190 F. 105 | D. Colo. | 1911
The bankrupt was incorporated under the laws of this state in November, 1905, and on January 3d, 1906, its board of seven directors first met and organized, after each director had subscribed and paid for one share of the common stock of the company.
The articles of incorporation provided:
“Tlie capital stock of our said corporation is three million (3,000,000.) dollars, to be divided into three hundred thousand shares of ten (10) dollars for each share and said stock shall be noil-assessable. One hundred thousand shares being preferred stock and two hundred thousand shares being common stock.”
At the time tlie corporation was organized one O. B. Thompson was the owner of a large number of mining claims situate in Gilpin Coun
. “That it is executed’ for the sole and exclusive purpose of guaranteeing to the holders of the preferred stock of said corporation that all arid each of the provisions contained therein will be fully and promptly complied with on the part of said corporation.”
Thompson's offer also bound him to place the preferred stock in the hands of a trustee for sale, and when sold a fixed percentage of the proceeds obtained for said preferred stock was to be paid over to the treasurer of the corporation. The stockholders at their meeting (being the seven directors) and the seven directors, as such, both accepted Thompson’s proposition. Thompson thereupon conveyed the property to the corporation and the corporation on February 20th, 1906, executed and delivered its deed of trust to the Empire Trust Company of New York securing to the present and future holders of said preferred stock the performance, on the part of the corporation, of the conditions contained in the certificates issued, and to be issued, for said preferred shares. This deed of trust was filed for record under the Colorado recording Acts on Feb. 25th, 1906. Thompson thereupon, in compliance with his offer, placed the preferred shares in the hands of agents in New York City for sale, and sales were made to the extent of sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000), one-fourth of which went to said agents for commissions, one-fourth to the corporation and one-half to Thompson. No further sales of preferred stock were ever made. The common stock was afterwards increased 'to ten million dollars ($10,000,000) and Thompson surrendered to the company all of the remainder of said preferred shares, which were taken up and canceled and presumptively common stock issued instead. The certificates of preferred stock gave the holder the right to surrender them and take in lieu thereof air equal amount of shares in .’common stock, and at the time of adjudication more than half of the preferred shares that had been sold by New York agents had been surrendered to the company and canceled, so that there was at adjudication, and is now, outstanding of the one million dollars of preferred stock only thirty-one or thirty-two thousand dollars thereof. The corporation never realized profits out of which dividends could be paid.
Incorporated under the Laws of tlie State of Colorado.
No.- ' -Shares.
TUffi FIFTY GOLD MINES CORLO RATION Capital Stock S3,000,000.00. Shares $10.00 each.
Preferred Stock Common Stock
$1,000,000.00 $2,000,000.00
This is to certify that-- is the owner of-Shares of the Preferred Capital Stock of The Fifty Gold Mines Corporation, fully paid and non-assessable and transferable only by entry on tlie books of the Corporation, upon surrender of this certificate properly endorsed.
The Preferred Stock is entitled to CUMULATIVE dividends of ten (10) per cent, per annum, payable quarterly, commencing April 1st, 1906, from the net profits of the corporation before any dividends are paid on the common stock, and the COMMON stock is entitled to all dividends in excess of said ten (10) per cent. In the event of the dissolution of the Corporation or a distribution of its assets, the Preferred Stock outstanding at that time shall first he paid at Eleven Dollars ($11.00) per share, plus all accumulated unpaid dividends, and the remainder of tlie corporate assets shall be divided ratably among the holders of the Common Stock.
The owner of unredeemed preferred stock, may, at his option, exchange the same at any time for common stock of the corporation, share for share. The voting power at any stockholders’ meeting is confined exclusively to owners of Common Stock.
THE FIFTY GOLD MINES CORPORATION reserves the right to redeem any number or all of its certificates of Preferred Stock, at Eleven Dollars ($11.00) per share, plus all accumulated unpaid dividends, at any time after January 1st, A. D. 1011, and to determine by lot which certificates shall first be redeemed, and said corporation expressly agrees to redeem all its preferred stock on or before January 1st, A. D. 1916. A failure of said corporation for a period of ninety days to pay any quarterly dividend hereon, after the same becomes due and payable, shall render the corporation in default as to such payment, and thereby entitle the owner of this certificate to a foreclosure of the Mortgage securing the same.
