Bodell v. General Gas & Electric Corp.

132 A. 442, 15 Del. Ch. 119, 1926 Del. Ch. LEXIS 20
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 2, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 132 A. 442 (Bodell v. General Gas & Electric Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bodell v. General Gas & Electric Corp., 132 A. 442, 15 Del. Ch. 119, 1926 Del. Ch. LEXIS 20 (Del. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The complainants state their contention in this case under two heads. They are, (a) the practice complained of constitutes a conscious offer of no par value stock below its fair *125 sales value, and, like all such offers is illegal; and (b) even if a conscious offer of no par value stock below its fair sales value may be legal if made to certain persons, it is illegal if made to the A stockholders alone in addition to their quarterly cash dividends of thirty-seven and one-half cents per share and before the B stockholders have received $1.50 per share. No attempt will be made in the ensuing opinion to divide the discussion into two parts corresponding to the two headings. The general discussion which follows will, however, disclose my views upon both branches of the argument.

The principal statutory provision with which we are concerned in this case is found in Section 4a of the General Corporation Law. That provision is, as follows:

“Such capital stock without nominal or par value * * * may be issued by the corporation from time to time for such consideration as may be fixed from time to time by the board of directors thereof, pursuant to authority conferred in the certificate of incorporation or in any amendment thereof, or if such certificate or amendment thereof shall not so provide, then by the consent of the holders of two-thirds of each class of stock then outstanding,” etc.

This language appears in the section authorizing the creation of stock without nominal or par value, which section was first adopted as a part of the Corporation Law by the act approved March 20, 1917 (29 Del. Laws, c. 113). By this act, the plan of no par stock was permitted with respect to common stock only. Now however, by virtue of an amendment approved April 2, 1925 (34 Del. Laws, c. 112), no par stock is allowed as well with respect to preferred stock. The quoted language, whether the stock be an issue of common or of preferred, is applicable.

Here we are not concerned with any question relating to the two classes of preferred stocks of this corporation. The controversy has solely to do with the right of the directors to issue no par common stock A to present holders of that stock, for the consideration of twenty-five dollars per share to the extent of their dividends while at practically the same time they offer to sell and succeed in selling to all other classes of stockholders, or in the alternative to underwriting bankers, a much larger number of shares of the same kind of stock at forty-five dollars per share.

*126 The certificate of incorporation- confers upon the- directors-authority to issue the stock. The provision in the quoted language-concerning the necessity of consent on the part o'f two-thirds of its stockholders is therefore not involved in the case.

Nor is the general preemptive right of stockholders to sub-' scribe for stock involved in the consideration of the case. The complainants in their reply brief concede this. ■

Stock without nominal or par value, though not a new feature in corporate structures, has had a distinct revival in recent times: Until a few years ago, capital shares were almost invariably, if not entirely, associated in this country with the conception of a par value expressed in dollars. When the plan of issuing shares without noihinal or par value was adopted by this and other states, it was-certainly intended by the legislative authority to introduce intp the characteristics of such stock qualities which capital stock, in the theretofore existing conception of the term, did not possess. Our Superior Court in, State v. Benson, 32 Del. Rep. (2 W. W. Harr.) 576, 128 A. 107, observed-that “shares of n-o par stock represent aliquot or proportionate parts of the capital.”' This same statement might also be made of shares having a par value. What the Superior Court meant to emphasize by the quoted language doubtless was, not that no par shares were in the particular of proportionate ownership distinguishable from shares having a par, but that with respect to this feature the no par sharps on their face, unlike par value stock, contained no reference to a dollar value. Thus the holder of no par shares would see from the certificate itself that he was only an aliquot sharer in the assets of the corporation, whereas if the shares were of the par value type the holder might in looking at the dollar value be beguiled into the thought that what he had was shares of actual value equal at least to the par denomination in dollars. Upon the feature now being considered, the difference between stock of a par value and of no par value, upon analysis consists not in a difference with respect to a proportionate or aliquot share in the corporation’s assets and business, but in the fact that in the case of the latter this character of proportionate interest is not hiddén beneath a false appearance of a given sum in money. It is of course common knowledge that though a stock may have a par value of one hundred dollars, it may, because of its aliquot nature, be worth *127 that', or more, or less, dependent upon the value of the entire assets of the company. The frankness of no par value shares in claiming nothing more for themselves than an aliquot share of the assets without reference to a dollar value, is one of the things that has commended them to the favorable notice of their advocates. But this particular difference between the modem no par stock and its companion, the par value stock, is not of particular moment here.

Another difference between the two, which is more to the point in the instant case and of quite vital interest in considering the questions of law with which we are here concerned, has to do with the consideration which is required to be exacted by the'corporation for .the issuance of its stock. The introduction into our law of stock without par value has not of course resulted in allowing a different kind of consideration to be received for it from that which has heretofore been required for par value stock. In other words, whether the stock have a par value or none, it still remains true that—

“No corporation shall issue stock, except for money paid, labor done or personal property, or real estate or leases thereof actually acquired by such corporation.” Article IX, §3, Constitution of Delaware.

As to the kind or quality of consideration for which stock may be issued, no par stock is in exactly the same situation as is stock having a par value.

But upon the point of amount of consideration, there is a distinct and pronounced difference between the two. With respect to par value stock the law sets up a standard in dollars with which the consideration given must square itself. That standard is of course the par value of the shares issued. It is this feature of par stock which, more than the other one of lack of frankness above referred to, served doubtless to induce those interested in corporate activities to advocate the idea of stock without nominal or par value.

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 442, 15 Del. Ch. 119, 1926 Del. Ch. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bodell-v-general-gas-electric-corp-delch-1926.