46 A.2d 208 | Pa. | 1946
Argued January 11, 1946. The plaintiffs, as minority stockholders of the United Gas Improvement Company, a Pennsylvania corporation (hereinafter referred to as "U.G.I." or the "Company"), filed their bill in equity against the Company, its President and its Secretary-Treasurer seeking to enjoin them from putting into effect a pension plan for employees of the Company, known as the Retirement Annuity Plan. The Plan had received the due approval of the requisite *59 majority of U.G.I.'s outstanding capital stock at a special meeting of its stockholders called for the express purpose, inter alia, of acting upon the question of the Plan's adoption.
After a trial on the merits, the learned chancellors who heard the case filed a thorough and complete adjudication. They therein made adequate findings as to all material facts and, on the basis thereof, drew certain legal conclusions which resulted in the entry of a decree nisi dismissing the bill. The court en banc, after a careful and detailed consideration of all of the many exceptions filed by the plaintiffs to the adjudication and the decree nisi, overruled the exceptions and entered the final decree dismissing the bill from which the plaintiffs took this appeal.
The appellants have filed thirty-two assignments of error. Sixteen of them charge error either in certain of the findings of fact made by the chancellors, and confirmed by the court below, or in the chancellors' refusal to find facts precisely or substantially as requested by the plaintiffs. The findings of fact so made, which are the subjects of assignments of error, are fully supported by the evidence. They therefore have the effect of a jury's verdict and are binding in comparable manner upon an appeal: Hazelton v. Lehigh Valley Coal Company,
The remaining assignments (except for No. 32 which covers the final decree) impute error either to the chancellors' conclusions of law, which the court below confirmed, or to the refusal of the chancellors to conclude as the plaintiffs had requested. Those assignments, together with No. 32, raise the questions of law upon which the appellants base their three principal contentions, *60 viz., (1) that U.G.I. is in liquidation and, consequently, is legally unwarranted in promulgating the Retirement Annuity Plan for its employees, (2) that the initial premium proposed to be paid to an insurance company for the funding of the Plan covers the insurance of benefits calculated upon an officer's or an employee's past tenure with the Company and, therefore, constitutes an illegal payment of compensation for past services, and (3) that, under the Pennsylvania Business Corporation Law of 1933, premiums for insurance utilized to fund retirement annuities or pensions to employees can be paid for by a corporation only out of its current earnings and not out of earned surplus. We shall consider these contentions in the above order.
(1) U.G.I. is not in liquidation. Nor is there any proof to justify a suggestion that it is. True enough, in recent years U.G.I. has greatly reduced its capital assets by distributing to its stockholders certain of its stockholdings in other companies and cash to equalize the distributive portions. In that manner, U.G.I. retired its entire outstanding preferred stock issue by distributing shares in other companies and a certain amount of cash for a combined value of $100.00 (the liquidating value) for each share of preferred. According to the terms of its issuance, the preferred stock was callable at any time at par ($100.00) and a premium of $10.00 per share. But, such distributions, including the one made to the preferred stockholders, were not in furtherance of a voluntary liquidation of U.G.I. They were necessitated by practical considerations occasioned by extant orders which had been entered against U.G.I. by the Securities and Exchange Commission (hereinafter referred to as the S.E.C.) under Sec. 11 (b) (1) of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of August 26, 1935, c. 687, Title I, § 11, 49 Stat. 820, 15 U.S.C.A. § 79k (b) (1). Under that Act, U.G.I. qualified as a holding company and had duly registered as such as it was required to do (15 U.S.C.A. § 79e). Thereafter, as a result of proceedings conducted *61
by the S.E.C., that body entered divestment orders against U.G.I. requiring it to dispose of certain of its capital assets of large value. The end sought to be attained by the S.E.C. is not here material. It is presently sufficient to say that it was not for the purpose of liquidating U.G.I. On the other hand, U.G.I. bitterly contested the S.E.C. proceedings throughout, filed petitions for review with the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit seeking to have the divestment orders set aside and even assailed the constitutionality of the Public Utility Holding Company Act: see United Gas ImprovementCo. v. Securities and Exchange Commission,
It is clear that what U.G.I. did in the way of divesting itself of capital assets, it did because of governmental pressure and not in aid of liquidation. Reorganizations or readjustments in capital structure, so brought about, are not attended with the incidents normal to liquidation as that term is known to the law when it results from voluntary corporate action or at the instance of creditors: cf. Otis Co. v.Securities and Exchange Commission,
