oneita Knitting Mills for an order determining the value of their stock or for the appointment of an appraiser to determine its value.
The respondent Oneita Knitting Mills, a domestic stock corporation organized in 1893, conducted its manufacturing operations entirely within the city of Utica, New York, until 1952. The original charter delineated the purpose of the corporation as'follows: “Second. That the objectives for which said corporation is formed are the manufacture and sale of knit underwear and knit goods and that the same is to be located and carried on at Utica in the County of Oneida and State of New York.”
Over a long period, the management of respondent had become increasingly aware of the difficulties confronting the
On June 5, 1952, with due authorization of its stockholders, the respondent amended its certificate of incorporation as follows: “ Second. The purposes of the corporation are to manufacture, process, sell and otherwise deal in knit goods of any character, yarns, cottons, wool, rayon and any other raw or processed materials, to purchase, acquire, hold, pledge, sell or dispose of the stocks, bonds, notes and other securities and to guarantee the obligations of any other corporation and to do all acts and things as may be necessary, convenient or incidental to the foregoing.”
In December of 1952, the respondent began the manufacture in its new Andrews plant of various product styles previously manufactured in Utica. Until about September of 1954, however, the major portion of respondent’s operations continued in Utica, with the respondent sustaining net losses in round figures, before nonrecurring gains on sales of capital assets, of $375,000 in 1952, $201,000 in 1953 and $207,000 in the first eight months of 1954 at times when business in general was experiencing prosperity. Since 1947, the respondent had borrowed from the Guaranty Trust Company, its principal banker since 1913, to the extent that its credit was being impaired. By the spring of 1951, the respondent’s financial position in relation to its volume of business was reduced to the extent that this bank refused to continue granting the prime interest rate on respondent’s borrowings. Despite the sale of respondent’s investment in the Mutual Box Board Company and the surrender of certain life insurance policies, its working capital and
A special meeting of stockholders was called for November 12, 1954, to consider among other matters a proposal that respondent’s Utica real property and such of its Utica machinery and equipment as the management might deem advisable be sold or leased. The petitioners duly filed objections to this proposal and demanded appraisal of their stock. Although eoncededly it would have been possible to obtain approval of two thirds of the voting stockholders for this proposal, it was not presented at the stockholders’ meeting. The management, upon the advice of counsel, believing that the consent of the stockholders was unnecessary, proceeded to wind up production at Utica, transfer usable machinery and equipment to the Andrews plant, and to sell or offer for sale the balance of the
On December 31,1954, audited balance sheets showed respondent’s capital as $1,600,000 and its net worth as $1,341,836.59, revealing an impairment of $258,163.41, despite the inclusion in the assets of the Utica real estate at a net book value of $252,085.71 and of the then unsold Utica machinery and equipment at a net book value of $199,747.30. Respondent, after the liquidation of substantially the entire Utica inventory as well as the liquidation of Utica machinery and equipment, having a net book value of about $297,000, owed the banks $350,000, and had other current liabilities of about $180,000, and a net working capital of approximately $521,000.
Section 20 of the Stock Corporation Law in substance requires the approval of two thirds of the stockholders entitled to vote if a corporation desires to sell or convey its property, rights, privileges and franchises, or any interest therein or any part thereof, if such sale, lease or exchange is not made in the regular course of its business and involves all or substantially all of its property, rights, privileges and franchises, or an integral part ¿hereof essential to the conduct of the business of the corporation. Section 21 of the same law prescribes the procedure to be followed by duly objecting stockholders. If, in view of the purposes and objects of a corporation, a particular sale may be regarded as within the regular and normal course of the business of the corporation and as not involving an integral part thereof, it is not within the purview of the statute. If the sale is such as to deprive the corporation of the means of accomplishing the ends for which it was incorporated; that is, if the business and assets sold were essential to the ordinary conduct of the business, it is within the statute.
The present controversy squarely poses the question of whether the conduct of the respondent was such as to bring it within the scope of section 20. The management of a corporation is entrusted to its board of directors. It is well established that the directors have power, in the ordinary course of business, to do any act permitted by the charter or certificate of incorporation. There is no serious suggestion that the actions of the board of directors were tainted by fraud, deceit or bad faith in any of the contested transactions. Although the statute has
The Fourth Department has recently indicated (Matter of Hake, 285 App. Div. 316) that a lease for a 10-year period of its New York property and the complete removal of a manufacturing corporation to Roanoke, Virginia, after the sale of certain personal property held to be obsolete and not needed at the new location was not a transaction outside the regular course of business of the corporation such as to give dissenting stockholders a right of appraisal. While the amount of property presently sold or offered for sale or lease was much greater than the amount there involved, the principle is analogous. It is thought that the transactions here are not of such character as to warrant the application of the statute. They did not involve an integral part of the business of the corporation and, under the peculiar circumstances confronting the respondent, were not calculated to affect injuriously the corporation, nor can they be considered as a practical dissolution or abnegation of its corporate purpose. It should be noted that production at Andrews may be easily expanded if condition should warrant, and that increased production is contemplated. As stated in Matter of Timmis (200 N. Y. 177,182, supra) we are called upon “simply to decide whether the facts of this case bring it within the sections under" consideration. ’ ’
Having determined that the provisions of section 20 have no applicability to the present situation, the converse problems of procedural differences in the disposition of the real and per
Respondent’s motion to conform its amended answer to the proof in all respects, and in particular to deny any allegations of the petitions that the sales in question were not made in the ordinary course of respondent’s business, and for a dismissal of the proceedings on the ground that on all of the evidence the petitioners have failed to show themselves entitled to the relief requested is granted.
Submit order.