Grone v. Economic Life Ins. Co.

80 A.2d 809, 80 A. 809, 38 Del. Ch. 158, 1911 Del. Ch. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMay 4, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 80 A.2d 809 (Grone v. Economic Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grone v. Economic Life Ins. Co., 80 A.2d 809, 80 A. 809, 38 Del. Ch. 158, 1911 Del. Ch. LEXIS 26 (Del. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

The exceptions of E. S. Norton and 20 other claimants, filed by their solicitors, Horace G. Eastburn, Esq., of Roy Higgins and Rose Bogatzy, filed by their solicitor, Christopher L. Ward, Esq., and of Thomas J. Hemmeler, filed by his solicitor, Louis M. Rosenbluth, Esq., of New York, will be considered and decided together, as they all belong to the same class of claimants against the fund in hand for distribution. All of the claimants are stockholders of the company who severally subscribed for shares of stock of the company, at varying prices per share, all at more than the par value thereof, and with varying terms as to the method of paying therefor and the application of payments as made. While the terms varied slightly, they were substantially similar. Each person subscribed for a definite number of shares at a fixed price, the price ranging from $15 to- $24 per share, par being $10. A portion of the price was paid in cash and the balance was made payable without further notice in a fixed number of installments of fixed *166 amounts, but none of the contracts fixed the interval of time to elapse between installments. Upon payment of the full amount of the subscription price the subscribers were to have a full-paid, non-assessable certificate. It was agreed that the installments so paid to the extent of the excess of the subscription price per share above par should “be first credited as received, to the company’s contingent fund, which fund shall be transferred to the permanent surplus fund of the company at the discretion of the board of directors, after deducting therefrom such amounts as it may be necessary to- expend in extending and maintaining the company’s business, so that the remaining $10 per share may be credited to the capital account without deduction.” A sample of the contracts is found in the master’s report. The master was right in treating all subscriptions alike, though'there were errors therein, evidently either clerical or resulting from inaccuracies- of calculation.

All of these exceptants are named in schedule L of the master’s report, which includes several hundred other persons. None of them have paid all the installments due, and are therefore in the class of subscribers whose stock is only partly paid for. Some of them have made sufficient payments to- cover the excess above par o-f their stock and a portion of the par thereof. Class 1. Others have made no payments on account of the par value of their stock, inasmuch as their part payments have not exceeded the excess price o-f said stock above the par value thereof. Class 2. The company in fact carried to the contingent fund all the moneys received from subscribers in excess of the par value until the whole of the excess was paid, and only credited to the par value of the stock the moneys paid in excess of par.

The master found that none of the exceptants and none o-f those other subscribers in like position were creditors; that those in class 1 above were neither creditors nor stockholders, having made no payments on their stock, but that all had contributed to the contingent fund; and that those in class 2 above were to- be treated as stockholders only to the extent that their payments exceeded the price agreed to- be paid over par. The exceptants claim that the amount of each installment as received should have been separated into two *167 parts, one to be credited to the contingent fund and the other to the capital stock, and each subscriber credited accordingly. •

The contentions may be thus illustrated. The exceptions claim that if there were such a subscription for 60 shares at $15 per share, calling for a total payment of $900, and if the first payment and each of the subsequent 9 installments should be $90, such $90 should be applied at once to the full payment of 6 shares at $15 per share, thus resulting in carrying to the capital account $60 and the crediting to the company’s contingent fund, which should be carried to the permanent surplus fund of the company, the sum of $30!; the transaction thus resulting in the stock subscriber being the owner of full-paid stock to the extent of 6 shares.

On the other hand, it was found by the master, as contended in behalf of the receivers, that assuming there was a subscription under this contract to 60 shares of the capital stock at $15 per share, thus calling for a total payment of $900 for such 60 shares, the installments when so paid to the extent of $300 would be first credited to the contingent fund, and none of such installments would be applied to the capital account until such payments exceeded said $300, whereupon the subsequent payments would be applicable to the par of the stock. Under the master’s construction of the contract, none of the $60 of the first payment would be credited on account of the par of the stock, but all would be applied to the contingent fund.

Assuming in each case that $600 had been paid in in installments, under the exceptant’s construction of the contract, the subscriber who had partly paid up would be entitled to> 40 shares of full-paid capital stock, $400, part of the $600, having been applied to the capital account and $200 to the contingent fund account. Under the master’s construction of the contract, in like case, $300 would have been applied and transferred to the surplus fund of the company, and $300 would have been applied on account of the capital account. If the subscriber thereupon ceased to pay because of the fault of the company, the stock subscriber would equitably be entitled to 30 shares of stock which his remaining $300 had paid for.

*168 There are no precedents to- guide this, court, and the principles of law applicable thereto are not of much service. The contention of the exceptants that the contracts were all ultra vires because the subscriptions were at prices above par and because it was an attempt in that way to increase the par value of the stock is untenable. The contracts are valid and the rights of the exceptants and those in like position are based thereon, and there is no real ambiguity in their terms. The master rightly found that the installments so paid to the extent of the excess above par on the entire subscription must first be credited as received to the company’s contingent fund and nothing credited thereunder to the capital fund until the full extent of the excess above par on all the shares subscribed for shall be paid, and only the last remaining $10 per share when paid should be credited to the par value of the shares. By the terms of his subscription each prospective stockholder must first pay the entire premium to the company before he was entitled to have applied to his shares any money paid by him, and was not entitled to receive a certificate for his shares until he had paid in full both premium and par value. This seems clear beyond question.

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Bluebook (online)
80 A.2d 809, 80 A. 809, 38 Del. Ch. 158, 1911 Del. Ch. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grone-v-economic-life-ins-co-delch-1911.