It is true, as the appellants cite, that, during the hearings before the S.E.C., representatives of U.G.I. had testified that the proposed plans (then before the Commission) for the divestment of certain of the Company's assets contemplated the ultimate dissolution and liquidation of U.G.I. Such statements were but expressions of current opinion. They did not operate to estop the corporate management from later determining that the continued existence and operation of the Company was desirable. The S.E.C. was not concerned with whether U.G.I. would be liquidated. It could not therefore have been materially misled by the statements as to the possible or likely liquidation of the Company. Nor has the S.E.C. lodged any objection to the proposed Retirement Annuity Plan. That U.G.I.'s management once had in mind the formation of a so-called "basket company" for the holding and liquidation of U.G.I.'s stock assets, which were incapable of distributionin kind among its eighty-seven thousand five hundred stockholders, is equally immaterial. The learned chancellors found, inter alia, that ". . . the U.G.I. management never contemplated the complete winding up and distribution of its business but always contemplated the carrying on with its remaining assets, either through the continuity of the present U.G.I. Company, or a successor company to which the remaining assets would be transferred." That finding correctly reflects the intention of U.G.I.'s management with respect to the continuation of the Company. And, the further fact is that after the divestments made by U.G.I., as already mentioned, it continued to be and still is a going concern with capital *63 assets of $99,233,819 book value (estimated market value $52,500,000 as of December 31, 1942) which it administers for its business purposes. The finding that U.G.I. is not in liquidation or in contemplation of liquidation stands unimpaired. With that fact so established, the contention that U.G.I. is legally incapable of promulgating a retirement or pension plan for its employees automatically falls.
(2) A statute of the State answers the appellants' second contention. Sec. 316 of the Business Corporation Law2 provides that "Every business corporation may grant allowances or pensions out of the earnings of the corporation to its directors, officers, or employes, for faithful and long-continued service, who have, in such service, become old, infirm, or disabled."3 Even a casual reading of the foregoing provision suffices for an understanding of what the legislature meant. A Pennsylvania corporation may grant to its directors, officers or employees "who have, in such [corporation's] service, become old, infirm, or disabled", pensions which in part reflect the "long-continued" service of such personnel in the past. As the court below pointed out, a pension plan that did not take into consideration past services as well as prospective services would not furnish an adequate retirement allowance; and that would be especially true in the case of older employees of long-continued service. Such a plan would penalize those most in need of the security which a pension is designed to afford. From a company standpoint, the benefits from a pension plan are not merely those individually received by the direct *64 beneficiaries. A pensioning corporation has a very definite interest in seeing to it that no discrimination is worked by its pension plan against any employee and, especially, not by a disregard of "long-continued service" to the marked disadvantage of its older employees.
No question of compensation for past services through the medium of pensions can be involved. It is enough that the legislature, which regulates and controls the internal management of Pennsylvania business corporations, has authorized them to grant pensions to their directors, officers and employees on a basis that reflects their long-continued service with the corporation. The policy which underlies industrial pension plans in general was spoken of approvingly by this Court in Busser v. Snyder,
(3) The appellants' final contention relates to the construction to be placed upon the word "earnings" as used in Sec. 316 of the Act of 1933, supra. As has already been seen, that section provides that the "allowances or pensions" by a corporation, thereby authorized, shall be paid "out of the [corporation's] earnings". The appellants contend that that means current earnings. We see no reason for reading any such restricted limitation into the statute. Earnings are earnings whether they be current or accumulated. They are composed of net gains and profits and, as such, are distinguished from capital. The word "earnings" in the statute embraces "earned surplus" as well as "current earnings". In Opperman's Estate
(No. 1),
The appellants' argument based on the fact that the large initial premium (on the funding insurance), required in the first year of the Plan's institution because of the inclusion therein of pension benefits for past services, "exceeds the total net income applicable to dividends for common stockholders in the year in which the [premium] payment is to be made" relates to matter addressable to thestockholders and, presumably, was by them considered when they voted their approval of the Plan. The appellants' contention that U.G.I.'s gains and profits from stock sales were not earnings is likewise without merit. Among U.G.I.'s charter powers is the power to deal in securities. The profits from such transactions properly resulted from the Company's business operations and, so, became earnings. If not distributed currently to stockholders by way of dividends, they necessarily went to help swell the Company's earned surplus. U.G.I.'s books established, prima facie, its earned surplus. The burden was upon the complaining minority stockholders to prove their suggestion that, perhaps, the "earned surplus", as shown by the Company's books, was in fact composed of receipts other than earnings. No such proof having been supplied, the chancellors' finding as to the amount of U.G.I.'s earned surplus was fully warranted.
The cases relied upon by the appellants are not in point. InRetirement Board of Allegheny County v. McGovern,
The decree of the court below is affirmed at the appellants' costs.