Dratz v. Occidental Hotel Co.

39 N.W.2d 341, 325 Mich. 699, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 406
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1949
DocketDocket Nos. 51, 52, Calendar Nos. 44,451, 44,452.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 N.W.2d 341 (Dratz v. Occidental Hotel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dratz v. Occidental Hotel Co., 39 N.W.2d 341, 325 Mich. 699, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 406 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

North, J.

Plaintiffs or their assignors were holders of preferred stock in the Occidental Hotel Company, a Delaware corporation authorized to do business in Michigan. It owned and operated a hotel in Muskegon. It had no other business. In 1943, this corporation consolidated, with another Delaware corporation, and incident to such consolidation the rights of plaintiffs as holders of preferred stock were materially affected. The new Occidental Hotel Company assumed the liabilities and obligations of the original or óld Occidental Hotel Company. By their suits, which were transferred to the equity side of the court, plaintiffs seek redemption of their preferred stock and payment of past due accumulated dividends as of December 31,1940. The 2 suits were consolidated for trial and are here on a single record. After hearing on the merits decrees were entered in the circuit court dismissing plaintiffs’ bills of complaint. They have appealed.

The original Occidental Hotel Company in which plaintiffs or their assignors held preferred stock had *706 its principal office in Wilmington, Delaware. It operated its hotel in Muskegon at a loss prior to 1942. At the 1942 annual stockholders’ meeting the directors “were instructed to prepare a suitable plan for the reorganization of the financial structure of the company.” As part of the plan adopted for reorganization, the Occidental Hotel, Inc., with an authorized capital stock of $1,000 was incorporated under the Delaware law. The directors of this new corporation, which was a wholly owned subsidiary of the old corporation, and the directors of the original Occidental Hotel Company entered into an agreement for consolidation of the two corporate bodies. The details of the plan for reorganization were submitted at the stockholders’ annual meeting held in January, 1943. Thereafter and in April, 1943, a special meeting of the original Occidental Hotel Company stockholders was held for the purpose of ratifying or rejecting the proposed plan of consolidation. By the required statutory vote of the stockholders the plan was adopted; but the assignors of plaintiff Dratz voted against the adoption of the consolidation plan. At a stockholders’ meeting of the newly-organized Occidental Hotel, Inc., the plan of consolidation was also approved. It is agreed by counsel that the consolidation was perfected in compliance with the law of Delaware, which we quote in part:

“Sec. 59A. * * * The parent corporation (upon consolidation) shall be deemed to have assumed all the liabilities and obligations of the merged corporation, and shall be liable in the same manner as if it had itself incurred such liabilities and obligations.” 41 Del Laws (1937), ch 131, § 2.
“Sec. 61. If any stockholder in any corporation of this State consolidating or merging as aforesaid, who objected thereto in writing and whose shares were not voted in favor of such consolidation or *707 merger, and who filed such written objection with the corporation before the taking of the vote on such consolidation or merger, shall within 20 days after the date on which the agreement of consolidation or merger has been filed and recorded; as aforesaid, demand in writing, from the corporation resulting from or surviving such consolidation or merger, payment for his stock, such resulting or surviving corporation shall, within 30 days after the expiration of said period of 20 days, pay to him the value of his stock on the date of the recording of said agreement of consolidation or merger, exclusive of any element of value arising from the expectation or accomplishment of such consolidation or merger.” 44 Del Laws (1943), ch 125, § 6.

Appellants as stockholders in a corporation organized under Delaware law did not comply with the statute which requires that within the time limited demand be made in writing for payment of “the value of his stock.” Hence appellants are not entitled to recover under the quoted provision of the Delaware statute.

However, appellants do urge right of relief op a wholly different theory. They assert that their rights as preferred stockholders in the original Occidental Hotel Company, who did not consent to the consolidation, to have “their shares redeemed at the date fixed therefor” in the stock certificates were not “destroyed” by the merger or consolidation above noted. They state in their brief:

“The defendant became and is liable to redeem the shares of preferred stock of the original Occidental Hotel Company now standing in the names of the plaintiffs by paying to them the par value ($100 per share) thereof, and the amount of the accumulated unpaid dividends ($66.50 per share) thereon, with interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum from the date of the maturity (December 31, 1940) of the shares. * * * , . :
*708 “The right of á holder of preferred stock to have his shares redeemed at the date fixed by the certificate of stock is a valuable, vested property right which cannot be destroyed by a State statute authorizing the merger of corporations.”

On this phase of the controversy defendant’s brief .contains the following:

“Counsel for plaintiffs has argued at considerable length that ‘the right of a holder of preferred stock to have his shares redeemed at the date fixed by the certificate of stock is a valuable, vested property right which could not be destroyed by a State statute 'authorizing the merger of corporation.’ In making this contention counsel has entirely lost sight of the fact that both the articles of association of the original Occidental Hotel Company and the preferred .stock certificates of that company provided that ‘the preferred stock shall be subject to redemption at par on the 31st day of December, 1940.’ There can be no argument but that this language gave to the holder of the preferred stock the option to demand that his stock be redeemed at par plus any accumulated dividends on and after December 31, 1940, subject to the rights of existing creditors of the corporation. The corporation itself also had the right at that time to pay to the preferred stockholder the par value of his stock plus any accumulated dividends and to demand the surrender of such stock. Neither the stockholders involved in this case nor the corporation ever exercised such right.”

In view of the foregoing our decision herein must be made in the light of the assumption, as admitted by defendant both in its answer setting up an affirmative defense and in its brief, that as of December 31,1940, plaintiffs herein had the “option to demand” redemption at par value of their preferred stock holdings and payment of accumulated unpaid dividends at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum thereon, subject however to the rights of the corporation’s *709 creditors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.W.2d 341, 325 Mich. 699, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dratz-v-occidental-hotel-co-mich-1949.