16 N.W.2d 402 | Wis. | 1944
Plaintiffs, as preferred stockholders of Land Development Company, brought this action against that corporation for a declaratory judgment determining the respective rights of the holders of the preferred stock and of the holders of the common stock of defendant, in and to its corporate assets. Defendant demurred to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The court sustained the demurrer. Plaintiffs appealed from the order. The facts alleged in the complaint, so far as pertinent on this appeal, are to the following effect. Defendant corporation was organized in 1909 with an authorized paid-in capital stock of $250,000, divided into two thousand five hundred shares having a par value of $100 each. In 1912, Art. III of its articles of incorporation was amended by a resolution, adopted by the unanimous vote of the common stockholders, to authorize also the issue of one thousand shares of preferred stock of the total par value of $100,000. This stock was sold largely to the common stockholders, who purchased it at par in reliance upon the following provisions in a recital in the preamble of the resolution amending Art. III, and in the article as amended, to wit: *126
(Provisions in preamble)
"Whereas, all of the outstanding stock of this company is represented . . . and has consented and does hereby consent that preferred stock to the amount of $100,000 be issued by the company, which preferred stock shall give a preference to the holders thereof both in the earnings of the company and in any distribution of corporate assets other than profits
"Now therefore," etc.
(Provisions in amended Art. III)
"Art. III: . . . The preferred stock shall be entitled to receive from the net earnings of the company an annual dividend of seven (7) per cent (which dividends shall be cumulative). In case of a distribution of the assets of the company the preferred stock shall receive an amount equal to its par value, with accumulated dividends, before the common stock shall be entitled to share in such assets. The preferred stock may be retired at any time the board of directors may so determine and shall be retired as soon as the company's obligations as of January 1st, 1912, shall have been paid and as soon thereafter as there may be sufficient funds on hand to retire the same, upon payment of the par value thereof, together with a dividend at the rate of seven (7) per cent per annum to date of retirement. No dividends shall be paid upon the common stock until after the preferred stock shall have been retired."
The provisions beginning with the words "in case of a distribution" were printed on the preferred-stock certificates, and also upon the new common-stock certificates issued in substitution of the old certificates held by the holders thereof. Annual dividends upon the preferred stock were paid until December 31, 1922. On December 29, 1927, the board of directors adopted the following resolution:
"Resolved: That a liquidating payment of ten per cent be and is hereby authorized on the outstanding preferred stock of the company, payable on February 1, 1928, and *127
"Resolved further: That the payment of all the accumulated dividends to February 1, 1928, on said ten per cent of the preferred stock of the company be and is hereby authorized payable on February 1, 1928."
Similar resolutions were adopted until February 1, 1930, and by then twenty-seven per cent of the par value had been paid on the preferred stock. After February 1, 1930, the board adopted similar resolutions for payments upon the par value of preferred stock, but without providing for the payment of accrued dividends. The last payment, made on January 18, 1944, had the effect of retiring all of the preferred stock at par, and reimbursing the holders thereof for the accumulated dividends thereon up to and including February 1, 1930; but dividends amounting to $74,945.37, which accrued since that date, have been left unpaid. The present assets of the corporation, over and above its liabilities excepting the common stock, amount to $111,510.62. In that amount there are no net earnings or profits, and none are available for the further payment of accrued dividends on preferred stock; and with the corporation's remaining assets amounting to only $111,510.62, its common stock has become impaired to a large extent. Up to February 1, 1930, the accumulated dividends on the retirement instalments of principal were paid out of surplus; but after that date there was no available surplus, and if, after the retirement payments of the preferred stock in full at par, the holders thereof are entitled to further payments of accumulated dividends in preference to the common stockholders, such payments must come out of corporate assets other than net earnings or profits. Plaintiffs and other preferred stockholders have demanded that defendant pay the preferred stockholders, out of the remaining assets as they become available for distribution, the accumulated unpaid dividends, or the equivalent thereof; and defendant has refused to make any such payment. *128
Plaintiffs also allege that —
"the purchasers of such preferred stock were informed through the terms of the preferred-stock provisions and recitals in the certificates that the preferred stockholders would have preference over the common stock in the payment of dividends and in the distribution of the corporate assets in the manner and to the extent recited in the articles of incorporation as amended and in the certificates of preferred stock;" and that "because of the representations that were made to the purchasers of the preferred stock as hereinbefore recited, and because . . . defendant has received and retained the benefit of the money so paid by the preferred stockholders for such stock," defendant "and the holders of the common stock should now be estopped to deny, the right of the preferred stockholders to be paid the accumulated preferred dividends, or an amount equivalent thereto, or an amount equivalent to the value of the use of the money by the defendant, before any distribution of corporate assets shall be made to the holders of the common stock."
In seeking a declaratory judgment, plaintiffs contend that the preferred stockholders are entitled to the payments of additional amounts, as the unpaid balance of the accumulated dividends or the equivalent thereof as interest on their investment, out of defendant's remaining capital assets before the holders of common stock are entitled to share in these assets; that defendant and its common stockholders in equity are estopped to deny to the preferred stockholders payment of either the unpaid accumulated dividends or the equivalent thereof as interest on their investment; and that defendant retired its preferred stock under circumstances requiring payment of the accumulated dividends as a premium or condition of retirement.
In relation to those contentions the learned circuit judge said, in sustaining defendant's demurrer, —
"Upon the showing made in the complaint it appears that no earnings or profits are included in the present assets of the corporation; that the total outstanding preferred stock has *129
been liquidated by periodic payments. It also appears that the common stock has already been impaired to the extent of $136,989.38. . . . It follows that pursuant to the provisions of secs. 182.13 and 182.19 there can be no lawful authorization of payment of accumulated preferred dividends. Hull v.Pfister Vogel Leather Co.
The conclusions, and reasons therefor, which were thus ably stated by Judge AARONS, rightly determine all material issues raised by the parties; and there is no need to enlarge upon his written opinion excepting as it may be helpful to note the following: The provisions in secs. 182.13(1) and 182.19(1), Stats. 1929, which were held in Hull v. Pfister Vogel Leather Co.
It follows that as there have been no net earnings or profits available since February 1, 1930, for the preferential payment of the unpaid balance of the accumulated dividends on preferred stock, the order must be affirmed.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.