19 A.2d 134 | Pa. | 1941
The Bradford County Telephone Company executed and delivered to Jerome K. Packard three notes, each in the sum of $10,000, dated November 1, 1929, payable November 1, 1960, with interest at six per cent per annum, secured by a mortgage of $30,000 on the company's plant and equipment, subject to a first mortgage of $100,000. Packard died in 1930. In 1936 the company brought a bill in equity against the administrator of his estate, alleging that the notes and mortgage were without consideration and therefore illegal and void, and praying for a decree that the notes be surrendered and cancelled and the mortgage satisfied of record. The cause came to this court on appeal(Bradford County Telephone Co. v. Young, Administrator,
Martin H. Murphy was the registered owner of all the stock of the company, but held a half interest in trust for Packard. In contemplation of the acquisition by the company of certain properties of the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania, Packard and Murphy entered into a written agreement dated October 20, 1928, wherein Packard agreed "to transfer over to said Murphy his entire stock ownership, or to quit-claim to him all his right, title and interest in and to the Bradford County Telephone Company," in consideration of the payment to Packard of $5,000 in cash and $30,000 of second mortgage bonds of a company which it was intended should be organized. The proposed company was *397 not formed and the plan was somewhat modified, the Bradford Company paying for the properties obtained from the Bell Company with cash realized from the negotiation of a first mortgage of $100,000 and by issuing to the Bell Company a certain number of shares of the Bradford Company out of an authorized increase of its capital stock. The execution of the $30,000 mortgage was duly authorized at a meeting of the board of directors of the Bradford Company, and the company's notes and a mortgage in that amount were delivered to Packard. Murphy paid to Packard the $5,000 cash provided for in the agreement as part of the purchase price of his interest. The certificates representing the capital stock which stood in Murphy's name had been pledged by Murphy many years before as security for a loan, and so remained until several years later when all the stock of the Bradford Company was purchased by Andrew J. Sordoni. None of the stock was ever assigned or transferred to the Bradford Company or recorded on its books as treasury stock acquired or owned by it.
The Constitution of Pennsylvania forbids the issuance of bonds by a corporation except for labor done or money or property actually received. There is no evidence in the present record from which a jury could properly find that the Bradford Company actually received Packard's interest in the stock of the company as consideration for the notes and mortgage. The case is plainly that of one stockholder buying out the holdings of another, — a transaction which did not increase the assets of the company and from which it derived no benefit. The agreement between Murphy and Packard stated as its purpose that Murphy should become the sole owner of the company, and it was to Murphy that Packard agreed to transfer his interest. No actual transfer was made, because all the stock already stood in Murphy's name; be continued as the registered holder, and thereafter as the sole beneficial owner, and ultimately sold the stock, he, not the company, receiving the proceeds. While a resolution of the board of directors *398 authorized the delivery to Packard of its bond and mortgage in the sum of $30,000 "in full payment, discharge and satisfaction for all of his interest in the company," this did not indicate that it was the company which was acquiring Packard's interest. What it was in fact doing was making part payment to Packard for the stock which Murphy purchased, Murphy himself paying the $5,000 which was the remaining part of the consideration. It is true that the vice-president, in a later letter to the Board of Accounts and Statistics of the Public Service Commission, stated that the purchase of Packard's interest was "by the company," that "This interest was not turned over to Murphy" (which was manifestly untrue), and that "The Packard interest was released by and for the company. Murphy negotiated for the company." He also testified, however, that these statements were made by him because he "had to say something so they [the Public Service Commission] would keep quiet," and they are not borne out by the facts of the transaction as it actually occurred, or by the books of the company, which represent the notes as having been issued, not for the purchase of Packard's interest in the stock, but as a "dividend from surplus."
If the notes were issued without a consideration "actually received" by the company, they were void under Article XVI, section 7, of the Constitution and the Public Service Law of 1913 then in force. Nor would the corporation be estopped to assert such invalidity merely because for several years it paid interest on the notes (Wright's Appeal,
While, therefore, we are of opinion that there was not sufficient evidence to submit to the jury that the *399
company purchased and received Packard's interest in return for the notes and mortgage, there is evidence in the record which would seem to establish their legality on a different theory. It would appear from the report of the company made to the Public Service Commission for the calendar year 1929, and from the books of the company as well, that at the beginning of that year it had a surplus or credit balance of $42,810.84, which was increased by income amounting to $7,023.59, making a total of $49,834.43, and this surplus was stated to have been reduced by "dividends from surplus" amounting to $45,000 and an item of $116 for "material lost," leaving a net surplus at the end of the year of $4,718.43. The $45,000 "dividends" comprised the $30,000 of notes, and $15,000 additional stock issued to Murphy which is not involved in the present litigation. If there was in fact such a surplus it could legally have been distributed as a dividend, and it was not necessary, if all the shareholders agreed, that there should have been a formal declaration thereof: Powers-Buchanan Co. v. Powers,
This case was tried by plaintiff on the theory that the notes and mortgage were given by the company in payment of Packard's interest in the stock. We are aware of the general rule, many times reiterated by this court, that a case will not be reviewed on appeal on a theory different from that upon which it was presented to the court below. Here, however, there is testimony in regard to the existence of a surplus which, if true, would apparently justify the issuance of the notes and the execution of the mortgage to Packard, and with such evidence staring at us from the record we feel that it would be a grave injustice to the Packard estate to deprive it of the $30,000 which he was to receive, and thought he did receive, for his interest in the company, — an interest which can no longer be recouped by his estate. A new trial will enable this aspect of the case to be developed, and will afford an opportunity to determine the question whether the company actually had a bona fide surplus at the time it executed and delivered its notes and mortgage to Packard.
Judgment reversed and a new trial granted. *401