Echols v. Graham

182 S.E.2d 69, 256 S.C. 202, 1971 S.C. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 8, 1971
Docket19229
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 182 S.E.2d 69 (Echols v. Graham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Echols v. Graham, 182 S.E.2d 69, 256 S.C. 202, 1971 S.C. LEXIS 289 (S.C. 1971).

Opinions

Littlejohn, Justice:

This action was brought under the Uniform Declaratory-Judgment Act (Section 10-2001 et seq., S. C. Code, 1962) to determine the rights of the parties under three documents, (1) a stock purchase agreement dated May 3, 1962, among certain stockholders of The Greenville News-Piedmont Company, a corporation (Now Multimedia, Inc.), (2) the Will of Roger Craft Peace, deceased, dated September 1, 1966, with Codicils dated November 28, 1967 and August 16, 1968, and (3) the Will of Frances P. Graham, deceased, dated November 5, 1964.

This appeal, from a portion of the decree of Honorable Frank Eppes, is by the guardian ad litem for the named minor defendants, individually and in their respective rep[205]*205resentative capacities, and the guardian ad litem for all minor defendants, known or unknown, born or unborn, and all persons under legal disability. No other parties have appealed.

From 1927 until January 1, 1968, The Greenville News-Piedmont Company was a South Carolina corporation with 1000 shares of common stock outstanding. That corporation was closely held by the Peace family. Only 136 of its 1000 outstanding shares were held by outsiders.

On May 3, 1962 certain members of the Peace family, including Frances Peace Graham and Roger C. Peace (whose Wills are in question here), entered into a stock purchase agreement contracting not to sell their stock to outsiders without first offering it to members of the Peace family.

This family agreement was binding until July 1, 2000, but would terminate prior to that time upon either bankruptcy, or insolvency, or receivership, or merger, or dissolution, or upon the consent of Peace stockholders owning 677 of the 1000 outstanding shares.

On August 9, 1967, the officers and directors of the Greenville News-Piedmont Company, and of The Asheville Citizen-Times Publishing Company, and of Southeastern Broadcasting Corporation, entered into an agreement of merger of the three corporations. The merger was approved by the requisite vote of the stockholders of each of the three corporations at a meeting held on September 15, 1967. At that time all the “Peace Stockholders” who had signed the stock purchase agreement on May 3, 1962 were in being and all of them were present in person or by proxy at the stockholders meeting.

According to its own terms, the family agreement terminated on January 1, 1968, the effective date of the corporate merger. The surviving corporation became known as “Multimedia, Inc.,” and its corporate purposes were substantially expanded and different in nature.

[206]*206About five weeks before the effective date of the merger, on November 19, 1967, Frances Peace Graham, one of the “Peace Stockholders” who signed the family agreement, died testate, leaving of force her Last Will and Testament dated November 5, 1964. Item X of her Will reads in pertinent part:

“Anything in any item of this my Last Will and Testament to the contrary notwithstanding, I will and direct that all or any part of my stock in Greenville News-Piedmont Company shall be held by my Executors and Trustee subject to the provisions of the Stock Purchase Agreement among the members of the Peace Family dated May 3, 1962.”

After execution of the family agreement, Roger C. Peace, another of the signators, executed his Last Will and Testament on September 1, 1966. Paragraph X of his original Will contained substantially the same provision as Paragraph X of his sister’s Will, with reference to sale of their stock. Plowever, on August 16, 1968, after the merger, he executed a codicil to his Will, specifically providing that any reference in his Will to the Greenville News-Piedmont Company should be construed to mean Multimedia, Inc., expressing a clear intention to restrict the sale of his stock even though the family agreement itself had clearly terminated by reason of the merger (seven months previously on January 1, 1968).

In the spring and summer of 1969 the corporation filed a Registration Statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission for the purpose of making a primary public sale offering; also, the Roger C. Peace and Frances Peace Graham estates had under consideration a secondary offering of a portion of their shares to the public for the purpose of raising funds to pay state and federal estate taxes. It was at this point that the question of the applicabiliy of the provisions of the family agreement and the restrictive provisions of the Frances P. Graham and Roger C. Peace Wills arose. This declaratory judgment action followed.

[207]*207The lower court construed Item X (quoted above) of Mrs. Graham’s Will inapplicable to stock in Multimedia, Inc. The court further held that the codicil to Roger C. Peace’s Will (executed after the merger) applied and restricted the sale of his stock.

We must determine first whether the references in the Will of Frances P. Graham to Greenville News-Piedmont Company stock applies to Multimedia, Inc. stock now owned by her estate. The cardinal rule in the construction of any Will is to determine the intent of the testator as gleaned from the written instrument itself; technical rules of interpretation are subservient to that principle. South Carolina National Bank of Charleston (Greenville, S. C.) v. Arrington, 252 S. C. 1, 165 S. E. (2d) 77 (1968).

At the time Frances Peace Graham executed her Will in 1964, the family stock purchase agreement had been effective for two years. Obviously no merger was contemplated at that time; Item X of her Will was inserted in an effort to give effectiveness to and assure compliance with the family agreement. All signers of the family agreement were released from the terms of the agreement upon completion of the merger. The appellants are asking this court to hold that she intended for her stock in the new corporation to be controlled by the agreement even though the stock of several of the other members of the family is no longer bound. This is not a case wherein a new corporation is merely a substitute for the old corporation such that ownership of stock in the one is basically equivalent to ownership of stock in the other. The Greenville News-Piedmont Company had 27 stockholders; Multimedia, Inc. has more than 400 stockholders. The Greenville News-Piedmont Company primarily published newspapers in Greenville, South Carolina; Multimedia, Inc. publishes newspapers in Greenville, and Asheville, North Carolina, and in Montgomery and Prattville, Alabama; it operates a trucking company, a film distribution service, an engraving [208]*208business, a public printing concern, a picture studio, television stations and radio stations, in several states. The stock in Multimedia, Inc. represents substantially different property interests from that represented by stock in the Greenville News-Piedmont Company. We hold that Item X quoted above imposes no restrictions on the Multimedia, Inc. stock owned by the Frances P. Graham estate. The exception contending otherwise is without merit.

We have indicated above that, prior to the merger, Roger C. Peace and Frances Peace Graham executed Wills with similar provisions designed to perpetuate the family purchase agreement of 1962. Several months after the merger was completed (August 16, 1968), Roger C. Peace executed a codicil to his Will.

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Echols v. Graham
182 S.E.2d 69 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.E.2d 69, 256 S.C. 202, 1971 S.C. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/echols-v-graham-sc-1971.