Engelhardt v. Hermitage Bldg. Corp.

100 F.2d 597, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2717
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 13, 1938
DocketNo. 6624
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 100 F.2d 597 (Engelhardt v. Hermitage Bldg. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engelhardt v. Hermitage Bldg. Corp., 100 F.2d 597, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2717 (7th Cir. 1938).

Opinion

SPARKS, Circuit Judge.

In this appeal it is sought to reverse an injunctive order of the District Court, growing out of a reorganization proceeding under section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 207. The order restrained appellant, as an original common stockholder of the debtor, from instituting or prosecuting any action in any court against the debtor based or founded upon appellant’s stock, and from enforcing in any manner any right or power arising out of the terms of the approved plan of reorganization, without first obtaining permission of the District Court.

The debtor filed its petition for reorganization under section 77B on September 18, 1934, and filed its proposed plan on December 12, 1934, which was confirmed on February 25, 1935. By its terms the debt- or’s capital stock was to be changed from 250 shares of common stock, each having a par value of $100, to 945 shares, divided into two classes consisting of 250 shares, no par value, of common stock, and 695 shares of preferred stock, each having a [598]*598par value of $100. The preferred holders, who were the original bondholders, were to receive, when declared by the directors, non-cumulative dividends at the rate of five dollars per annum, and upon dissolution of the corporation, whether voluntary or involúntary, they were to receive $100 per share. The bonds and trust deed securing them were to be cancelled, and one share of the preferred stock issued for each $100 par value of the bonds. The common stock was to be held in the treasury of the corporation, and delivered to the holders of the old common stock at any time within five years from the effective date for the creation of the preferred stock, provided all the preferred stock should have been retired or redeemed.

The plan further provided that H. L. Patterson, one of the holders of the old common stock, should be a director of the corporation for five years, and the holders of the preferred stock agreed to vote for. his election and re-elect him as such director during that period. The plan also provided that the debtor’s articles of incorporation should be amended to incorporate all the changes set forth in the plan.

By amendment of the plan on December 21, 1936, the preferred shares, by agreement, were increased in number to 701. On April 20, 1937, there was a proposal, adopted on May 12, 1937, to further amend the plan by reducing the preferred shares to $70 per share, in order to create a paid in surplus of $30 per preferred share, and it was further provided that new common stock be issued in exchange for the old common stock, share for share, and should be endorsed in blank by the person or persons to whom issued, .and held in the debtor’s treasury to be delivered to the person or persons who should be entitled to its delivery at any time within five years from May 23, 1935, provided that all the preferred stock should have been retired or redeemed; and if not so retired or redeemed, the common stock should be cancelled. It was clearly stated that the dividends on the preferred shares should be paid out of the earnings of the debtor.

The final decree was entered on June 4, 1937, by the terms of which the plan as amended was declared to have been carried out, the reorganization proceedings closed and terminated, and the debtor and its assets were released from the jurisdiction of the court.' The decree, however, enjoined all the owners of the old common stock from instituting any actions at law or in equity in any court, based on such stock or any interest therein, or from enforcing any right or power arising by reason of the ownership of such stock, inconsistent with the provisions of the approved plan.

On February 25, 1938, appellant filed his intervening petition in the reorganization proceedings, in the same court and before-the same district judge who had entered the final-decree on June 4, 1937. From this petition it appears that at the inception of the reorganization proceedings appellant owned 46 shares of the original common stock of the debtor; that in July 1937 he, with other holders of the debtor’s original common stock, surrendered his old stock certificates to the debtor, and became entitled to certificates for a like number of shares of the new common stock of the reorganized debtor, but that they were never issued; that on January 11, 1938, appellant with two other original common stockholders, named E. A. Nowak and H. L. Patterson, filed a stockholders’ bill in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, against A. H. Eich and W. R. Windsor, directors of the debt- or, to compel the issuance of the new common stock in accordance with the provisions of the amended reorganization plan, and for the restitution to the debtor of dividends alleged to have been illegally declared and paid by the defendant directors in violation of the amended plan and of the Illinois Statutes. The defending directors moved to strike the bill on the ground that such plaintiffs were not stockholders as contemplated by the plan; that if they were entitled to the relief sought, their remedy was by petition to the District Court; and that the state court proceedings were barred by the injunctive order in the bankruptcy decree. Thereupon the state circuit court directed appellant and his co-plaintiffs to present the matter to the District Court for instructions upon the following two questions: (1) Does the District Court of the United States have jurisdiction of the matters raised in the suit to the exclusion of the state court? (2) Are the plaintiffs in the suit stockholders of the Hermitage Building Corporation? Appellant’s intervening petition here was filed pursuant to that direction of the state court.

In appellee’s answer to appellant’s intervening petition it is admitted that cer[599]*599tificates for a total of 239 shares of the original common stock were surrendered to the debtor, whereas, according to the plan 250 shares should have been surrendered; that it was ready and willing to issue common stock in accordance with the plan, that is to say, it was to be endorsed in blank and turned over to the debtor by the persons in whose names it was to be issued. The answer further alleges that both the plan and the Statute of Illinois contemplate and provide that the shares of common stock thus endorsed and held in the debtor’s treasury, are in effect treasury stock, and are not entitled to be voted. Hence it says that the endorsers are not stockholders of the debtor. The answer denied that appellant was entitled to any relief other than to have issued to him a certificate for 46 shares of the present stock, which he should immediately endorse in blank and surrender to the debtor, in accordance with the plan. The answer asked for a finding and order that appellant was not a stockholder, but that he merely had a right, with the other holders of the old common stock, to acquire the new common stock upon redeeming the new preferred stock according to the terms of the approved plan.

After a hearing the court, on March 30, 1938, found that it had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties; that the persons entitled to acquire the new common stock were not entitled to vote it until they acquire it by redeeming or retiring the new preferred stock.

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Bluebook (online)
100 F.2d 597, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engelhardt-v-hermitage-bldg-corp-ca7-1938.