First Union National Bank v. Quality Carriers Inc.

48 Pa. D. & C.4th 1, 2000 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 227
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedOctober 10, 2000
Docketno. 2634
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 48 Pa. D. & C.4th 1 (First Union National Bank v. Quality Carriers Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Union National Bank v. Quality Carriers Inc., 48 Pa. D. & C.4th 1, 2000 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 227 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

SHEPPARD,

This opinion is being submitted in support of this court’s contemporaneous order sustaining, in part, and overruling, in part, the preliminary objections filed by defendants.1

BACKGROUND

Chemical Leaman Corporation was formed in 1977 as a holding company to hold the stock of Chemical Leaman Tank Lines Inc. and several smaller entities. The family of Samuel and Eunice H. Niness owned a substantial number of shares of CLC stock, which were ultimately deeded to several Niness family trusts. By 1992, the plaintiff trusts held an aggregate total of 130,631 shares of CLC common stock. At that time, the plaintiff trust shares represented 14 percent of the then-outstanding shares of CLC common stock. Complaint at ¶¶18-20.

In the late 1980s, David Hamilton and George McFadden, then officers and directors of CLC, also held substantial quantities of CLC common stock. Plaintiffs allege that in 1986, Hamilton and McFadden joined in a bid for control of CLC, with the eventual goal of buying out CLC’s public shareholders and taking CLC private. As part of this plan, Hamilton and McFadden began negotiations with the Niness family to purchase the plaintiff trust shares. These negotiations led to a framework for agreement under which the plaintiff trust shares would be exchanged for a new class of CLC preferred stock [4]*4with a cumulative stated value of $2.6 million. Under the original framework, the CLC preferred stock was to bear dividends at a rate of 12 percent per year until the time of redemption. However, for tax reasons, CLC requested a reduction in the dividend rate to 6 percent, with the additional 6 percent to be paid to members of the Niness family as consulting fees over a 10-year period. Id. atfI21-24.

On August 28,1992, the plaintiff trusts and CLC formalized their understanding by entering into an “exchange agreement.” Under the exchange agreement, the plaintiff trusts exchanged all 130,631 of their shares of CLC common stock for an aggregate total of 130 shares of CLC series A preferred stock, with a stated value of $20,000 per share. As protection for the plaintiff trusts’ investment, the designation statement for the series A stock provided that:

“No class or series of capital stock of the corporation shall be issued which shall be senior in priority in any way to the series A stock while any of the shares thereof are issued and outstanding. The corporation’s shares of series A stock shall rank, as to dividends and upon liquidation, equally with each other and (i) senior and prior to the corporation’s common stock, and (ii) senior to, or on a parity with, classes of series of capital stock (other than the corporation’s common stock) hereafter issued by the corporation.” Designation statement at section 3.

In addition, in the event of “liquidation,” defined as “a complete liquidation, dissolution or winding up” of CLC,2 the holders of series A stock are to receive the [5]*5stated value of their shares, plus any accrued dividends from the issuance date until the date of liquidation. The designation statement also gave CLC the unilateral right to redeem the series A stock at any time on the condition that it pay a premium if it exercised this right prior to 2000. Complaint atfj[25, 27, 29-31.

In connection with the exchange agreement, Niness, Graham and Littlepage executed written consulting agreements with CLTL, under which each was to be paid a total of $378,000 over a seven-year period. According to the complaint, the consulting agreements, which do not have integration clauses, are partial expressions of the parties’ intent because they do not address the continuing employment of Niness, Graham and Littlepage for the three-year period from July 1999 through July 2002. The complaint further asserts that this omission was intentional and made at the insistence of CLTL, which feared that a written 10-year consulting agreement could be characterized as a dividend by the Internal Revenue Service. However, CLC (as CLTL’s parent) allegedly assured the plaintiffs that the consulting agreements would not be terminated at the end of the seven-year term, [6]*6but would be in effect for a total of 10 years, provided that the series A stock was not redeemed. Id. at ¶¶24,32-34.

CLC subsequently issued two additional classes of capital stock: a series B convertible preferred stock and series C preferred stock. Both series B stock and series C stock were junior in priority to the series A stock, with a stated value of $6,000 per share and a 6 percent cumulative dividend payable quarterly. In May 1996, CLC converted 151 shares of CLC common stock held by Karen Szabo Lloyd into 151 shares of series B stock and also converted 302 shares of CLC common stock owned by another shareholder into 302 shares of series C stock. Id. at ¶¶35-39.

The complaint alleges that on August 28,1998, Quality Distribution, then known as MTL Inc., acquired CLC in what was primarily a stock purchase transaction merger.3 As part of the transaction, the former shareholders of CLC received $70 million in cash, $5 million in MTL preferred stock and $1.1 million in MTL common [7]*7stock. Quality Distribution financed the merger through $235 million in incremental term loans, $19.9 million in preferred equity and $12 million in common equity. Quality Distribution’s borrowings were made pursuant to a credit agreement4 and were guaranteed by CLC under a supplemental indenture. Id. at ¶¶40-43.

In early 1999, Quality Distribution memorialized the final stage of the merger in an agreement and plan of merger, dated February 25, 1999, and filed the relevant articles of merger in Pennsylvania, Virginia and Illinois on March 1, 1999. Under the plan of merger, three wholly-owned subsidiaries of Quality Distribution, including CLC, were merged into a single surviving corporate entity called Montgomery Tank Lines Inc.5 As soon as the merger was completed, Montgomery’s name was changed to “Quality Carriers Inc.” As a result of the merger, all outstanding shares of CLC were canceled, with Quality Distribution owning all of the stock of the new Quality Carriers. Id. at ¶¶44-50.

Although Lloyd, the holder of series B stock, was notified of the merger and permitted to cash out her interest in CLC prior to its consummation,6 the plaintiff trusts were never notified of the merger or of any related shareholder meetings, nor were they given compensation for [8]*8their shares. In addition, the plan of merger was never presented to Niness, even though he was a member of CLC’s Board of Directors.7 Id. at ¶¶52-53.

During the course of 1999, Quality Distribution implemented a plan to integrate CLC into Quality Carriers, as a result of which the balance sheets of CLC and Quality Carriers were merged. The integration plan also included the termination and relocation of CLC employees, liquidation of CLC assets, and elimination of significant accounts. By the end of the calendar year, the complaint alleges, the integration of CLC into Quality Carriers was complete and irreversible. Id. at ¶¶57-59.

In the meantime, in mid-1999, the plaintiff trusts learned that CLC had been merged out of existence and demanded that they be paid the redemption price and premium for their series A stock.8

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Bluebook (online)
48 Pa. D. & C.4th 1, 2000 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-union-national-bank-v-quality-carriers-inc-pactcomplphilad-2000.