Federal Mining & Smelting Co. v. Wittenberg

138 A. 347, 15 Del. Ch. 409, 55 A.L.R. 1, 1927 Del. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 8, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 138 A. 347 (Federal Mining & Smelting Co. v. Wittenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Mining & Smelting Co. v. Wittenberg, 138 A. 347, 15 Del. Ch. 409, 55 A.L.R. 1, 1927 Del. LEXIS 9 (Del. 1927).

Opinion

Pennewill, C. J.

delivering the opinion of the court:

This case is here on an appeal from the Court of Chancery, in which a decree was made by the Chancellor on May 17, 1926, ante p. 147,133 A. 48, overruling a demurrer filed by defendant to complainants’ bill of complaint.

The only assignment of error is the action of the Chancellor in overruling said demurrer.

The material facts are alleged at length in the bill of complaint and their truthfulness admitted by the demurrer filed below. Those facts are clearly and sufficiently stated in the Chancellor’s opinion, and it is not deemed necessary to repeat them here at length.

The defendant company is what is known in the law as a “wasting asset corporation.” It was incorporated under the General Corporation Law of the state June 23, 1903, and having, at the time suit was brought, a total par value of issued preferred stock of $12,000,000, and of common stock of $6,000,000. The [411]*411amount of capital deficit as of the end of 1925 is not stated. As of the close of 1924, the balance sheet shows it was $7,624,661.95. As of the close of the preceding year it was more than $1,000,000 less than this sum. The balance sheet as of December 31, 1924, shows the capital assets to have been so depleted that they were then insufficient to pay on the preferred stock, upon liquidation, the par value thereof. The net earnings of the defendant corporation for 1925 amounted to $3,440,000. The deficit, therefore, in the paid-in or invested capital on January 6, 1926, was, apparently, at least $4,000,000.

On the date last mentioned, notwithstanding there was a capital deficit admitted by the defendant, the board of directors of the defendant company adopted a resolution authorizing the payment of accrued dividends (nineteen and one-fourth per cent.), and the current quarterly dividend of one and three-fourths per cent., on the preferred stock, and a dividend of $10 per share on the common stock, out of earnings prior to 1926; and it further resolved that until further action of the board, it should be the policy of the corporation that one-half of current net profits for each year including 1926, remaining after all charges except depletion, and after the payment of all accrued and unpaid dividends on the preferred stock, be paid out as dividends on the common stock.

The preamble to these resolutions recited that the company’s net profits for 1925 amounting to $3,440,000 after all charges except depletion, are available for dividends on the preferred and common stock despite the fact that the books of the company show a deficit, and that after preferred stock dividends were provided for the company might from time to time distribute its remaining net profits as a dividend on the common stock without first making any deductions for depletion or establishing a reserve sufficient, in the event of liquidation of the company, to pay off the preferred stock at the par value thereof and unpaid dividends.

The complainants prayed for an injunction against the payment of the declared dividend of $10 a share on the common stock; and that the defendant be enjoined from hereafter paying any dividends on the common stock until it shall have set up and accumulated a reserve equal to the sum by which the invested cap[412]*412ital has been impaired by the depletion of the ore bodies and that thereafter the defendant be enjoined from paying any dividends on the common stock when such payment would impair the invested capital.

An alternative prayer asked for an injunction against the payment of common stock dividends until a reserve has been set up equal to the difference between the net value of the present assets and the par value of all outstanding preferred stock and thereafter that no common stock dividends shall be paid if as a result thereof net assets will be reduced below the par of all the outstanding preferred stock.

The defendant’s business is that of mining, smelting, etc., of mineral ores and marketing the finished products. Since its inception, the company has acquired numerous mines many of which have been exhausted. Its certificate of incorporation shows that the company has general powers other than mining but its operations have been confined to that business.

From 1904 to 1908, inclusive, dividends were paid on the common stock aggregating forty-seven and one-half per cent, of par. Since then, nothing has been paid on the common stock. Since its organization, the defendant corporation has paid as dividends on its preferred stock the sum of $16,072,213.16. At the present time there are accumulated unpaid back dividends on the preferred stock amounting to $19.25 per share.

The contention of the complainants is, “that the defendant has no legal right so long as any shares of its preferred stock are outstanding, to pay dividends on its common stock when and so long as the amount of the defendant’s net assets is less than the amount of its paid-in or invested capital.”

The complainants claim they are entitled to the injunctive relief prayed for because of contract rights growing out of the relation between the preferred stockholder and the corporation.

They say:

“There is impliedly written into every corporate charter of this state, as a constituent part thereof, every pertinent provision of our Constitution and statutes.”

[413]*413And they claim that the pertinent provisions of the Delaware statutes and the defendant’s certificate of incorporation are the following:

Section 34 of the General Corporation Law (Revised Code 1915; § 1948), which provides that:

“The directors of every corporation created under this chapter shall have power, after reserving over and above its capital stock paid in, such sum, if any, as shall have been fixed by the stockholders, to declare a dividend among its stockholders of the whole of its accumulated profits, in excess of the amount so reserved, and pay the same to such stockholders on demand; provided, that the corporation may, in its certificate of incorporation, or in its by-laws, give the directors power to fix the amount to be reserved.”

And the following provision from defendant’s certificate of incorporation :

“In the event of any liquidation, or dissolution, or winding up, whether voluntary or involuntary, of the corporation, the holders of the preferred stock shall be entitled to be paid in full both the par amount of their shares and the unpaid dividends accrued thereon before any amount shall be paid to the holders of the common stock, and after the payment to the holders of the preferred stock of its par value and the unpaid accrued dividends thereon the remaining assets shall be divided and paid to the holders of the common stock according to their respective shares.”

Because of these provisions of statute and charter it is insisted that the preferred stockholders of the corporation derived two rights, viz.:

“First, the right that no dividends shall be paid to the common stockholders of the defendant except out of some amount of money which exists ‘over and above’ the paid-in capital of the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
138 A. 347, 15 Del. Ch. 409, 55 A.L.R. 1, 1927 Del. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-mining-smelting-co-v-wittenberg-del-1927.