In re JONES & LAUGHLIN STEEL CORPORATION.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
March 20, 1980.
412 A.2d 1099
Aрpeal of Mr. and Mrs. Walter BARCHESKI, James D‘Antonio, Harold B. Dally, Robert J. Donovan, William H. Ehrgott, Mr. and Mrs. Bert D. Peterson, Dr. and Mrs. Edward N. Peterson, Paul J. Piccirilli and Alexander H. Scott. Argued Dec. 10, 1979.
Article I, Section 11 of the Pennsylvania Constitution provides: “All courts shall be open: and every man for an injury done him in his land, goods, person or reputation shall have remedy by duе course of law, and right and justice without sale, denial or delay. . .” Limitations to one‘s access to the courts are unconstitutional. However, for historical and humane reasons, this Court in prior decisions has permitted the substitution of the Workmen‘s Compensation law for one‘s access to the courts. And since the Majority‘s limitation, (bar of a third party‘s joinder of an employer) is within the scope of the Workmen‘s Compensation Act, I join in the result of the majority with the condition that the employer‘s right to subrogation is not automatic. The employer must in some judicial proceedings establish its freedom from fault in order to be subrogated.
Gilbert J. Helwig, Edward Hoopes, Joseph F. McDonough, Pittsburgh, for appellee.
Before EAGEN, C. J., and O‘BRIEN, ROBERTS, NIX, LARSEN and FLAHERTY, JJ.
OPINION
NIX, Justice.
Appellants, minority stockholders in the Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation (J & L), sought to challenge the validity of a 1974 merger through which J & L “went private” and deprived them of equitable interest in J & L. The Superior
A thorough recitation of the facts is given in the opinion of the Superior Court. The following summary will suffice for the present discussion. In 1974, J & L was controlled by the L.T.V. Corporation (LTV). LTV owned 100 percent of Jones & Laughlin Industries, Inc. (JLI), which in turn owned 81 percent of the common stock of J & L. In the fall of 1974, the directors of LTV decided that it was in LTV‘s best interests to eliminate the minority interest in J & L and acquire all of its outstanding shares.2 LTV accomplished this goal by creating the undercapitalized shell3 Jones & Laughlin Industries, Inc. II (JLI-II) as a wholly-owned
Two separate groups of J & L shareholders objected to the merger. Prior to the merger‘s consummation, one group filed a class action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York seeking to enjoin the merger from occurring, and claiming violations of §§ 10(b) and 14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
The second group, the present appellants, did not аct to prevent the merger except to dissent to the merger at the shareholders’ meeting, thereby perfecting their rights as dissenting shareholders under § 515 of the BCL. When appellants persisted in their refusal to accept the offered price of $29 per share for their stock, J & L filed a petition in the Court of Common Pleas of Allеgheny County seeking an appraisal and forced sale, pursuant to § 515 F,
J & L replied to the new matter by attacking the jurisdiction of the court of common pleas to consider the validity of the merger in the appraisal proceeding. Appellants argued that the court did have jurisdiction on the theory that the appraisal action could not proceed unless the appraisal court first determined that there had been a valid merger. The court agreed with appellants and scheduled a hearing limited to the issue of whether there had been a valid merger. Prior to this hearing, J & L appealed to the Superior Court5 claiming the appraisal court lacked jurisdiction tо determine the validity of the merger. The Superior Court held that a § 515 appraisal court is without jurisdiction to inquire into the validity of the challenged merger. We granted review pursuant to
The test we must employ in determining the jurisdiction of a court over a given subject matter has oft been stated:
The test of jurisdiction is the competency of the court to hear and determine controversies of the general class to which the case presented for consideration belongs. The question is whether the court has power to enter into the inquiry and not whether it is able to grant the relief sought in the particular case.
Cooper-Bessemer Co. v. Ambrosia Coal & Constr. Co., 447 Pa. 521, 524, 291 A.2d 99, 100 (1972) quoting from Jones Mem. Bapt. Ch. v. Brackeen, 416 Pa. 599, 602, 207 A.2d 861, 863 (1965); see also Whitney v. Lebаnon City, 369 Pa. 308, 311-12, 85 A.2d 106 (1952). Although statutes purporting to limit a court‘s jurisdiction must be strictly construed,
The crucial question is whether the legislature intended the § 515 fair value appraisal to be the exclusive post-merger remedy available to dissenting shareholders.6 Section 515 K expressly limits the remedies available to dissenting shareholders:
K. Any shareholder, who desires to object to, or to dissent from, any proposed plan authorized under any section of this act, and where this act provides that shareholders so objecting or dissenting shall have the rights and remedies herein provided, shall be limited to the rights and remedies prescribed under this section, and the rights and remedies prescribed by this section shall be exclusive.
The “rights and remedies prescribed under this section” are the rights of the dissenting shareholders to demand an appraisal of the fair value of their stock and its purchase at that price by the corporation. On its face, the exclusive remedy provided dissenting shareholders does not include the right to challenge the validity of the merger in the appraisal proceeding.
Appellants argue that the § 515 appraisal is their exclusive remedy only when the merger is “authorized” by Pennsylvania corporations law. They contend that our law does not authorize mergers whose sole purpose is to defraud minority shareholders of their equitable ownership of the corporation, or where the merger was effectuated through a breach of the fiduciary duty owed to the minority sharehold-
We believe that the legislature intended “authorized” plans to simply mean those general corporate activities made permissible by the BCL. The cope of the court‘s inquiry in a § 515 proceeding is whether or not mergers are permissible under the BCL. In this regard, it is significant that the merger plan was filed with the Pennsylvania Department of State which awarded a certificate of merger pursuant to BCL § 905, as amended
Despite appellants’ assertions, the dicta found in Hubbard v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp., 42 F.Supp. 432 (W.D.Pa. 1941), and Miller v. Steinbach, 268 F.Supp. 255 (S.D.N.Y. 1967), are in no way conflicting with our holding in this case. We agree with the Superior Court‘s analysis on this point:
The issue in Hubbard was whether the Business Corporation Law authorized a recapitalization of preferred stock into a new series of preferred stock pursuant to a merger. Finding that it did, the court stated that the plan was valid—meaning authorized under the Business Corporation Law—and that appraisal was the only remedy. In this case by contrast, there has been no claim that a cash merger is not authorized; the [appellants] merely argue that they don‘t want to be bound by the merger. Their only remedy for this claim is the appraisal.
