Allen v. Chase National Bank

180 Misc. 259, 40 N.Y.S.2d 245, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1642
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 180 Misc. 259 (Allen v. Chase National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Chase National Bank, 180 Misc. 259, 40 N.Y.S.2d 245, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1642 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1943).

Opinion

McGeehan, J.

The motion to confirm the report of the learned Referee is granted, and the sum of $10,000 is hereby allowed to him for his fees.

The motion to terminate the proceeding is granted, with appropriate reservations of the court’s jurisdiction to be determined upon the order to be settled hereon.

Furthermore, the petitioners, Allen & Company, apply for an order hereon fixing their costs and expenses in this proceeding to include the fee of their attorney, and directing the payment of same by the respondent Wickwire Spencer Steel Company. This phase of the motion presents facts which differ in some aspects from the usual situation in corporate litigation of this type. Ordinarily a sum of money has been realized from the litigation, and counsel fees are allowed out of that sum. In this instance there is no such fund available, but it is undeniable that the results accomplished have been of great benefit to the corporation and its stockholders.

When this proceeding was instituted, all of the stock of this company stood of record in the names of the respondents, voting trustees. The beneficial owners, over five thousand in number, held mere certificates issued by the voting trustees. As certificate holders they were precluded from any right to vote the stock, and the "complete control of the corporation was accordingly in the hands of the voting trustees. The board of directors consisted of the voting trustees and others chosen by them. One of the trustees was named as chairman of the board. The petitioners, Allen & Company, in instituting this proceeding, maintained that the voting trust should have come to an end on March 1, 1942. The voting trust agreement provided for its termination on that date unless the corporation should at the time be indebted to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (hereinafter called RFC ”), in Which event it was to continue until that, debt was fully paid.

It appears that when this company emerged in 1937 out of reorganization, under the then section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act (U. S. Code, tit. 11, § 207), it did so under a plan which authorized the borrowing of $2,000,000 from the RFC to provide adequate working capital. It was specifically to meet the requirements imposed as a condition to the making of this loan that all the stock was placed in the voting trust.

By July, 1941, the original loan had been reduced to $594,000, and the current earnings of the company indicated the probability of the complete retirement of the debt before March 1, 1942. On July 25, 1941, a special meeting of stockholders was [261]*261held, at which an additional loan of $1,906,000 from the RFC was authorized and the entire loan was to be paid over a period of ten years, subject to certain amortization payments.

As the voting trustees were the legal owners of all of the stock, they were the only ones who had the power to vote at such meeting. This procedure had the obvious effect of prolonging the trust for years beyond March 1,1942.

The petitioners questioned the motives of the trustees in making this new and larger loan which had the effect of continuing them indefinitely in absolute control of the corporation. Furthermore, they assumed the position that, notwithstanding the motives that prompted the making of the loan, the corporation should avail itself of the right to prepay same. The petitioners advocated doing this in one of two ways, either by procuring a new loan for the amount of the debt or by using the cash then in the treasury. Under the first alternative, if they desired such new loan, Allen & Company offered to procure it at a much lower rate of interest and on the remaining terms at least as favorable as the RFC loan. If the second alternative was to be pursued and they wanted to pay it off without new financing, it was shown by the petitioners that on March 1, 1942, there was $3,200,000 in cash on hand, while the amount due on the debt had been reduced to about $1,500,000. The balance sheet of the corporation as of December 31, 1942, showed current assets of $9,025,648.74 against current liabilities, exclusive of the RFC loan, of only $1,602,360.64. Such payment of the RFC loan would have automatically terminated the trust. The corporation’s income statement for the nine months ending September 30,1941, has since shown a net income after provision for taxes of $2.90 per share for that period of nine months.

The petitioners, as the holders of perhaps the largest block of certificates, sought a meeting of the certificate holders in order, through their concerted action, to induce the trustees to bring about a refinancing that would not only lighten the interest burden on the company, but would result in the termination of the voting trust and the restoration of the full rights of ownership to the beneficial owners of the stock.

Another purpose of the proposed meeting was to give to the certificate holders an opportunity to express an opinion on the advisability of a sale of all of the assets of the corporation. Virtually all certificate holders were originally creditors of the corporation and received their stock in its reorganization. Accordingly there was an understandable desire for the liquidation of these holdings. It appears that in October, 1941, a [262]*262responsible prospective purchaser offered to acquire all the assets of the company at a price of $10,698,130.86, which would have netted $16 in cash for each share. This offer was rejected by the board of directors and by the voting trustees without ever having been submitted to the certificate holders for their consideration. Without passing upon the adequacy of this offer, the petitioners contended that the certificate holders, as the beneficial owners of the stock, should have been afforded an opportunity to make known their wishes with regard to the offer to purchase the corporation’s assets.

Inasmuch as there were in existence over five thousand individuals who held voting trust certificates, the petitioners were in no position to call a meeting without first procuring a list of all certificate holders. The voting trustees refused to comply with a demand for such list of certificate holders. A prior application to compel an inspection of a list of certificate holders was successfully resisted by the trustees, who contended that the provisions of the voting trust agreement vested in them the sole discretion to permit such an inspection.

On March 17,1942, chapter 121 of the Laws of 1942 went into effect, which added a new section, 115, to the Stock Corporation Law. Subsequently the petitioners, Allen & Company, made a new demand for a list which was again refused, whereupon this proceeding was duly instituted.

The respondents contended that such prior denial was an adjudication which was a bar to this proceeding. They further contended that section 115 was prospective in its effect and could apply only to voting trust agreements entered into subsequent to the date of its 'enactment, and that if it be construed as applying to existing agreements, it was violative of section 10 of article I of the Constitution of the United States, and accordingly unconstitutional.

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Bluebook (online)
180 Misc. 259, 40 N.Y.S.2d 245, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-chase-national-bank-nysupct-1943.