Dana v. American Tobacco Co.

65 A. 730, 72 N.J. Eq. 44, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 153
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 A. 730 (Dana 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
Dana v. American Tobacco Co., 65 A. 730, 72 N.J. Eq. 44, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 153 (N.J. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Pitney, Y. C.

This bill is almost identical in frame and prayer with that of Beling v. American Tobacco Company, just decided.

The certificate of preferred stock held by the complainant was issued to his intestate in 189-2 and the intestate died in 1904. The stock ivas never transferred.

The prayer of the bill, though varying somewhat in verbiage from that in the Beling Case, is in substance the same. It prays that the merger agreement and the merger itself, in all its aspects, may be held to be void as against the complainant; that the lien of the mortgage made by the new company to the Morton Trust Company may be removed from the property of the American Tobacco Company and be declared null and void as a lien thereon, so far as regards the rights of the complainant; that there may be an ascertainment of the specific items of real and personal estate and other assets owned by the original company al the time of the merger, and that the same may be separated from the property of the merged corporation and be redelivered to the officers and directors of the American Tobacco Company; [46]*46that there may be an ascertainment of the loss by reason of the merger, and that the stockholders of the original company who are made parties to the bill may be made liable therefor and charged therewith by the decree of this court, and that the court will-issue a mandatory injunction to compel performance of its decree, and that the merged corporation may account for all the profits, income, properties and moneys derived by it from the assets of the original corporation, and for other relief.

The defendants’ answer is much the same as the answer to the Beling bill.

At the hearing a large amount of evidence was taken verifying-in detail the allegations of the answer, which were admitted by the complainant in the Beling Case.

It was further proven that most of the few stockholders who had voted against the merger agreement had come in and accepted the terms of that agreement.

With regard to the attitude of the complainant and his conduct, the case differs from that of Beling. The complainant’s father died in January, 1904, and complainant took out letters of administration, and about the 1st of June complainant wrote a letter to the company stating that he was about to leave for Europe, to be gone during the summer, and wished his dividends put to his credit in a bank which he named. This letter at its head stated Ms business address at an office which he occupied in New York City. But the complainant did not have Ms stock transferred to Ms name. It consisted of two certificates of $5,000 each, and he contented himself with handing over one of those certificates to his brother, who was, besides his mother, the sole nest of kin.

No entry having been made upon the stock ledger of this change of ownership and address, the notice of the meeting and the copy of the contract of merger were sent to the residential address of his late father in New York City, which, at the time, September 9th, that they were sent, was in the hands of a caretaker. The widow, who was also a stockholder, and who resided there, was, at that time, still stopping at her country place in the Berkshires.

Affirmative proof was given tending to show that for some [47]*47unexplained reason neither the notice to the complainant’s intestate nor to his widow was ever actually received.

The complainant returned from Europe on the evening of October 5th, entirely ignorant of what had taken place in his absence, but after attending to his own private affairs and business, which occupied a few weeks, he seems to have bethought himself of his dividends on the tobacco stock, and applied to the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, the transfer agent, on or about the 10th day of November, and then and there learned that the company was no longer in existence, and very shortly— two or three days afterwards—received copies of the merger agreement which contained all the particulars. He had, however, some fews days or weeks before that, heard indefinite rumors of some change in the organization or management of the company. He immediately consulted his New York counsel and with him alone undertook to study the situation and his rights. He also interviewed counsel of the tobacco company and correspondence ensued running over into January, 1905, and early in that month he served a written protest on the company, which was the first that he had made a definite declaration of his position.

In the meantime the transactions provided for in the agreement of merger had been carried through by the surrender of the original certificates of stock and bonds and the issuing in place thereof, as usual in such cases, temporary negotiable certificates to be delivered to the trustees when the permanent securities had been engraved, prepared and signed to be exchanged therefor. The complainant’s protest reached the company before the actual exchange for temporary certificates for permanent securities had taken place, but in the meantime those temporary certificates had become an article of mercantile dealing.

Now, under these circumstances, each party charges the other with negligence and laches. The defendants charge the complainant with laches in not having the certificate of stock formally transferred to him, and giving his address to be entered on the stock ledger, and next in that, upon receipt of a copy of the merger agreement and being informed, as he was, that the merger had been or was being consummated, and [48]*48being aware, as he must have been, that changes were daily taking place in the situation, both of the business conditions of the new company and in the ownership of the securities issued by it, he did not immediately take advice of counsel learned in New Jersey law as to1 his rights and remedies thereon.

On the other hand, the complainant complains that the defendants ought, on the receipt of his letter asking them to have his dividends put to his credit in the bank, to have made such memorandum of it as would have resulted in the notice of the meeting of September 30th being sent to his business address, in which case he claims it would have reached him at that address in New York City.

The defendants’ reply to that is that that letter referred wholly to dividends and did not at all call their attention to his business address but to the address of his bank, the former appearing only in print at the head of the letter, and hence that it was misleading. I find by examining the correspondence that it does seem to have misled them; and they farther claim that the regular course of business and the terms of the statute require them to send the notice to the party in whose name the stock stands on the books of the corporation, and that they were not justified or required to change the address upon an implied notice of that sort.

I am inclined to think that the defendants’ position is sound, and that the complainant’s duty was either to have the stock transferred on the books of the company or to have given them distinct notice that any notice sent to him as a stockholder should be sent to a certain address. But the evidence leaves me in doubt whether he would have' received the notice under any circumstances.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 A. 730, 72 N.J. Eq. 44, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dana-v-american-tobacco-co-njch-1907.