Eisenberg v. Central Zone Property Corp.

115 N.E.2d 652, 306 N.Y. 58
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 22, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 115 N.E.2d 652 (Eisenberg v. Central Zone Property Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eisenberg v. Central Zone Property Corp., 115 N.E.2d 652, 306 N.Y. 58 (N.Y. 1953).

Opinions

Conway, J.

The plaintiff more than twenty years ago purchased at public offering one $500 bond secured by a mortgage upon land and a building on East 45th Street in New York City. Difficulties arose during the depression period followed by the formation of a bondholder’s protective committee, reorganization, the issuance to plaintiff of five new bonds plus five shares of stock represented by voting trust certificates in a new New York corporation then organized and known as Central Zone Property Corporation (hereinafter referred to as New York Corporation). The plaintiff retained the new bonds then issued and with the passage of years they have been paid in full. He has also retained his five shares of stock. The questions presented here have to do with those five shares of stock.

[63]*63The assets of New York Corporation consist in the main of the land and building on East 45th Street and it is claimed they have a market value of approximately $3,000,000 subject to a mortgage of $1,440,000. There is thus an equity for the stockholders of more than $1,000,000 and the gross receipts from the building have increased progressively between 1945 and 1951.

In March of 1952, the security holders in New York Corporation received a letter to stockholders and voting trust certificate holders and a notice of special meeting. Some had not exchanged their voting trust certificates received on the reorganization in the depression period but were to be permitted to vote as though they had exchanged them for stock certificates. Those owning the totality of stock certificates and voting trust certificates will be referred to hereafter (as they are sometimes in the record) as stockholders. The letter advised that the principal stockholders had considered the feasibility of an arrangement which would enable the stockholders as a group to realize a return on their stock. It is believed that a better price can be obtained for all the shares of stock if they could be sold and delivered as a unit.” Accordingly, said the letter, there had been formulated an outlined plan which would make it possible to sell all the stock of the Corporation [New York Corporation] as a unit when a satisfactory offer is obtained ”. (Emphasis supplied.) The unit sale of stock in New York Corporation was the end to be accomplished by the outlined plan. This purpose required a transfer of all the assets of New York Corporation and then the succeeding steps in the plan to the end that plaintiff would be compelled to join in a unit sale, or as an alternative, to seek an appraisal and cease to be a stockholder. That which was to be accomplished was to take unlawfully from the plaintiff many of his stockholder rights and to impose restrictions upon him never contemplated by any of our statutes. Toward the end of the letter there was a statement that counsel for New York Corporation had obtained a ruling from the Bureau of Internal Revenue that the consummation of the plan would ; not result in taxable gain or deductible loss to New York Corporation, to a Delaware corporation to be formed or to [64]*64the shareholders of the corporation. That was for the reason, as we are informed in the letter to the stockholders and respondent’s brief, the only design and effect to be accomplished was a dissolution, distribution and liquidation of the New York Corporation and its assets.

The plan as set forth also in the notice of the special meeting of stockholders involved the following steps:

1. The transfer of all assets of New York Corporation to a Delaware corporation to be formed, with an identical capital structure, in exchange for the assumption by the corporation thus to be formed, of the liabilities of New York Corporation and the issuance to New York Corporation of all of the authorized capital stock of the Delaware Corporation (as it will hereafter be called). The Delaware Corporation was to have no othei assets on formation.

2. The deposit by New York Corporation of all the shares of stock of the Delaware Corporation when received, in a voting trust to be formed, of which two named directors of New York Corporation and a third named stockholder would be voting trustees pursuant to a voting trust agreement which would confer upon the Voting Trustees the right to elect directors ” and would also contain, in effect, provisions authorizing the voting trustees “ to sell all of the deposited stock * * * a,s a unit for such consideration in money, notes, mortgages, leases, securities, or otherwise, as they may deem advisable ” provided that the sale was consented to by the holders of voting* trust certificates (there would in fact be only one voting trust certificate holder initially — New York Corporation since it was the sole stockholder of the Delaware Corporation and sole owner of the deposited stock — and whether the voting trust certificates of Delaware Corporation stock were to pass to stockholders of New York Corporation by affirmative exchange by stockholders or by operation of law upon dissolution of New York Corporation is in dispute, as we shall later see) representing at least 66%% of the deposited shares of stock aiidthat there 'was not written objection by 20% or more of such holders within thirty days after the giving of written notice of the terms of the proposed sale. (Emphasis supplied.) Then followed this proposed term of [65]*65the voting trust agreement: ‘1 The terms of any proposed sale [of the deposited stock] may include an agreement by the purchaser of the stock to have the real property owned by the Delaware Corporation leased to a new corporation to be organised by the Voting Trustees, and in such case the Voting Trustees may organize a new corporation to act as lessee and may lend or contribute to it such part of any net cash proceeds of the sale which may in their judgment be required by such new corporation.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Other terms of the proposed voting trust agreement are not material at this point.

3. The amendment of the certificate of incorporation of the New York Corporation to authorize the transactions set forth in the notice of special meeting.

4. The dissolution of the New York Corporation “ upon the consummation of the foregoing proposals ” and the distribution to each stockholder of the New York Corporation in exchange for his stock (or equivalent security) of a voting trust certificate representing the same number of shares of stock of the Delaware Corporation as are owned by such stockholder in the New York Corporation. (Emphasis supplied.) The brief of the respondent asserts, thus differing from the notice of special meeting to stockholders, that the distribution of the voting trust certificates will be acquired by New York Corporation stockholders only by operation of law upon the dissolution of New York Corporation rather than from affirmative distribution of voting trust certificates in exchange for stock of New York Corporation since the individual stockholders of New York Corporation were never holders of the Delaware Corporation stock which was transferred to the voting trustees.

In other words New York Corporation, under the plan, was X to transfer its assets to Delaware Corporation in exchange for 100% of Delaware Corporation stock, and was to trustee that stock in a voting trust, receiving voting certificates for it.

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Bluebook (online)
115 N.E.2d 652, 306 N.Y. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eisenberg-v-central-zone-property-corp-ny-1953.