Bachman v. First-Mechanics, B. Trenton

60 A.2d 291, 142 N.J. Eq. 389
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 5, 1948
DocketDocket 147/622
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 60 A.2d 291 (Bachman v. First-Mechanics, B. Trenton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bachman v. First-Mechanics, B. Trenton, 60 A.2d 291, 142 N.J. Eq. 389 (N.J. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

A proposed alteration in the capital formation of the defendant banking association has occasioned the present litigation.

It will be recalled that previous to 1933 our National Bank Act empowered national banks to issue only common stock, and any subsequently desired increase in that single class of stock could only be achieved by means of the favorable vote of shareholders owning two-thirds of the existing shares. In 1933 the economic casualty with its devastating effect upon the stability of our financial institutions actuated the Congress to implant in our National Bank Act sections 51-a and 51-b which, inter alia, afforded national banks the privilege to issue preferred stock. Those sections prescribed the method by which preferred stock might be issued and the incidents of its ownership, and nevertheless preserved in accordance with the established policy the supervisory powers of the Comptroller of the Currency.

In 1934 it became imperative for the defendant bank to avail itself of the opportunities conferred by the federal legislation, and it resolved to issue preferred stock of two classes to be distinguished and identified as "A" and "B." At that critical period the capital stock of the institution consisted of 40,000 shares of common stock of a par value of $50 a share.

A provident economy of words obliges me to summarize the account of the pertinent subsequent events relative to the processes of recapitalization and to the cognate alterations in the articles of association.

By virtue of the amendment of July 31st, 1934, the capital structure of the bank was increased to $5,200,000 comprised of the following classes of stock:

(a) $2,000,000 Class "A" preferred stock, divided into 200,000 shares of par value of $10 each, which stock was retirable at $10 a share.

(b) $1,200,000 of preferred stock "B," divided into 60,000 shares of par value of $20 each, retirable at $20 a share.

(c) $2,000,000 of common stock, divided into 40,000 shares of par value of $50 each. *Page 391

The Reconstruction Finance Corporation purchased the $2,000,000 issuance of the Class A preferred stock, and it may be stated with substantial accuracy that the Class B preferred stock was acquired by the directors of the bank.

It will be informative to quote some excerpts and otherwise tersely disclose the import of certain terms and provisions embodied in the amendment of July 31st, 1934.

Article Fourth, section 11:

"By the affirmative vote of the holders, voting by classes, of at least two-thirds of the shares of each class of stock at the time outstanding, and not otherwise, and subject to such approval by the Comptroller of the Currency and such other conditions as at the time may be required by law * * *." (Italics mine.)

It was also provided:

(a) That the capital stock of the Association might be increased provided that

1. No vote of "A" stock was required in order to issue "B" stock or common stock if the proceeds of such issue were to be used to retire "A";

2. No vote of "B" stock was required to issue common stock if the proceeds were to be used to retire "A" or "B" stock;

3. No vote of the holders of stock of any class was required to issue common stock as a stock dividend.

(b) The capital stock could be decreased provided that no vote of any class was required to retire "A" or "B."

(c) The name of the Association might be changed, c.

(d) "These Articles of Association may be amended at any time, and from time to time, in any other respect, but not so as tochange the respective voting rights of the preferred stock `A,'preferred stock `B,' and common stock so long as any shares ofpreferred stock `A' or preferred stock `B' remain outstanding." (Italics mine.)

Sections 13 and 14 of Article Fourth display the protective sovereignty which the R.F.C. might exercise over the management of the bank in the event that the bank is guilty of delinquencies or violations of the articles. See, also, subdivision (h) section 11, article 4. *Page 392

In 1935 it was determined that the capital anatomy of the bank continued to be infirm, and consequently on August 23d 1935, the articles of association were again amended to enable the R.F.C. to purchase an additional $3,000,000 of Class A preferred stock. It is to be noticed that in this transformation the par value of the 40,000 shares of the common stock was reduced from $50 to $10 a share. The following recapitalization thereby resulted:

(a) $5,000,000 of Class "A" preferred, divided into 500,000 shares of $10 par, retirable at $10 a share.

(b) $1,200,000 of preferred "B," divided into 60,000 shares of $20 par, retirable at $20 a share.

(c) $400,000 consisting of 40,000 shares of common stock of $10 a share par.

It is not evident that the voting rights and powers of the shareholders of the respective classes of stock under the prior amendment of July 31st, 1934, were in any material or significant respect changed or abridged by the last mentioned amendment.

The capital configuration was next remodeled on October 25th, 1935, at which time the R.F.C. advanced an additional $500,000 for the purchase of 50,000 more shares of Class A stock. The par values of the "A" and "B" preferred stocks were lowered (section 51, b-1, National Bank Act) thus producing the following conformation:

(a) $2,200,000 par value class "A" preferred stock, divided into 550,000 shares of par value of $4 a share, retirable at $10 per share.

(b) $600,000 of preferred stock "B," divided into 60,000 shares, with a par value of $10, retirable at $20 per share.

(c) $400,000 of common stock, consisting of 40,000 shares with a par value of $10 a share.

If one views these successive transitions retrospectively, it is in the amendments of October 25th, 1935, that the cradle of the present discord can be found. An innovation then contorted section 11, Article Fourth of the former articles of association relating to the increase or decrease of stock by the elimination therefrom of the restrictive method of class voting and the substitution of the method exemplified by the following quotation: *Page 393

"Section 11. Increase or decrease of capital stock; amendmentsof Articles of Association, etc. — By not less than two-thirds of the votes to which all stockholders are at the time entitled, and not otherwise, and subject to the approval of the Comptroller of the Currency and to such other conditions as at the time may be required by law;

"(a) The capital stock of the Association may be increased at any time, and from time to time, through issuing additional shares of preferred stock A, preferred stock B, and/or common stock, and/or through the creation of one or more additional classes of stock * * *."

In our present galloping way of life, it is not unnatural to allow the anxiety, the anguish, and the distress of the period of the economic prostration to fade into a mere fable. Yet in undertaking to estimate the proprieties of the business policies necessarily employed during that intense emergency, we must not forget that today is not yesterday. At that time rescue could only be acquired at the cost of extreme sacrifices, and so it is not evident that the owners of the common stock asserted any opposition to the modification of their voting powers until the introduction in January, 1947, of the proposed plan for a new issue of stock. Indeed, that circumstance gathers increased significance in that I do not recall any proof that the complainants were stockholders at the time of the amendment of the articles of association in 1935. Vide, Bookman

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127 A.2d 210 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1956)

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