Driver v. Producers Cooperative, Inc.

345 S.W.2d 16, 233 Ark. 334
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 1, 1961
Docket5-2215
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 345 S.W.2d 16 (Driver v. Producers Cooperative, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Driver v. Producers Cooperative, Inc., 345 S.W.2d 16, 233 Ark. 334 (Ark. 1961).

Opinion

George Rose Smith, J.

Producers Cooperative, Inc., is a farmers ’ association engaged principally in the operation of a cotton gin at Osceola. The three appellants were formerly members of the association and are now inactive preferred stockholders having a total investment of $29,444.08 in the association. They brought this suit against the association and its directors to compel the association to comply with its charter and by-laws (a) by paying dividends upon its preferred stock and (b) by establishing a revolving fund to be used for the retirement of preferred stock. After a protracted hearing upon the merits the chancellor dismissed the complaint, finding that in both matters complained of there had been no abuse of discretion upon the part of the directors. The correctness of that ruling is essentially the only issue upon appeal.

The co-op was organized in 1941 under the authority •of Act 116 of 1921. Ark. Stats. 1947, Title 77, Ch. 9. The •charter provides that membership is limited to persons actively engaged in farming. An applicant for membership is required to purchase one share of common stock, which has a par value of $10 and does not bear dividends. Bach member is entitled to one vote at any meeting of the stockholders. If a member becomes ineligible to remain in the association, as by ceasing to farm, the association is entitled to redeem his common stock. The co-op is authorized to do business with non-members, who share in the annual distribution of net earnings.

The charter provides for the issuance of preferred stock, which ‘ ‘ shall bear non-cumulative dividends not to exceed 5 per cent per annum, if earned and when declared by the board of directors; and such dividends shall have preference over any and all other dividends or distributions declared in any year.” The preferred stock is without voting rights, is redeemable at par, and has priority over the common stock in the distribution of the .assets upon a dissolution of the association.

Article X of the by-laws provides that after the close of each ginning season the directors shall have the books audited by a public accountant, whose report shall show the net earnings after all operating expenses (including depreciation) have been paid or provided for. The net earnings so determined shall then be distributed as follows:

(a) Not less than 10 per cent of the earnings shall be put in a general reserve until this fund equals 25 per cent of the outstanding capital accounts; thereafter the fund is to be maintained at that level.

(b) An amount not exceeding 5 per cent (as limited by the charter) of the outstanding preferred stock shall be set aside for the payment of dividends upon that stock. In the discretion of the directors these dividends may be paid by the issuance of additional preferred stock instead of in cash.

(c) The remaining net earnings shall be distributed to the patrons of the co-op, including non-members, in proportion to the amount of business done by the various patrons with the co-op during the fiscal year in question. In making this patronage distribution the association is to retain an amount equal to one dollar for each bale of cotton ginned during the season, and preferred stock is to be issued to each member for that part of his patronage so retained.

Article XI of the by-laws directs that after adequate capital has been provided for the association through amounts paid in and amounts retained from the patronage distribution, an amount of the oldest outstanding-preferred stock equal to the amount of new preferred stock issued during the year shall be redeemed or retired. Thus the effect of Article XI is to create a revolving fund for the retirement of preferred stock.

When the cooperative association was organized in 1941 it raised about $14,000, mostly by borrowing money, with which to buy a gin and begin business. In the early years the annual patronage distribution was sometimes made at least partly in the form of preferred stock. Apparently this procedure was adopted so that the co-op would have cash for working capital and for the payments upon its long-term debt. The appellants, who were then active members of the co-op, acquired their preferred stock holdings entirely through such distributions of stock in lieu of cash. In 1950, a year or two before the appellants ceased to be active members of the association, the practice of issuing preferred stock was discontinued. No such stock has been issued since that year. Almost two-thirds of the outstanding preferred stock (including recorded credits for which stock certificates have never been issued) is held by the appellant and by the appellee directors of the co-op.

In 1947 the association expanded its activities by constructing an alfalfa dehydrator. This venture proved to be a failure, as a blight curtailed the local production of alfalfa. In 1953 the manager of the co-op obtained from an attorney, James E. Hyatt, Jr., a written opinion as to the proper method of writing off the dehydrator loss, which had been kept separate from the ginning operations. In that opinion Hyatt discussed Article X of the by-laws, summarized above, and recommended that the association comply with it by setting up the general reserve and paying a small dividend upon the preferred stock before making the annual patronage distribution. The minutes reflect that the director considered Hyatt’s letter at their July meeting in 1953.

The directors did not follow Hyatt’s suggestion that Article X be complied with. Instead, beginning with the fiscal year ending April 30, 1954, the directors put into effect a method of distributing the annual net earnings that is the point of controversy in this case. The appellants contend that the new system discriminates against the preferred stockholders, in that no provision is made either for the payment of dividends upon that class of stock or for its retirement.

The profit sharing procedure challenged by the appellants is the subject of much testimony in the record. This evidence shows that when a farmer brings his cotton in to be ginned he pays the co-op a fee for its services in ginning and baling the cotton. The patron retains his ownership of the cotton itself, bnt the co-op purchases the cotton seed — a valuable by-product of the ginning process. It is shown by the weight of the evidence that the co-op’s fees for ginning and its payments for seed are fixed competitively and are substantially in line with the fees and payments of other gins in the vicinity of Osceola.

Most, if not all, of the gin’s profits come from its disposition of the cotton seed rather than from its service charges for ginning. This particular cooperative gin disposes of its cotton seed through another cooperative association, Osceola Products Company, which operates a cottonseed oil mill. Membership in the oil mill co-op is limited to ginners, who are required to own stock therein. The oil mill processes and sells the seed brought in by its members. At the close of its fiscal year, which ends June 30, the oil mill distributes its net profits among its members.

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Related

Producers Cooperative, Inc. v. Driver
401 S.W.2d 730 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1966)
Collie v. Little River Co-Op
370 S.W.2d 62 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
345 S.W.2d 16, 233 Ark. 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driver-v-producers-cooperative-inc-ark-1961.