Beling v. American Tobacco Co.

65 A. 725, 72 N.J. Eq. 32, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 156
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 4, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 65 A. 725 (Beling v. American Tobacco Co.) 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
Beling v. American Tobacco Co., 65 A. 725, 72 N.J. Eq. 32, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 156 (N.J. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

This is, in substance and effect, a bill for the specific performance of a continuing contract in writing, consisting of a certificate of capital stock, dated February 38th, 1894, issued by the then American Tobacco Company to one Fannie Soule, by which [33]*33it was certified that she was the owner of one hundred shares, of $100 each, of the preferred capital stock of ihe American Tobacco Compaq, which stock was entitled to dividends not exceeding eight per cent, for each year out of the net profits for such year, payable quarterly, in preference to the common stock, and also a preference on the assets of the company on the final distribution or division thereof (1940).

Fannie Soule, the beneficiary named in this certificate, died February 28th, 1895, and one J. Forbes Potter became the owner and holder of said certificate of stock by virtue of letters testamentary of the will of the said Fannie Soule, and held the said certificate until the latter part of the month of January, 1905, when he sold and assigned it to one Schalk, who held it until the 15th day of February, 1905, and on that day sold and assigned it to the complainant, Beling.

In the meantime the ownership of the stock stood on the books of the company in the name of the said Fannie Soule, and dividend checks were sent to her at her address, as recorded on those books, four times each year until the month of September, 1904. Those checks were presumably received by the executor and collected by him in the ordinary course of business.

The business of the American Tobacco Company, as declared in its articles of association, was

“to euro leaf tobacco, and to buy, manufacture and sell tobacco in all its forms, and to establish factories, agencies and depots for the sale and distribution thereof, and to transport, or cause the same to be transported, as an article of commerce, and to do all things incident to the business of trading and manufacturing aforesaid.”

On the 9th day of September, 1904, the American Tobacco Company entered into an agreement of consolidation and merger with two other companies engaged in ihe tobacco business,' to wit, the Continental Tobacco Company and the Consolidated Tobacco Company, to consolidate and merge those three companies into a new company, to be known as the American Tobacco Company, all the said corporations being New Jersey corporations, and said agreement of merger was afterwards approved by a meeting of the stockholders of the American [34]*34Tobacco Company held, after due and legal notice to each stockholder, on September 30th, 1904.

The agreement of merger was filed in the office of the secretary of state on the 20th day of October, 1904.

The proceedings were had in pursuance and by virtue of section 104 et seq. of-the Corporation act of 1896 and the supplements thereto of April 10th, 1902. P. L. p. 700; Dill. Private Corp. (4th ed.) 128 et seq.

The merger agreement provided that the new corporation, the present American Tobacco Company, should assume 'all the obligations of the old corporations, and provided for the satisfaction of the preferred stock of the old companies, amounting to $14,000,000, of which the complainant is the holder of $10,000, by the issuance of six per cent, bonds, maturing in 1940, the date of the expiration of the original American Tobacco Company’s corporate existence, such bonds to be delivered to the holders of the preferred stock in the proportion of $13,333 of face value of the bonds to $10,000 of the face value of the stock, with a provision for fractions. So that complainant had the option to receive for his certificate of stock six per cent, bonds maturing at the time that his certificate of stock, so to speak, would have matured, which would produce him precisely the same income that his preferred stock, under the most favorable circumstances, could have produced him, and insure him at its maturity one-third more than its face value. Further, as appears by an examination of the consolidation agreement, the security for its payment would have been much better than that for the payment of dividends on his certificate of stock. Then comes the fact, distinctly alleged in the answer, that the market value of complainant’s stock was at once increased as the result of the merger, so that presumably Potter received a greater price on his sale to Schalk than he otherwise could have received.

The only respect in which the holders of such preferred stock could have been the losers by the exchange was in the loss of the right, if any, to participate in the division of the surplus assets of the old American Tobacco Company, at its winding up in 1940, over and above sufficient to pay all classes of stock at par.

The question of this right so to participate was discussed at [35]*35length, but I do not deem it worth while to express a definitive opinion upon it, since it abundantly appears that the shares of common stock were more than three times the number of that of the preferred stock, and the control of the company was absolutely in the common stockholders, and the directors, being elected by the holders of the common stock, would naturally see to it, by the exercise of their power to declare dividends, that the preferred stockholders should receive no more than the par value of their stock at the end of the corporate existence of the company.

It sufficiently appears, from the pleadings, exhibits and schedules, that the property of the company is composed so much of general merchandise and of individual units quite susceptible of being sold in pieces as to present no obstacle to the consummation of what would almost necessarily lie the natural desire of the common stockholders. And this circumstance makes the case a complete contrast to that of Bridgewater Navigation Co., 39 Ch. Div. 1 (1888); Birch v. Cropper, 14 App. Gas. 525 (1889), which is an authority relied upon in support of the proposition that preferred stockholders have an equal right with the common stockholders to share in surplus assets.

I am satisfied that the allotment of bonds to the complainant or his predecessor in ownership was a fair equivalent for his stock.

This oiler, however, the complainant declined to accept, and by his bill charges that the whole proceedings to merge, though taken and carried through strictly according to the terms of the act of 1896, were absolutely void as to him and the then holder of his certificate of stock, for the reason that that act was passed after the organization of the original American Tobacco Company and after the issuance of the certificate of which he is now the owner.

His argument is the simple one so often advanced, viz., that his certificate of stock was a contract into which must be read the provisions of the Corporation act of the State of New Jersey at the time (1890) that the original American Tobacco Company was organized, and that no more than those provisions can be so read into it; that at that time it was not competent to [36]*36merge that particular corporation with any other corporation. Hence, he argues, the act of 1896 was absolutely void as to him and his contract, and the proceedings taken under it to merge were as to him absolutely void.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 A. 725, 72 N.J. Eq. 32, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beling-v-american-tobacco-co-njch-1907.