Silversmiths Co. v. Reed & Barton Corp.

199 Mass. 371 | Mass. | 1908

Loring, J.

The learned counsel for the defendant said that it might be urged “ in support of such a by-law, from the standpoint of a manufacturing corporation, that it serves a beneficial purpose in protecting those who may have brought a business to a high degree of excellence and secured for it an enviable name and standing from hostile attempts of rival interests to obtain a control or an influence over its affairs destructive of its independent existence.”

The by-law adopted by the defendant is manifestly narrower than the purpose stated by its counsel.

The purpose stated by counsel covers all cases where a stockholder sells or otherwise disposes of his stock. Such a by-law .was before this court in Barrett v. King, 181 Mass. 476.

The by-law here in question does not include all cases where a stockholder sells or otherwise disposes of his stock. It manifestly permits stock to pass, on the death of a stockholder, to his executor or administrator, although that might have been forbidden. See New England Trust Co. v. Abbott, 162 Mass. 148.

In the case at bar the stock in question was held by a corporation organized under laws which permitted it and another similar corporation to consolidate into a single corporation, and which provided that on such consolidation being consummated the property of each of the original corporations should vest in the new corporation by force of the statute without deed or other transfer. The question is whether a transmission of title *375to the new single corporation under such circumstances and in that way is a “ sale ” within the meaning of that word in this by-law.

It is not technically a sale because the consideration (if there be one) is not money but stocks, and it well may be doubted whether a barter as distinguished from a sale is included within the prohibition of the by-law, because the effect of the by-law is to give the corporation an option on the trade proposed to be made with the outsider. By the terms of the by-law the offer to be made to the corporation is an offer “ at the lowest price at which the holder will sell. Nothing but a sale for money is contemplated in case the corporation elects to accept the offer and the sale to the outsider (contemplated by the by-law) is a sale of the same kind.

The transmission of title which took place here is more like the transmission of title by operation of law where a natural person dies intestate than it is like a sale or a barter. See in that connection Squire v. Learned, 196 Mass. 134, where it was held that the bequest by a tenant of his leasehold interest is not a breach of a covenant not to assign.

The question here however is not what this transmission of title is like. The question is whether such a transmission of title is a sale within the meaning of that word in this by-law.

The transmission of title now in question was not in fact or in law either a sale or a barter. No consideration properly speaking was received for it by way of barter or sale. The old corporations passed out of existence and a new corporation came into being which succeeded to the property of the two corporations which thereby came to an end. The stock issued to the shareholders of the old corporations was issued and received, not by way of payment for something sold to another but by way of a statement of the interest which those persons who are beneficially interested therein had in the new corporation as the result of the consolidation.

Finally, the transmission of title which took place was not one which could be offered to the Reed and Barton Corporation on the same terms as those which were to be the basis of the transmission to an outsider.

We are of opinion that there was no sale of these shares of *376the old corporation to the new corporation formed by the consolidation within the meaning of that word in this by-law.

It follows that the defendant is bound to issue a new certificate to the plaintiff as the present holder of the shares in <lueation-

So ordered.

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