Gallois v. West End Chemical Co.

185 Cal. App. 2d 765, 8 Cal. Rptr. 596, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1578
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1960
DocketCiv. 19215
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 185 Cal. App. 2d 765 (Gallois v. West End Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallois v. West End Chemical Co., 185 Cal. App. 2d 765, 8 Cal. Rptr. 596, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1578 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

DUNIWAY, J.

Appeal by a dissenting shareholder of respondent West End Chemical Company, a California corporation, from a judgment determining the fair market value of his shares, pursuant to the provisions of Corporations Code, sections 4300-4318.

The sole question before us is whether the court below was in error in excluding evidence offered to show that appellant’s stock, which was a participating preferred stock, callable at $1.05, was "de facto” noncallable. We conclude that the judgment was correct.

Appellant asserts that a federal question lurks in this record, the theory apparently being that due process requires that the dissenting shareholder not only be paid the fail-market value of his shares, but that fair market value be ascertained as appellant would have it ascertained. We think, however, that there is nothing in this point. The State of California has long reserved the right to alter the existing rights and duties of shareholders. (Const., art. XII, § 1; Corp. Code, § 126; Market Street Ry. Co. v. Hellman, 109 Cal. 571, 584-585 [42 P. 225]; Ballantine & Sterling, California Corporation Laws, pp. 6-9, 432.)

Ballantine and Sterling say at page 432: "It can hardly be seriously contended, under the California law, that a provision for compensation is a necessary condition to the constitutionality of statutes providing for merger . . . and other corporate changes. The open question is primarily one of policy . ...” We think that the sole question before us is one of statutory construction, not one of constitutional power.

The Pacts

Effective October 1, 1956, West End Chemical Company was merged into Stauffer Chemical Company, following the favorable vote of the shareholders of both companies on September 24. Appellant holds 58,712 shares of participating *767 preferred stock of West End, out of 1,609,341 shares outstanding, all of which had been outstanding for about 30 years. This stock has at all times been subject to call at 105 per cent of par value ($1.00), but none of it has ever been called. It has full priority over the common shares in liquidation and cumulative dividend priority to the extent of 6 per cent of its par value, and in addition, after the payment of dividends on the common equal to 6 per cent of the latter's par value, is entitled to equal dividends with the common.

Appellant did not vote for the merger and took all necessary steps required by Corporations Code, sections 4300-4318, to recover the fair market value of the shares. The court found that the fair market value on the date of the merger, excluding any appreciation or depreciation in consequence of the proposed merger, was $1.30 per share, and judgment was entered accordingly.

At the date of the merger a group of 11 persons, referred to as the Smith-Ellis group, collectively owned 56.6 per cent of the common stock and 29.7 per cent of the preferred stock of West End. Stauffer owned approximately 16 per cent of the common stock and 37 per cent of the preferred stock of AVest End. Representatives of these stockholders controlled the board of directors.

Pretrial and Trial

On the basis of an agreed statement showing the foregoing and some additional facts, the parties submitted to the pretrial judge two questions of law: (a) what is the meaning of fair market value as that phrase is used in sections 4300-4318 of the Corporations Code; and (b) what elements are to be taken into consideration in establishing fair market value?

The pretrial judge made an order under which the trial court was to inquire into purchases and sales of West End preferred during the period up to and including September 24, 1956 (the date when the stockholders of the companies voted upon the merger) and to determine therefrom whether there existed during such a period a “market.” 1

*768 It was further ordered that if the court should determine that a market did exist on the date in question, then it shall determine the market price as of that date, excluding therefrom any appreciation or depreciation in consequence of the proposed merger. There was a further provision for an alternative method of determining the fair market value if the court should find that a “market” for the stock did not exist.

Thereafter the respondent requested that the court correct the pretrial order by striking out items numbers (4) and (5). This request was denied by a second pretrial order. 2

The case went to trial under these two pretrial orders. At the trial it was shown, and the court found, that a formal announcement of the terms of the proposed merger was made by the officials of West End on August 27, 1956, and that newspaper publicity was given out on or about June 20, 1956. It was also shown that there was an extensive and active over-the-counter market for the stock, and had been for many years. In order to comply with the last sentence of section 4300 of the Corporations Code, which provides that the fair market value shall be determined as of the day before the vote of the shareholders approving the agreement of merger, “excluding any appreciation or depreciation in consequence of the proposed action,” the court chose the over-the-counter market prices during the period January through May 1956, and on *769 the basis of those prices fixed the fair market value at $1.30 per share. The court found that from January 1, 1954, to September 24, 1956, there was a market for the preferred and that it was one of buyers and sellers who were informed as to all matters necessary to constitute them informed buyers and sellers and the market an informed market. It also found that there is no evidence on whether the market was or was not informed as to whether or not any decision had been made to call or not to call the preferred stock.

The trial consisted of a showing of the nature and extent of the market, by West End, and, on the part of appellant, of efforts to show that an informal determination had been made by the directors of West End not to call the stock for the reason that to do so might cost the stockholders of the Smith-Ellis group a large amount of money in income taxes, and that the fact that this determination had been made was not known to traders in the over-the-counter market, so that the market was not composed of “informed” buyers and sellers.

Appellant showed through the testimony of an expert that the market value of a preferred stock that is subject to call is largely controlled by the call price, and that if the stock were not callable, and if it were a participating preferred stock such as that owned by appellant, the price of the stock would move along with the price of common.

When the plaintiff offered evidence designed to show that an informal decision had been made not to call the stock, the evidence was excluded by the trial judge apparently partly on the theory that he was required by the second pretrial order to exclude it, and partly on the theory that it was not admissible in any event.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 Cal. App. 2d 765, 8 Cal. Rptr. 596, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallois-v-west-end-chemical-co-calctapp-1960.