Farmers Loan & Trust Co. v. Hewitt

118 A. 267, 94 N.J. Eq. 65, 9 Stock. 65, 1922 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 43
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 2, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 118 A. 267 (Farmers Loan & Trust Co. v. Hewitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Loan & Trust Co. v. Hewitt, 118 A. 267, 94 N.J. Eq. 65, 9 Stock. 65, 1922 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 43 (N.J. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Backes, V. C.

This is a stockholders’ bill to restrain corporate action, and the motion is for a preliminary injunction.

The Ringwood Company was formed in 1905 by Mrs. Sarah A. Hewitt, widow of Abraham S. Hewitt, for the more convenient management of her vast estate in the town of Ringwood and vicinity, in the Greenwood lake section of the state, and for the accommodation of her testamentary disposition. The capital stock is $6,000, divided into six hundred shares, par $10. Mrs. Hewitt conveyed to the corporation her lands in this state and also stocks and securities of other corporations. She died in 1921, and by her last will and [67]*67testament devised and bequeathed to the company all her estate not therein otherwise disposed of, and then bequeathed to each of her six children one-sixth, or one hundred shares, of the capital stock of the comany—to five of them outright, and to one, Edward R. Hewitt, in trust, for his life, with remainder to his issue. As a result of an agreement entered into by the children, in October following, the will was admitted to probate; stocks and securities bequeathed to the children by their mother were transferred to the company; the directors were increased from three to six, and each child’s interest was given a representation on the board. The company’s assets at that time were estimated at $9,000,000. In November following, the company divided a million and a half of securities among the children, and the following April another million and a half of stocks and securities was distributed. In the latter month the company assumed all the obligations of the estate of Mrs. Hewitt, and her executors were discharged. Peter Cooper Hewitt, one of the sons, died in August, 1921, and the Earmers Loan and Trust Company of New York, one of the complainants, is executor and trustee of his will. The principal activities of the company have been the development' of the lands for residential purposes, and the operation of iron ore mines at Ringwood. The land improvement enterprise is progressing slowly, but the mines are at a standstill, owing to the present depression in the iron trade. The management has been, and is, in the hands of Mr. Erskine Hewitt, and a division of opinion has arisen between him and his three sisters, who, or whose representatives, form a majority of the directors, and the complainants, representing the estate of Edward R. Hewitt and Peter Cooper Hewitt, as to whether the mines should be shut down and flooded, at a resumption cost of $100,000, or be operated on a small scale, and ready-for-business basis when trade revives, at an expense of from $150,000 to $300,000 a year. The majority of the board is of the opinion that the latter course should be pursued, but, whichever may be adopted, the company stands in need of funds to carry on, and to that end the board of directors, on March 9th, 1922, [68]*68passed the following resolution by a vote of four to two, the complainants voting in the negative.

“Resolved, That' the board of directors deems and declares it advisable that the company be authorized to- issue bonds to an amount not to exceed five hundred and ninety-four thousand dollars ($594,-000) to become due not less than three years nor later than five years from the date of issue, to be redeemable at the option of the company as a whole, but not in part at any time upon thirty days’ notice as hereinafter provided, and to bear interest payable semi-annually at a rate not less than six per cent. (6%) nor more than eight per cent. (8%) which bonds, as shall be therein so declared and prescribed shall unless redeemed prior to the expiration of two years from the issue thereof, be convertible at par at the option of the holder into fully paid common stock of the company at par at any time after the expiration of the said two years and before the fixed date for the maturity thereof or before their earlier redemption after the expiration of Lhe said two years; in case of the exercise by the company of its option to redeem the said bonds before their maturity, 'notice thereof and of the date fixed for such redemption to be mailed to the last-known address of each holder of said bonds, as it may appear on the books of the company, not less than thirty days prior to said date. Said bonds to be offered to the stockholders pro ra-ta in such multiples of $6,000 and at such times as may be required for the proper financing of the company as determined by the officers of the company, and any bonds so offered and not taken to be offered to subscribing stockholders in proportion to the amount of their subscriptions: any bonds not so taken to be sold on. such terms and to such purchasers as to the officers shall seem fit, the conditions as to the time within which subscriptions must be made for the said bonds, the denominations thereof and other details to be determined by the officers.
“Resolved, That the board of directors deems and declares it advisable that the total authorized capital stock of the company be increased from six thousand dollars ($6,000), divided into six hundred shares of the par value of $10 each to six hundred thousand dollars ($600,000), divided into sixty thousand (60,000) shares of the par value of ten dollars ($10) each, all of which shall be common stock; and that the certificate of incorporation be amended by amending article fourth thereof to read as follows;
“Fourth. The total authorized capital stock of this corporation is six hundred thousand dollars ($600,000), divided into sixty thousand (60.000) shares of the par value of ten dollars ($10) each, all of which is common stock.”

It was further resolved to submit the resolutions to the stockholders at a- special meeting to he held March 14th, then following,-for their consideration and approval. Thereupon [69]*69this bill was filed by the two dissenting directors and a temporary restraint issued.

The prayer of the bill is twofold, to restrain the operation of the'mines during the pending business depression, because wasteful, and to prevent the raising of money by the plan indicated by the resolutions, on the grounds that it is unconscionably oppressive, confiscatory of the complainants’ capital interest in the corporation, and that it was conceived in bad faith by the majority stockholders with intent to deprive the minority of its holdings.

Whether the iron mines should be operated at a loss or closed down at a loss, but less, are purely business and economic problems to be handled by the directors, not by the court, and the majority judgment must prevail, in the absence of a showing of b"ad faith or abuse of power. Ellerman v. Chicago Junction Railroad Co., N. J. Eq. 217. It is to be assumed that the defendants, representing, as they do, four-sixths as agáinst the complainants’ two-sixths interest, will pursue a course that will best serve the interests of the company. Self-preservation alone would deter them from doing otherwise.

Statutory authority for raising the funds by bonds convertible into stock, as undertaken by the directors, is conceded, and that the procedure is in all respects in conformity with sections 27 and 29a of the Corporation act is not disputed, but the complainants set up a variety of reasons why the court should intervene.

They say that the scheme proposed will do violence to the intention of Mrs. Hewitt’s will. All that need be said on that score is that her testamentary wishes ended with her bequests of the capital stock of the company equally among her children.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 267, 94 N.J. Eq. 65, 9 Stock. 65, 1922 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-loan-trust-co-v-hewitt-njch-1922.