Neither does Miller . . . support the position of the [appellants]. In Miller the court‘s holding was merely that section 515K does not bar an action for fraud under the Federal Securitiеs Laws.
263 Pa.Super. 391 n.13, 398 A.2d at 192 n.13.
Appellants further contend that unless it is permissible to contest the validity of the merger during the appraisal proceeding, it will be impossible to prevent fraudulent or unfair mergers from occurring. They argue that they “had two choices when confronted with the proposed ‘freeze-out’ merger; they could either do nothing or sеnd written objections to J & L” and thereby perfect their rights under § 515. We do not agree.
The BCL was amended by the
E. . . . a shareholder shall not have any right to obtain, in the absence of fraud or fundamental unfairness, an injunction against any proposed plan or amendment of articles authorized under any section of this act, or to claim the right to valuation of and payment for his shares because of any such plan or amendment except that he may dissent and claim payment if and to the extent prоvided in section 515 of this act where this act expressly provides that dissenting shareholders shall have the rights and remedies provided in section 515 of this act.
Appellants claim that they sat on their rights because of misleading statements in the proxy issued by J & L priоr to the merger. The proxy stated in part that “Section 515 K provides that any shareholder who desires to object to, or to dissent from a proposed plan such as the Merger Agreement shall be limited to the rights and remedies prescribed in Section 515 and that the rights and remedies prescribed by Section 515 shall be exclusive.” This is merely а restatement of § 515 K and obviously did not mislead the other dissatisfied shareholders who instituted an injunction action in a federal court. In addition, if appellants believed J & L to be acting fraudulently and unfairly, it would have been most unreasonable for them to have been content to rely upon J & L‘s statement of the remedies available to them.
We wish to emphasize that today‘s decision dоes not condone the manner in which appellants and other minority shareholders were deprived of their equitable interest in J & L. We are not unmindful of the grave unfairness and fraud frequently present in mergers of this type, especially where
The order of the Superior Court is affirmed.
LARSEN, J., files a dissenting opinion in which FLAHERTY, J., joins.
LARSEN, Justice, dissenting.
I dissent.
The Majority claims that it “does not condone the manner in which appellants and other minority stockholders were deprived of their equitable interest in J & L” and that it is “not unmindful of the grave unfairness and fraud frequently present in mergers of this type, especially where there is a ‘сash-out’ of the minority stockholders.” Notwithstanding the Majority‘s alleged concern for minority stockholders, the Majority refuses to permit appellants’ post-merger challenge to the validity of the instant merger, holding that appellants’ “exclusive” post-merger remedy is “the right . . . to demand an appraisal of the fair value of their stоck and its purchase at that price by the corporation.” I dissent from this holding; stockholders who allege that a merger is “fraught with fraud or fundamental unfairness” should be permitted to challenge the validity of said merger at any time, including post-merger. In support thereof, I cite the opinion of the Delaware Supreme Court in Roland International Corp. v. Najjar, Del., 407 A.2d 1032 (1979), a case similar to the one at bar:
[A] [fiduciary] duty is owed by the majority stockholders (who have the power to control corporate property, and indeed, corporate destiny) to the minority stockholders of the corporation when dealing with the latter‘s property. It may not be circumvented by full compliance with the proсedures permitted under and required by the corporation statutes, nor is it discharged by remitting minority shareholders to a statutory appraisal remedy (often based upon the status of the market and the elements of an appraisal), the timing of which is entirely within the control of the majority. The fiduciary duty is violated when those who control а corporation‘s voting machinery use that power to “cash out” minority shareholders, that is, to exclude them from continued participation in the corporate life, for no reason other than to eliminate them. [Emphasis provided]
FLAHERTY, J., joins this dissenting opinion.
Notes
Early in 1972, the management and directors of LTV concluded that LTV should, in the interests of its stockholders, primarily place greater emphasis, during the foreseeable future on the operations of its subsidiaries. To achieve that objective, the management and directors of LTV determined that LTV should function as an operating organization, with more direct control over subsidiary operations. This represented a change in the fundamental management philosophy of LTV and was based upon the conclusion that its existing operating structure placed inhibitions on its corporate growth and flexibility, resulting from corporate and legal considerations, rather than from business and competitive considerations.
Whilе the acquisition by JLI of 100% of the Common Stock of J & L Steel pursuant to the merger is not intended to result in any change in the management, capital structure or business of J & L Steel, it will, in the opinion of LTV remove the above-mentioned inhibitions of LTV insofar as J & L Steel is concerned. Accordingly, a principal purpose of LTV in the Merger is to аcquire the minority interest in a fair and equitable manner. Such shareholders will not receive in the Merger any securities of J & L Steel, as the surviving corporation, or any securities of LTV or JLI. Proxy Statement at 7.
§ 1908. Rights of dissenting shareholders
A. If any shareholder of a domestic corporation which becomes a party to a plan of merger or consolidation shall object to such plan of merger or consolidation and shall comply with the provisions of section 515 of this act, such shareholders shall be entitled to the rights and remedies of dissenting shareholders therein provided if any.
