23 Del. Ch. 52 | New York Court of Chancery | 1938
The Supreme Court of this State in Keller, et al., v. Wilson & Co., Inc., 21 Del. Ch. 391, 190 A. 115, held that it is beyond the power of a Delaware corporation created prior to the amendment of the act of 1927 (35 Del. Laws, c. 85) so to amend its charter as to reclassify its stock in a way that would extinguish the right of a dissenting preferred stockholder to receive in cash the arrearages of dividends which had accumulated on his shares as stipulated in the charter, before dividends on junior stock could be paid. The same rule applies to a corporation created after said amendment of 1927. The Supreme Court so held in Consolidated Film Industries, Inc. v. Johnson, 22 Del Ch. 407, 197 A. 489, affirming 22 Del. Ch. 267, 194 A. 844. The rule of the Keller Case is therefore applicable to all corporations existing under the act regardless of when they were created, and so is applicable to the defendant.
But the amendment which falls under the condemnation of Keller, et al., v. Wilson & Co., Inc., supra, is not void absolutely. If the stockholders are unanimous in its adoption, it is binding. A stockholder is barred from complaining against it by the estoppel of his acquiescence or by circumstances showing loches in the assertion of his objection. Trounstine v. Remington-Rand, Inc., 22 Del. Ch. 122, 194 A. 95, decided by this court on July 21, 1937.
The defendant contends that the delay by the complainants of four and one-half years after the amendment was adopted before they filed their bill, is such a delay as under the circumstances ought to bar the complainants from maintaining their suit. When a corporation takes important action of the kind here challenged, action which involves a complete change in its capital structure and which alters in a radical way the character and rights at
Now in the instant case, the complainants waited over four and one-half years before filing their bill. They waited fully three and one-half years before even expressing to the corporation a demand that the amendment be regarded as inoperative upon them insofar as the cumulations on the preferred stock were concerned. Through the period of
In fact on the one occasion when he approached the question, viz., in his letter of March 28, 1934, he indicated his acquiescence by saying that if the sixty shares of preferred and the sixty shares of common which he and his wife held were to receive sixty shares of common, as he had understood and as to which he desired to be assured, he hoped to have the stock of himself and wife exchanged for the new. The next day he was advised, and correctly so, that his understanding was in accordance with the facts. But Bomer then lapsed into his former silence and did nothing.
Over two years later he emerged from his state of silence and demanded the preferred dividends and the dividends which would come to him on the common.
In the meantime the company had, because of the reconstitution of its capital structure effected by the amendment and the reduction of its capital rendered possible thereby, been put in a condition as to surplus which made possible the payment of dividends. The condition of the balanee sheet was such that had it not been for the amendment, not only could no dividends have been declared on the eommon stock at any time down to the date of the filing of the bill, but none also could have been declared on the preferred stock which the complainants were holding.
It seems clear to me that the complainants were shrewdly biding their time and were deliberately playing with the situation.
Furthermore, other persons who relied on the capital structure of the company as' fixed and definite in accordance
The defendant stresses the suggestion that, treating Mr. and Mrs. Romer as one, every single stockholder of the defendant at the time the amendment was adopted was the holder of preferred and common stock in units, that is to say, each held the same number of shares of preferred as he did of common. That being so, it is quite correctly said • that the amendment which changed each one’s holding into a number of common shares equal to one-half of both his preferred and common shares, made no alteration whatever in the equity which each stockholder had in both the capital and the earnings of the corporation. The result would be that as dividends were declared out of earnings, the stockholder as a present holder of common stock would be in position to receive as much in the way of dividends as he would have been in to receive as a holder of both the old preferred and common. The effect of this argument, however, goes only to the fairness and the basis of exchange. I do not see that it has a bearing on the question of power which was adjudged as lacking in Keller v. Wilson & Co., Inc., supra.
However that may be, I am of the opinion that the complainants by their inexcusable delay in asserting their
A decree will be entered dismissing the bill.