Buckley v. Cuban American Sugar Co.

19 A.2d 820, 129 N.J. Eq. 322, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 52
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedAugust 1, 1940
DocketDocket 129/358
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 A.2d 820 (Buckley v. Cuban American Sugar Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckley v. Cuban American Sugar Co., 19 A.2d 820, 129 N.J. Eq. 322, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 52 (N.J. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

An order was issued requiring the defendant to show cause why its plan for recapitalization and an amendment of its certificate of incorporation should not be restrained.

The defendant company proposed amending its certificate of incorporation as follows:

"A. Increase the present capitalization from $20,000,000 to $35,110,170, divided as follows:

"1. 102,361 shares of 5 1/2% convertible preferred stock, par $100, to be issued only in exchange for the present 7% preferred stock.

"2. 78,938 shares of 7% preferred stock, par $100, which upon exchange for the 5 1/2% stock shall be canceled and not reissued.

"3. 1,698,027 shares of common stock, par value $10.

"B. The 7% preferred stock with the right to accumulated dividends in the amount of $54.50 per share is to be exchangeable for 1 4/10 shares of the 5 1/2% preferred stock and $14.50 in cash. *Page 323

"C. The 5 1/2% preferred stock, besides the change in dividend rate, will differ from the present 7% preferred stock in that (1) it can be redeemed by the company at a price of $115 per share, plus accrued or unpaid dividends thereon, and (2) it may be converted into common stock at the rate of 7 shares of common stock for 1 of preferred.

"D. No part of the dividends accrued to July 1st, 1940, on the 7% preferred stock can be paid until after dividends payable upon the 7% preferred stock and the 5 1/2% preferred stock accrued after July 1st, 1940, and for the current fiscal year have been paid or provided for."

It is the contention of the complainants that the defendant's plan of reorganization and amendment of its corporate certificate is inequitable, unfair and contrary to law, and that the object of the plan is to confiscate and take the property of complainants, who are preferred stockholders, and other preferred stockholders, for the benefit of the holders of the common stock; that the plan affects the vested rights of the complainants and preferred stockholders, and reduces the value of their shares and their proportionate interest in the assets of the defendant company, in the past earnings thereof and in its future earnings.

The complainants allege that the plan and amendments "violate, and impair the obligations of the contract between the complainants and the other stockholders of the defendant, as expressed in the terms and provisions of its certificate of incorporation, and in the terms and provisions of the certificates of said preferred stock owned by the complainants."

The plan proposes to pay the sum of $14.50 in cash, to only the 7% preferred stockholders who convert their present stock into the "new 5 1/2% preferred stock." No payment is made in cash to the 7% preferred stockholders who do not convert their shares into the 5 1/2% preferred stock. That feature of the plan, as well as other features of the plan, complainants say "are designed, without warrant in law or equity, to force the 7% preferred stockholders to convert their stock into the 5 1/2% preferred stock."

Complainants say "that by other provisions of the plan, such as the amount of dividends which will thereafter be payable upon the shares issued in exchange, the sum which *Page 324 would be chargeable against the surplus or accumulated profits of the defendant company in the event of the redemption of the 5 1/2% convertible preferred stock at $115 per share, as well as by other features of the plan, the rights of the preferred stockholders under their contract and in and to the accumulated surplus and net profits of the defendant company will be unlawfully affected to their detriment." It is further alleged that the defendant company has consistently failed "to declare dividends upon the preferred stock when its financial condition was such that it could readily have done so" and that the "financial condition of the company is such that a dividend should now be paid on account of the accumulated dividends due on the preferred stock of the defendant company, and that no bonafide reason exists from the point of view of the defendant company why such dividend should not be declared and actually paid at this time."

The defendant company was organized in 1906. It has outstanding 73,115 shares of 7% cumulative preferred stock, having a par value of $100 per share. Upon these shares there are arrears of dividends in the amount of $54.50 per share, or a total arrearage of $3,984,767.50. There are 981,500 shares of common stock outstanding of a par value of $10 per share, or a total common capital stock of a par value of $9,815,000.

As of September 30th, 1939, the defendant company had current assets of $12,904,614.74. Included in these assets were cash and marketable securities to the extent of $3,697,000. The current liabilities, as of the same date, were less than $1,100,000. Thus, the complainants say, its current assets alone exceeded the entire amount due on the preferred stock, both its par and accrued dividends. The earned surplus of the company, as of the same date, was $16,403,778.81.

Under the provisions of the defendant company's charter, the 7% cumulative preferred stock is not redeemable.

The complainants take the position that the preferred stockholders have a vested right to at least the extent of their dividend arrears as against the earned surplus of the defendant company which is in excess of $16,000,000. They contend *Page 325 that the board of directors of the defendant company are chiefly and principally interested in the common stock, because of the fact that such stock in days of prosperity profits more from the distribution of earnings than does the preferred stock. They admit that the directors also hold preferred stock, but that the principal source of profit is largely derived from the common stock holdings.

The complainants insinuate that it is the settled design of the defendant's board of directors "to get rid of the preferred stock arrearages with as little cash as possible, and to force the stockholders to give up their non-redeemable stock for a stock redeemable at the option of the company." Outwater v. PublicService Corp., 103 N.J. Eq. 461; 143 Atl. Rep. 729; affirmed,104 N.J. Eq. 490; 146 Atl. Rep. 916.

To the assenting shareholders, the defendant company offers $14.50 per share, but no such allowance is made to the non-assenting shareholders. Such allowance discharges an equal amount of dividend arrearages, which is, in effect, a charge against the surplus in which the preferred stockholders have vested rights. As to the allowance of $14.50 per share, the complainants argue that it is at once obvious that the plan interferes with the present vested rights of the 7% preferred stockholders in the earned surplus of over $16,000,000 in the following respects:

"(1) The surplus is reduced by the amount of money needed to pay $14.50 per share to the assenting stockholders. The non-assenting stockholders receive nothing on account of their proportionate vested right in the surplus funds.

"(2) The 7% preferred stock, as far as its arrears of dividends are concerned, is made subject to the dividends in the future on the new preferred stock, and the 7% preferred stock. The dividends upon the 1.4 shares of new stock issued for each share of the old stock, will amount in each year to $7.70 per share. Hence, there will be a greater accumulating dividend charge as against the non-assenting preferred stockholders than they have heretofore been subjected to.

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Bluebook (online)
19 A.2d 820, 129 N.J. Eq. 322, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckley-v-cuban-american-sugar-co-njsuperctappdiv-1940.