Carver v. Southern Iron & Steel Co.

78 A. 240, 78 N.J. Eq. 81, 8 Buchanan 81, 1910 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 31, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 78 A. 240 (Carver v. Southern Iron & Steel 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
Carver v. Southern Iron & Steel Co., 78 A. 240, 78 N.J. Eq. 81, 8 Buchanan 81, 1910 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13 (N.J. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Garrison, V. C.

This is an application upon a bill and affidavits for an injunction to prevent the defendant corporation from increasing its authorized capital stock and providing for a new issue of preferred capital stock, and selling or disposing of such new stock at less than par. From the bill and the proofs accompanying the same it appeared that the complainant was a stockholder of the defendant corporation; that the defendant corporation was seeking authority from the stockholders to carry out a contemplated [83]*83scheme according to which it should issue $1,200,000 of debenture bonds to be sold at ninety-three, with a provision that they might be 'converted, at .the option of the holder, into preferred stock of the defendant corporation at seventy cents 'on the dollar of the par of the stock.

The purpose, as stated in the call for' the meeting and the accompanying papers, was to sell the $1,200,000' of debentures'at ninety-three, and' to deposit, with a trust company, preferred stock in something over the amount of $1,700,000 par value so as to insure the holders of the debentures that they might convert the same, by applying to this trustee, into preferred stock at •seventy cents on the dollar of its par.

Since the company stated that i't had ten thousand shares, or 4>1,000,000 par value of such preferred 'stock “available,” it ■sought authority from the stockholders to increase the authorized capital of the company so that the necessary seven hundred and odd thousand dollars worth of preferred stock needed for the ■scheme aforesaid could be obtained.

There can be no question, and it reqúires no'citation of authority, that a New Jersey corporation cannot lawfully issue debentures to be sold at ninety-three, the holders of which shall have the privilege of obtaining from the company its preferred ■stock at seventy per cent, of its par, if the scheme contemplates the issuing of stock of the company at less than par. Such a •claim would be directly in the face of the statute which' requires that stock shall be fully paid for, either in property or in' cash. 'The complainant, therefore, upon the showing made by'the bill .and affidavits, was clearly entitled to a preliminary injunction ■restraining the corporation from practically issuing its stock 'at •seventy cents on the dollar.

The defendant, by answering affidavits and proofs, puts a different phase upon' the matter. It insists' that it is not seeking to increase its authorized capital so as to provide stock'to be sold at seventy cents on the dollar, and sets forth an extended explanation. Generally stated, the defendant’s position is this: The Southern Iron and Steel Company is a New Jersey corporation ■which was caused tó be formed by the reorganization committee •of the Southern Steel Company. This latter company became [84]*84bankrupt and a reorganization committee was formed to take care of the various lien security and stockholders, and a plan and agreement of reorganization was proposed and entered into. This complainant became a party to such agreement and' plan. Under the plan, property which belonged to the Southern Steel Company was purchased at the bankrupt sale on behalf of the committee, and was transferred by the committee, or its agent, to the new company which it caused to be -formed, namely, this defendant corporation; that, in pursuance of the plan and in consideration of the transfer, the defendant corporation issued to the committee its bonds, preferred and common stocks, in the amounts provided for in the plan; that the committee has expended moneys for and on behalf of the new company in excess of those which the plan and agreement provided that it should expend, and that the amount of such expenditures, in excess of the amounts provided in the agreement, equals $755,000; that out of the stock issued by the defendant corporation to the committee under the reorganization agreement there are ten thousand shares of preferred stock which the committee has available for the purposes of its trust; that the new company (the defendant corporation) is in need of additional moneys to properly carry on its business; that the contemplated scheme is this: The defendant corporation is to authorize the issue of $1,200,000 debentures, to be sold at ninety-three cents on the dollar; it is to increase its authorized capital stock and create a new issue of preferred stock, and issue to the committee, in payment of the debt due by it to the committee, something in excess of seven thousand shares, or $700,000 worth of such new stock. The committee has already placed the ten thousand shares of preferred stock which it had in its possession and is to place the additional seven thousand, shares of such stock with a trust company, to insure to the holders of the debentures the ability to receive preferred stock in exchange for their debentures at seventy per cent, of the par value of such preferred stock. The committee is to cancel its indebtedness against the new company, the defendant corporation.

The argument of the defendant upon this assumed state of facts is that, as to the ten thousand shares which are issued and [85]*85outstanding, they belonged to the committee for the purposes of their trust, and, in accordance with the terms of the latter, they may be pledged, or sold, or otherwise dealt with by the committee at such price and in such manner as to it seems fit, and that the committee therefore has perfect power, if it sees fit, to use such stock as an aid to selling the debentures; that the new stock is to be issued to the committee in payment of a debt due by the new company to the committee; that there is nothing to prevent a New Jersey corporation, with the assent of the majority of its stockholders, from increasing its authorized capital stock for a legitimate purpose; and that the payment of a debt by the issuance of stock at par therefor is legitimate and cannot be attacked by a stockholder.

The defendant vigorously insists that since the reorganization committee is not a party defendant, the complainant may not question its acts, and must make out a case wholly without reference to its conduct.

I do not think that this objection should have the result which the defendant contends for. As previously pointed out herein, the complainant’s ease on her bill would result in her obtaining the relief sought.

The call for the meeting and the accompanying papers, if taken to mean just what they say, disclosed a scheme in direct opposition to our Corporation act, and one that the court would not permit to be carried out in the face of objection by a stockholder. The defendant perceived this, and by its affidavits and other proofs and by its argument sought to show that it was not intending to issue the stock and dispose of it at less than par.

It is the defendant which seeks to justify its action, who brings in the reorganization committee, the agreement, and the facts with respect thereto. Unless, therefore, the defendant succeeds in justifying its conduct by reason of the relationship between the company and the reorganization committee, the complainant must prevail.

The defendant contends, and it may be true, that the reorganization committee is a separate entity from the defendant corporation, and that in an action against one the rights of the other [86]*86may not be adjudicated. I shall not stop to cite or analyze the cases which the defendant refers to under this head.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 A. 240, 78 N.J. Eq. 81, 8 Buchanan 81, 1910 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carver-v-southern-iron-steel-co-njch-1910.