93 Va. 673 | Va. | 1896
«delivered the opinion of the court.
This controversy grows out of an exchange of stock, reserving dividends.
On the 3d of January, 1896, William Hotopp sold to M. Kaufman thirty shares of the capital stock of the Monticello Wine Company, par value $100 per share, for forty shares of the capital stock of the Charlottesville Woolen Mills Company, par value $50 per share, it being understood and agreed between the parties that Hotopp was to receive whatever dividend was declared on the stock of the Monticello Wine Company for January, 1896, and Kaufman was to receive whatever dividend was declared on the stock of the Charlottesville Woolen Mills Company fqr January, 1896. Each received from the other the scrip representing the stock purchased in the exchange, and the stock was duly transferred to the parties!on the books of the companies.
On the 14th day of January, 1896, the Charlottesville Woolen Mills Company held its regular annual stockholders’ meeting, and declared a cash dividend of ten per cent., and there being an accumulated surplus in the treasury, and the stockholders deeming it expedient, the following resolution was unanimously adopted: “ Resolved, That the capital stock
A stock dividend is not, in the ordinary sense, a dividend; the latter being a distribution of profits to stockholders, as income from their investment. A stock dividend is merely an increase in the number of shares, the increased number representing exactly the same property that was represented by the smaller number of shares. The corporate property remains the same after the stock is increased as before, and the interest of each stockholder in the corporate property is also unchanged. He merely holds a new
Corporate earnings are, until distributed by the company, part of the corporate property. The stockholder has an interest in such earnings, as he has in all the other corporate property, in proportion to his stock, but he is not entitled to the control or use of the same, except such portion thereof as the corporation, acting in good faith, may separate from the corporate property, and distribute to the stockholders as dividend or income.
The accumulated profits of a corporation belong to the company, and acting in good faith, and for the best interest of all concerned, the corporation may capitalize the surplus, or it may invest it in its work and plant so as to secure and increase the permanent value of its property, or it may reserve part of the earnings of a prosperous year to make up for a possible lack of profits in future years, or it may distribute its earnings at once to its stockholders as income.
Which of these courses is to be pursued must be determined by the directors, with due regard to the condition of the company’s property and affairs as a whole, and, except in case of fraud and bad faith on their part, their discretion in this respect cannot be controlled by the courts. Gibbons v. Mahon, 136 U. S. 549. The case cited is analogous to that at bar, being a controversy between a life tenant and remainderman, the former claiming the right to enjoy as income a stock dividend declared from the accumulated earnings of the company, but the court, after reviewing the authorities, both English and American, reaches the conclu
In the case at bar it is clear, on reason and authority, that the proper construction of the contract between the parties is that Kaufman retained to h'imself whatever dividend was declared in January, 1896, as the ordinary and usual fruit of the investment he*was parting with. This he received when the cash dividend of ten per cent, declared for the stockholders was paid to him.
The stock dividend of twenty-seven per cent, represented part of the corporate property sold to Hotopp, in which Kaufman reserved no interest, and was therefore not entitled to the whole or any part thereof.
The judgment of the court below is correct, and must be affirmed.
Affirmed.