Filene v. Kirstein

171 N.E. 285, 271 Mass. 219, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1101
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 1, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 171 N.E. 285 (Filene v. Kirstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Filene v. Kirstein, 171 N.E. 285, 271 Mass. 219, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1101 (Mass. 1930).

Opinion

Carroll, J.

This suit in equity is to prevent the violation of a written contract of July 19, 1928, referred to herein as the settlement agreement. The parties to this agreement were the plaintiff and the defendants, which defendants together are, it is alleged, the controlling stockholders of Wm. Filene’s Sons Company, a Massachusetts corporation.

The purpose of the settlement agreement was to effect a reorganization of the corporate structure of the Filene corporation and to bring about a revision of the stockholdings of the parties in the corporation. The parties foresaw, the bill alleges, the possibility of combining the company with other companies operating “a similar business in other places.” The settlement agreement recites that the parties contemplate that they shall be employed by the said corporation with equal compensation to each; “that each shall have a reasonable opportunity to participate pro rata according to his then holdings of voting common stock in any financial advantages which may directly or indirectly accrue to them as such stockholders from any matter or dealing which may substantially change the control of the said corporation”; that the parties “will not accept and retain compensation whether by way of salary, bonus or other form of compensation in the aggregate greater than any one of them so employed may receive during the same period from the Company”; that each of the defendants agrees with the others and with the plaintiff that he “will not sell his holdings of common stock as a whole or substantially as a whole for cash or its equivalent . . . without causing Edward A. Filene and said others to have the right to sell [223]*223a pro rata part of his common stock at the same time, at the same price and on the same terms and conditions”; that éach of the defendants agrees with the plaintiff and with the others not to exchange his or their common stock or any part thereof “for stock or securities of any other corporation or association without causing Edward A. Filene and said others to have the right to exchange a pro rata part of his own common stock at the same time, at the same rate, and on the same terms and conditions.” The settlement agreement also stipulated that all the parties should have a reasonable opportunity to participate pro rata according to their common stock holdings “in any financial advantages corresponding to those which may directly or indirectly accrue to them and each of them as stockholder or stockholders from any sale or exchange (whether by one transaction or a series of transactions) of their majority holdings of common stock as a block or substantially as a block.” On March 27, 1929, the defendants signed a document, called the deposit agreement, in which they (spoken of as the committee in this agreement) were parties of the first part, and such holders of the common stock of the Wm. Filene’s Sons Company as should become parties were parties of the second part. Any shareholder could deposit his stock under the terms of the agreement. The committee was to organize a holding company and was authorized “to assent to any plan for the consolidation or merger of any such holding corporation with any other corporation.” The seventh paragraph of the deposit agreement provides that prior to the expiration of twenty days from the publication of the plan of reorganization, “neither the Committee nor the Trustees under the voting trust . . . nor any holding corporation organized by the Committee shall . . . vote the shares of the said Filene Company in favor of any action which . . . requires the affirmative approval of more than a majority of the common stock of said Filene Company,” unless the written approval of certificate holders representing at least two-thirds of the common stock of the Filene company is given. It was provided in the deposit agreement that anyone depositing his stock after the first [224]*224publication of the notice, as provided in section 9, could within twenty days withdraw his shares. .

The plaintiff’s bill alleges a threatened violation of the. settlement agreement of July 19, 1928; that the defendants made an agreement for exchange of their stock and have entered into an arrangement with bankers and others to form a consolidation; that in effect the deposit agreement is contrary to the settlement agreement and in violation of the plaintiff’s rights under the settlement agreement.

In the Superior Court the defendants’ demurrer was sustained. From the interlocutory decree sustaining the demurrer and the final decree dismissing the bill, the plaintiff appealed.

The plaintiff contends that under the settlement agreement certain rights were given him of which he will be deprived by the defendants if the deposit agreement and the arrangement of merger are carried out; that according to the deposit agreement he is not to be a member of the committee nor to exercise any of the powers given to the committee; that while the shares of the Filene company remain in the holding company, the defendants shall have full power to vote them; that the defendants are to be the directors of the holding company; that the defendants propose to transfer the shares deposited with the holding company to a second corporation which shall hold the voting shares of the corporations to be merged; that the shares of this second holding company are to be held by five persons including the three defendants, but not including the plaintiff, as trustees; that the plaintiff is not to hold any position therein, but the defendants are to cause themselves to be elected directors, officers and managers, and to obtain terms and conditions which are denied the plaintiff; and that the defendants are to receive financial benefits as officials or employees in the combined companies, not accorded to the plaintiff.

The settlement agreement gave to the plaintiff the same advantages, with reference to the sale or exchange of stock in the Filene company, as the defendants possessed. They could not dispose of their holdings without giving the plain[225]*225tiff the same right to sell at the same price and on the same terms and conditions. The plaintiff also, pro rata according to his holdings, was to participate in any financial benefits, corresponding to any which might accrue to the defendants as stockholders from any sale or exchange of stock. Under these provisions in the settlement agreement the plaintiff’s rights as a stockholder were to be protected. The stockholders as such were to share pro rata in the sale or exchange of stock or in other financial advantages resulting to them “as stockholder or stockholders.”

The section in the settlement agreement in which the words “on the same terms and conditions” appear is section six. This section is divided into six subsections, all of them relating to the rights of the plaintiff as a stockholder. There is nothing in this section giving the plaintiff the right to participate in the management of any new company or combination, or to be employed therein. • The equality given him is the equality of a stockholder as such. The equality did not extend beyond this to terms or conditions relating to other details of the contemplated merger. The words “the same terms and conditions” are restricted to the sale or exchange of stock, and in each subsection they have a similar meaning.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 N.E. 285, 271 Mass. 219, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/filene-v-kirstein-mass-1930.