Goodison v. North American Securities Co.

178 N.E. 29, 40 Ohio App. 85, 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 661, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 501
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 13, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 178 N.E. 29 (Goodison v. North American Securities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodison v. North American Securities Co., 178 N.E. 29, 40 Ohio App. 85, 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 661, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 501 (Ohio Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

*663 LEVINE, PJ.

The case is submitted to this court upon an agreed statement of facts. A careful perusal of same discloses that the essential difference between the parties is one of law. It may be stated at the outset of our discussion that the defense of laches, as the term is generally understood in equity, wa§ waived by counsel for the defendant.

The question of law ' and which in our opinion presents the dominant issue between the parties, may be. summarized in the following language: Has the plaintiff become barred from the obtaining of relief for which she prays, because of her failure to file a written objection or to otherwise claim relief under the provisions of the General Code?

The plaintiff refers the court to the articles of incorporation of the Harvard Mortgage Company and particularly to the provisions relating to preferred shares, which read as follows:

“The holders of preferred stock shall be entitled to cumulative dividends in each year at the rate of eight percent (8%) per annum, payable out of the surplus profits of said company, in preference and priority to any dividends on the common stock. Dividends, when earned, shall be payable semiannually. In the event of dissolution of the Company, the holders of preferred stock shall be entitled to preference and priority in the distribution of its assets.
“The holders of preferred stock shall not be entitled to vote at meetings of the stockholders of said company so long as dividends on the preferred stock are paid; but in case of default for two consecutive dividend periods, in thte payment of such dividends, then and thereafter, during the period of such default, the holders of preferred stock may vote.
“Preferred stock is subject to redemption on or after January 1st, 1924, at one hundred ten dollars ($110.00) per share, and all accrued unpaid dividends, if any, at the option of the company.”

The defendant asserts that plaintiff’s exclusive remedy is under the provisions of the General Code, either that of §8713 GC et seq, which provide a method of the ascertainment of the value of stock and payment therefor to a dissenting shareholder in case of a sale of the entire assets, or under §8623-72, GC, which provides a similar method in case of such sale or a consolidation, and that in both instances written ob- , jections must be filed by the dissenting shareholder within thirty or twenty days respectively from the time of the -adoption of the authorizing resolution of shareholders, and that a failure to file such objection* within the time prescribed by law amounts to a waiver.

The plaintiff concedes that if she had relied upon the statutory remedy it would, of course, follow that a strict compliance with the provisions of the code is essential to the assertion of such remedy, and that1 a failure in that respect would prove fatal to the plaintiff’s claim, as she filed no written objection within the time prescribed by law. It is asserted, however, by plaintiff that she stands squarely upon the provisions found in the articles of incorporation of the Harvard Mortgage Company relative to the rights of preferred shareholders; that the transaction which took place between the two companies amounted to a call on the plaintiff’s preferred shares for redemption, and that therefore she is entitled to the redemption value of her preferred share interest as provided in said articles of incorporation. We are inclined to the view that the statutory remedy was not intended by the Legislature to constitute the exclusive remedy of a dissenting shareholder, and that if equitable grounds exist, a resort may be had to a court of equity for the> enforcement of such rights as may exist in a dissenting shareholder.

The argument presented by defendant to the effect that the plaintiff is in default, and that therefore she cannot claim or assert any rights against the defendant, is not well taken, for the reason that while the subscription contracts between the plaintiff the Harvard Mortgage Company specifies the payment of forty dollars per month, yet there is in evidence a bank book which recorded a long series of payments in small installments much less than forty dollars a month and which the Harvard Mortgage Company apparently gladly accepted.

While much learning was expended by both sides in an exhaustive discussion of certain principles of law which counsel deemed applicable to this case, we are led into an additional channel of thought by a consideration of certain fundamental principles. Since the subscription contracts between the plaintiff and the Harvard Mortgage Company constitute the basis of her present claim for relief, it seems to us quite profitable that a reference be made to said contracts, and that an effort be made to determine the exact relationship existing between her and the Harvard Mortgage Company by virtue of same. These sub *664 scription contracts read virtually alike, as follows:

“The Harvard Mortgage Company Subscription.
Cleveland, O., Jan. 23, 1924.
“I hereby subscribe and agree to pay /10 shares of the eight percent cumulative, redeemable, preferred stock at One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) per share, and a like number of shares of no par common stock at Four Dollars ($4.00) per share of The Harvard Mortgage Company, payable as follows: Forty Dollars ($40.00) herewith in cash, and the remainder at the rate of Twenty Dollars per month.
“Said stock certificates, preferred and common will be issued only upon full payment. of this subscription. Dividends on partial payments will be allowed by the company, at the rate of eight percent per annum payable out of net profits.
“Interest will not be charged by the company on deferred installments, except on delinquencies.
“All checks must be made payable to the Harvard Mortgage Company.
“This agréement contains the entire understanding between the parties. Witness Burger
Bus. Conn.-
(Signature) Jane B. Goodison,
(Mail Address) State Hospital”

The other subscription contract of January 1924 wherein plaintiff subscribed for an additional ten shares preferred and ten shares common stock in the Harvard Mortgage Company, reads exactly like the first contract herein set forth in full.

It will be observed that under the terms of these contracts stock certificates preferred and common will be issued only upon full payment of the, subscription price. What was the relation existing between the Harvard Mortgage Company vendor, and the plaintiff who was vendee under said contracts? While the shares of stock remained unissued, what rights, if any, in addition to the right of dividends on partial payments became vested in the plaintiff by virtue of said subscription contracts? It seems that the relationship between the Harvard Mortgage Company and the plaintiff which arose by virtue of the subscription contracts is not unlike that of a vendor and vendee under a land contract.

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Bluebook (online)
178 N.E. 29, 40 Ohio App. 85, 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 661, 1931 Ohio App. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodison-v-north-american-securities-co-ohioctapp-1931.