As a guarantee that THE FIFTY GOLD MINES CORPORATION will promptly pay all dividends upon its preferred stock and redeem the same in strict accordance with the provisions of this Certificate, said corporation has made, executed and delivered to The Empire Trust Company of New York City, as Trustee, a FIRST MORTGAGE LIEN UPON ALL ITS PROPERTY in the amount of 81,000.000.00, in which security all owners of preferred stock participate ratably.
This certificate is not valid until countersigned by The Empire Trust Company of New York City, N. Y.
Witness ihe seal of the Corporation and the signature of its duly authorized officer this-— day of- — , A. D. 19 — .
COUNTERSIGNED AND REGISTERED
The Empire Trust Company
By--
THE FIFTY GOLD MINKS CORPORATION,
By Tilomas Fielding, President,
and ,T. L. Fielding, Treasurer.
Thereafter, and in November 1908, the corporation issued its negotiable bonds to the extent of four hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($450,000), and to secure payment of the same gave its deed of trust to the Corporation Trust Company of New Jersey, as Trustee. In this deed of trust it is represented that the preferred shares then outstanding, secured by the deed of trust to The Empire Trust Compa
After adjudication Fermor J. Spehcer, the trustee in bankruptcy, took possession of the mining properties and he thereupon filed a petition before the Referee asking that the deed of trust given to The Empire Trust Company to secure the outstanding- preferred shares be declared null and void. The Corporation Trust Company, trustee under the second deed of trust, also filed its petition asking the same relief. Service of all parties in interest was made by publication, under order of the Referee, on the said petition of the trustee in bankruptcy.- When the matter came on for hearing six holders of preferred certificates, amounting in all to nine hundred shares, appeared by counsel and resisted the orders sought by the two petitions. The relief sought by the trustee in bankruptcy and The Corporation Trust Company was granted, the deed of trust to The Empire Trust Company was declared null and void and an order entered that the holders of said preferred shares were not entitled to assert, or have allowed, any claims against the bankrupt under their certificates as against creditors, either secured or unsecured; and on petition of the holders of the said nine hundred preferred shares who resisted said order the Referee has certified the controversy.
. Oral arguments were made at length and exhaustive briefs have been filed.
There is only one inquiry involved in the controversy, and that is: Do the preferred certificates constitute the holders thereof stockholders in the corporation,. or are they, under the terms of the certificates, made creditors of the, corporation?
An examination of the certificate issued for preferred shares, so-called, discloses; (1) that'the holder thereof was not entitled to participate in the management of the corporation’s affairs, (2) nor in the profits thereof, above a limit of ten per cent, per annum, (3) nor in the assets thereof on distribution, above eleven dollars per share. These privileges, denied to the holders of these certificates, are the usual ones belonging to a stockholder. But, on the contrary, these certificates (1) guaranteed to the holders thereof, if net profits permitted it, ten per cent, per annum, (2) reserved to the corporation the absolute right to redeem said certificates after January 1st, 1911, at a fixed amount per share, (3) bound the corporation to redeem' all of said outstanding certificates on or before January 1st', 1916, (4) authorized certificate holders, on failure to pay the dividends to which they were entitled thereunder for ninety days after such dividends became due, to foreclose the mortgage securing them, and (5) provided for a first mortgage lien upon all of the corporation’s property as. security in which the holders of said certificates should participate ratably. These are indubitable evidences of an intention to create a debt and constitute the holder thereof a creditor of the corporation.
“To call a thing by a wrong name does hot change its. nature. * * * The question in such cases is not what did the parties call it? But what do the facts and circumstances require the court to call it?”
In my opinion the holders of preferred certificates are creditors and not stockholders, and they are entitled to have their claims allowed as preferred claims against the bankrupt. Heller v. Bank, 89 Md. 602, 43 Atl. 800, 45 L. R. A. 438, 73 Am. St. Rep. 212, and cases therein cited; Savannah v. Silverberg, 108 Ga. 281, 33 S. E. 908; Mulford v. Torrey Exploration Co., 45 Colo. 81, 100 Pac. 596.
The findings and order of the Referee are therefore overruled. He will take further action in keeping with these conclusions.