27 Del. Ch. 234 | New York Court of Chancery | 1943
The demurrer raises two questions:
(1) Whether the persons, who are not the record owners of corporate stock, but who are the real owners of the certificates, are “stockholders” within the meaning of Section 61 of the General Corporation Law, Rev. Code 1935, § 2093; and (2) whether, in any event, the complainants have complied with that section of the statute.
Section 61 provides:
“If any stockholder in any corporation of this State consolidating or merging as aforesaid, who objected thereto in writing, shall within twenty days after the date on which the agreement of consolidation or merger has been filed and recorded,* * * demand in writing from the corporation resulting from or surviving such consolidation or merger, payment of his stock, such resulting or surviving corporation shall, within three months thereafter, pay to him the value of his stock at said date * * *. If within thirty days after the date of such written demand the corporation and such stockholders fail to*240 come to an agreement as to such value of such stock, such stockholder may demand an appraisal of his stock by three disinterested persons, one of whom shall be designated by the stockholder, one by the directors of the resulting or surviving corporation and the other by the two designated as aforesaid and may serve written notice on such corporation designating therein one appraiser and requiring the corporation to designate a second appraiser within thirty days from the date of service of such notice. If within thirty days from the date of service of such notice the corporation shall have failed to designate a second appraiser or if the two appraisers first designated shall fail to designate a third appraiser within thirty days from the designation of the second appraiser, such stockholder may apply to the Chancellor to designate a second and a third appraiser, or a third appraiser as the case may be. The decision of the appraisers as to such value of such stock shall be final and binding upon the corporation and such stockholder. In case the value of such stock as so fixed by the appraisers is not paid to such stockholder within sixty days from the date of such decision and of notice thereof given to the corporation, the decorporation, and such amount may be collected as other debts are by cisión of the appraisers shall be evidence of the amount due from the law collectible from the resulting or surviving corporation. * * *”1
Pursuant to that section, within a certain prescribed time “any stockholder” of a corporation, consolidating with another, “who objected thereto in writing”, may, therefore, “demand in writing” from the surviving corporation payment of his stock. If within thirty days thereafter they fail to agree as to its value, the “stockholder” may demand its appraisal by “three disinterested persons”. One of such ' appraisers shall be designated by the “stockholder,” one by the directors of the consolidated corporation, “and the other by the two designated as aforesaid.” After the objecting stockholder shall have selected an appraiser, if the corporation, on the prescribed notice, shall fail to designate a second appraiser within a specified time, the stockholder may apply to the Chancellor to designate a second and third appraiser.
The complainants allege in some detail the necessary steps taken pursuant to the statute, justifying the valuation
Mandamus is purely a legal remedy, and cases like State ex rel. Healy v. Superior Oil Corporation, 1 Terry, (40 Del.) 460, 13 A. 2d 453 and Stats ex rel. Crowder v. Sperry Corporation, 2 Terry (41 Del.) 84, 15 A. 2d 661, need not be considered.
The bill alleges: (1) That the complainants, by letters dated December 11th, 1942, addressed to the corporations contemplating a consolidation, objected thereto, and to the adoption of any such agreement at the stockholders’ meeting to be held" December 15th; and (2) that, as further notice of their objections, they enclosed in the appropriate letters proxies, executed by them, directing certain named persons to vote the 7100 shares of stock in The Salt Dome Oil Corporation and the 10,000 shares of stock in the Gulfboard Oil Corporation against the said Agreement of Merger. These proxies were not attached to the bill, but it appears that they disclosed that the' 7100 shares of stock in The Salt Dome Oil Corporation stood on its records in the name
The demurrer is overruled, and an order will be entered accordingly.
A later statute provides a different method of selecting appraisers.