Hauben v. Morris

161 Misc. 174, 291 N.Y.S. 96, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1471
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 161 Misc. 174 (Hauben v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hauben v. Morris, 161 Misc. 174, 291 N.Y.S. 96, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1471 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Pécora, J.

The plaintiffs are stockholders of the Industrial Finance Corporation. They bring this action in equity on their own behalf and on behalf of all other stockholders similarly situated, against certain of the directors of the corporation, to recover, on behalf of the corporation moneys alleged to have been acquired by the directors with others, in violation of the fiduciary duty which such directors owed to the corporation. While the trial lasted many, days and the evidence is voluminous, the essential facts may be simply stated.

Industrial Finance Corporation is a holding company. It was organized in Virginia in 1914 for the purpose of forming and controlling so-called Morris Plan banks throughout the country. Its prime mover in its processes of organization and expansion [177]*177was the defendant Arthur J. Morris. Its strongest individual financial supporter was one John Markle, a capitalist who died before this action was commenced. Something like one hundred banks were established under its sponsorship throughout the country. In 1919 it branched out into the business of financing the retail purchase and sale of Studebaker automobiles.

Owing to the rapid expansion of its business, it required additional capital. This was obtained in 1922 by selling to Markle $2,000,000 par value of six per cent bonds at 95. The total authorized issue of bonds was $2,500,000. They were secured by approximately $3,500,000 worth of collateral, consisting in the main of stock of the various Morris Plan banks.

In 1924 the corporation transferred its automobile sales financing business to a subsidiary called Industrial Acceptance Corporation. At about this time negotiations were entered into with Markle by the Industrial Finance Corporation for the exchange of his secured bonds for a preferred stock issue. As a result thereof, on January 30, 1925,. the corporation purchased about $50,000 of Markle’s bonds, and for the balance thereof exchanged $1,805,000 par value of so-called debenture stock, for the issuance of which it had obtained the necessary stockholders’ authority. This debenture stock was in the nature of a preferred stock and took precedence over all the other issues of the corporation. It bore cumulative dividends at the rate of seven per cent per annum, and was preferred upon a distribution of assets at the figure of $105 per share. It was redeemable on any interest date after three years from the date of issuance at $105 and accrued interest. The interest dates were May first and November first. In "the event of default in .the payment of two dividends, the debenture stock was given the light to elect a majority of the board of directors; otherwise it had no voting power.

At the time of this exchange it was agreed that the corporation would repurchase from Markle, within twenty days after his demand, $250,000 par value of the debenture stock at par and accrued interest; and also that it would purchase annually for six years beginning in January, 1926, $100,000 par value of the debenture stock at 105 and accrued dividends. To enable it to carry out this agreement, provision was made by the corporation for a sinking fund of ten per cent of its annual net earnings, not exceeding $100,000 a year; and a sinking fund agreement was entered into with a bank. It was further agreed that, while the debenture stock was outstanding, the corporation would not create any security, mortgage or bond issue ranking ahead of the six per cent bonds or the [178]*178seven per cent debenture stock issue which shall be a lien on the stocks now in trust as security for the collateral trust gold bonds during the life of the same.” It was further understood that the corporation would have the right to use those stocks for the purpose of securing bank loans made in the usual course of business from time to time.

It is of the utmost importance to bear in mind that the corporation was actually obligated to purchase or redeem this debenture stock. It did, in fact, purchase 2,500 shares thereof from Markle at par on April 11, 1925, and 1,000 shares at 105 on February 1, 1926. This left on the last-named date 14,550 shares of the debenture stock in Markle’s hands. Of this amount the corporation was under the obligation to purchase or redeem a thousand shares annually, and the entire balance on or before January 31, 1932, all at the price of 105.

Some time in 1925, and continuing until about the fall of 1926, disagreements arose between Morris and Markle, not only over personal matters, but also with respect to the corporation’s policies. These engendered much bitterness and acrimony, and culminated in a stormy interview between them at Markle’s office in the summer of 1926, at the end of which Markle ordered Morris out of his office.

Mutual friends, who were directors of the corporation, undertook various efforts at peacemaking between them, all of which appar-. ently failed. Finally, on September 15, 1926, on the recommendation of Morris, who was president of the corporation, the board of directors abolished the office of chairman of the board of directors, which Markle then filled, and appointed a committee to consider the possibility of Markle’s removal altogether as a director. Markle thereupon consulted his personal attorney,. with a view to the adoption of defensive and retaliatory measures. His attorney suggested to him as an alternative that Markle sell out all of his holdings in the corporation and its affiliates, arid endeavor to effect an arrangement whereby he would be permitted to resign from his various offices in the corporation and its affiliates, instead of facing removal therefrom. Apparently, Maride became willing to adopt this suggestion. Accordingly, on September 20, 1926, his counsel met Morris and the defendant Hicks, the latter of whom was a director of the corporation and one of its counsel, and made those proposals to them. Markle’s holdings at that time included blocks of common stock, in addition to the 14,550 shares of debenture stock. It also included shares in other companies affiliated with the corporation.

[179]*179Eventually, on November 24, 1926, after various conferences between Morris, Hicks and others, with Markle and his attorney, a syndicate was formed, largely through the activities of Morris and other directors of the corporation, to purchase Markle’s holdings. This syndicate was composed of about twenty-one persons, eleven of whom, including Morris and Hicks, were then directors of Industrial Finance Corporation, and two of whom became such directors before the conclusion of the syndicate’s subsequent transactions with the corporation.

On December 20, 1926, the syndicate entered into a written agreement with Markle for the purchase of his holdings. In this agreement the holdings were divided into two groups, called, respectively, parcel A and parcel B. Parcel A consisted solely of the 14,550 shares of the debenture stock, and the purchase price therefor was $95 per share, or $1,382,250. Parcel B consisted of all the other issues of the corporation and its subsidiaries and affiliates then held by Markle, and the purchase price therefor was the lump sum of $542,750, making a total purchase price for both parcels of $1,925,000. A down payment of only ten per cent, or $192,500, was required to be made by the syndicate under the agreement and various other subsequent installment payments were provided for. The final payment by the syndicate for the parcel A, or debenture stock, became due on May 1, 1928, and the final payment for the parcel B stocks was fixed for June 1,1928.

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Bluebook (online)
161 Misc. 174, 291 N.Y.S. 96, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hauben-v-morris-nysupct-1936.