Alfred J. Brown Seed Co. v. Brown

215 N.W. 772, 240 Mich. 569, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 938
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1927
DocketDocket No. 40.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 215 N.W. 772 (Alfred J. Brown Seed Co. v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfred J. Brown Seed Co. v. Brown, 215 N.W. 772, 240 Mich. 569, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 938 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Fellows, J.

In 1885 Alfred J. Brown started in a small way in the business of selling seeds in the city of Grand Rapids. The business was successful and slowly and continuously developed until he had a large number of customers to whom he sold seeds at wholesale throughout the country. His son, T. Herschel Brown, when he grew old enough, became associated with him in the business. On October 21,1918, Alfred J. Brown Seed Company, a corporation, was organized and took over the business; $100,000 of common and $100,000 of preferred were authorized; the par value of each share was $100. The common stock was all issued, 989 shares to Alfred J. Brown, 10 shares to T. Herschel Brown, and 1 share to Edward B. Seymour, bookkeeper of the company. They were elected directors of the company. Six hundred shares of the preferred was issued to Alfred J. Brown and he gave his note in payment therefor. He sold 100 shares of the preferred and the money received was applied on his note. Some of Alfred J. Brown’s stock was transferred to his son Herschel, and some of the employees also acquired a few shares from him. In 1918, due to war conditions and the increased cost of seeds, more money was needed in the business, and it was planned to increase the common stock toi $500,000 and the *573 preferred to $200,000. On June 25, 1918, the board of directors, consisting of the two Browns and the bookkeeper, declared a 20 per cent, cash dividend and a 100 per cent, stock dividend upon the common stock. There was some delay in perfecting their plans, some of which was attributable to the creation of the capital issues committee by the act of congress of April 5, 1918 (40 U. S. Stat. pp. 508, 512). We shall go more into detail presently. The $200,900 of preferred stock was sold to the public. Under normal conditions it had no voting power, and the board of directors remained the same. Dividends were paid on the preferred and from time to time on the common. The company borrowed large sums of money from various banks. The bank indebtedness having reached something in excess of half a million, the bank became somewhat perturbed, and in December, 1922, they were given and assumed control over the affairs of the company for the purpose of liquidating their indebtedness, which was accomplished by converting the assets, including some real estate, into cash, and the furnishing of some money by the preferred stockholders. This result was reached in October, 1923. The preferred stockholders also became interested in the affairs of the company, and in March, 1923, the articles of association were amended by increasing the number of directors to seven, and Alfred J. Brown and six of the holders of the preferred stock were made directors. They did not assume the management of company affairs until after the banks had been paid. This bill seeks an «accounting from the individual defendants by reason of claimed unlawful and fraudulent acts and conduct on their part in the manipulation of corporate assets and affairs. Upon the hearing in the court below and here, the case resolves itself into an inquiry of these questions, the relief against the A. J. Brown & Son, Inc., not being insisted upon. *574 This involves a consideration of various transactions and more of detail than is usually necessary as the case must be largely disposed of as one of fact. The record is voluminous, consisting of two volumes and the exhibits, many of which are audits, and has required much time and attention. In disposing of the case, we shall follow the order pursued by both counsel.

1. When the company reorganized and authorized the sale of $200,000 of preferred, it also increased its common to $500,000. Alfred J. Brown subscribed for 1,612 shares of the common and gave his note to the company for $161,200. T. Herschel Brown subscribed for 264 shares and gave his note to the company for $26,400. As appears by the records of the company, this was subject to the approval of the capital issues committee, then recently created by the act above cited. The committee disapproved of this plan, and the stock was recalled and the notes given-up and canceled. It is insisted that the individual defendants should now account to the company for these notes, — should pay them. This contention can not be sustained. These subscriptions were made under a plan of reorganization expressly stated to be subject to the approval of the capital issues committee. This committee disapproved the plan, as it had a right to do under this war time measure. Having disapproved the plan, proposed, it became necessary for the company to make other plans. This it did. The stock was returned to the treasury, the notes were canceled, and, with the approval of the committee, the preferred stock only was sold.

2. There was a cash dividend of 20 per cent, declared and paid on the common in the summer of 1918, and at the same time there was a stock dividend of 100 per cent, declared on the common and it was issued to the Browns who thereafter held it and drew *575 dividends on it. In the summer of 1919, a 10 per cent, cash dividend was declared and paid on the common, and in the summer of 1920 a 7 per cent, cash dividend was declared and paid. The Browns received in cash dividends on the common stock $50,616, besides their stock dividend. • Counsel do not disagree as to the applicable law. It is thus stated in 6 Fletcher Cyclopedia Corporations, § 3658:

“It is a well-settled principle that, as between the stockholders of a corporation and its creditors, the assets of the corporation are, in a sense, a trust fund for the payment of its debts, and they cannot lawfully be distributed among the stockholders, even in part, to the prejudice of creditors. Furthermore, the amount of the capital stock of corporations is very generally fixed by their charters or by a general law, and both the State and each stockholder of the corporation, as well as its creditors, have the right to insist that it shall not be reduced or impaired by any distribution among the stockholders. It is a settled rule, therefore, even in the absence of any statutory provision, that a corporation cannot lawfully declare dividends out of its capital stock, and thereby reduce the same, or out of assets which are needed to pay the corporate debts. They can be declared only out of surplus profits.”

Counsel for plaintiff insists that the condition of the company, as disclosed by all the audits, did not justify the declaration of these dividends or any of them, and points to the .fact that a deficit existed at the end of each fiscal year, which in 1918 was made the calendar year, while counsel for defendants insist that the condition of the business when the dividends were declared, about the middle of the year, justified their declaration, and point to the fact that the audits show a surplus as of June 30th of each year. The business of the company was a seasonal one. In the first half of the year, money was coming in and in the last half of the year it was going out. Counsel for defendants thus state the situation:

*576 “During the last six months of the year less than one-fifth of the annual sales were made, and during this period an operating loss usually exceeding $100,000 was sustained. During the first six months of the year more than four-fifths of the sales were made and all of the profits of the company were realized.”

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Bluebook (online)
215 N.W. 772, 240 Mich. 569, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfred-j-brown-seed-co-v-brown-mich-1927.