In re Cooperative Wage Fund

65 Pa. D. & C. 274, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 271
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedApril 21, 1948
Docketno. 3252
StatusPublished

This text of 65 Pa. D. & C. 274 (In re Cooperative Wage Fund) 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
In re Cooperative Wage Fund, 65 Pa. D. & C. 274, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 271 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

Brown, Jr., P. J.,

— This court entered an order on February 16, 1948, requiring all claims for compensation for services rendered and reimbursement of costs incurred in connection with the proceeding before the court for the involuntary dissolution of Transit Investment Corporation to be [275]*275filed with the prothonotary on or before March 8, 1948, or be forever barred.

In accordance with the order, a petition was filed by the firm of Schnader, Kenworthey, Segal & Lewis, requesting an allowance of compensation in the amount of $3,000 to be paid out of the corporation’s funds for professional services as members of the bar in representing shareholders, the trustees of the P. R. T. Cooperative Wage Fund, who instituted the proceeding for dissolution, and reimbursement from such funds in the sum of $412 for the expense of mailing notices of the hearing on that petition to the owners of shares and to creditors as directed by the court.

For a number of years, the corporation had been unable to serve its purpose as an active investment company, and engaged in a slow and piecemeal liquidation of holdings acquired prior to the depression of the nineteen hundred and thirties. The receivership, in the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania was terminated because the corporation was solvent, but as it had no prospect of attracting new money, its board of directors followed a passive policy of converting assets to cash on a gradual basis. This program offered no likelihood of liquidating its major assets, the Mitten Building and voting trust certificates for 375,194 shares of the common stock and 7,203 shares of the preferred stock of the Philadelphia Transportation Company, or of distributing its assets to the stockholders. Also involved was the cost incident to prolonging the corporate existence. Its common stock, though it was being sold on the market, was valueless, and the value of its preferred stock was seriously impaired.

The initiative to terminate this situation necessarily had to come from the stockholders. Except for the trustees of the Wage Fund, who held thirty-one percent of the preferred stock and twenty-nine percent [276]*276of the common stock, the stock was widely distributed, the preferred stock being held by 25,036 persons and the common stock by 8,312 persons. There was no probability of the voluntary dissolution of the corporation either “by a written agreement signed by all the shareholders”, or by “the affirmative vote of the holders of at least a majority of the outstanding shares entitled to vote”, in accordance with the provisions of section 1102 of the Business Corporation Law of May 5, 1933, P. L. 364, 15 PS §2852-1102. Only the common stockholders were entitled to vote, and the consent of a majority could not have been expected because the common stock was being sold on the market, and this fictitious market value would have been destroyed by the corporation’s dissolution.

After a study of the financial and legal status of the corporation, and conferences with its counsel, officers and directors, which revealed the foregoing circumstances, and being of the opinion that there was no possibility of the corporation’s resuming actively its objects or materially reducing the deficits to its stockholders, and that liquidation and distribution were in the interest of the preferred stockholders who were the only stockholders having any equity in its assets, claimants advised their clients, the trustees of the Wage Fund, to institute this proceeding for the involuntary dissolution of the corporation pursuant to section 1107 of the Business Corporation Law, 15 PS §2852-1107.

In view of the familiarity of this court with the affairs of the Wage Fund, and thereby with those of the corporation, claimants conferred with and secured the permission of the late President Judge Thomas D. Finletter to file under the above caption an appropriate petition for the involuntary liquidation of the corporation. Claimants prepared and filed such petition, gave notice of the hearing thereon to the registered owners [277]*277of common and preferred shares and to creditors, and assembled the necessary financial and other factual information for submission to the court. Answers to the petition were filed by Albert M. Hankin, who deposed that the trustees of the Wage Fund represented a single viewpoint in connection with the corporation’s liquidation or dissolution and were not representative of, and had no community of interest with, other individual shareholders, and by the corporation, which averred the willingness of its board of directors to continue and complete the liquidation of its assets in accordance with the program therein set forth, and suggested that there was no necessity for the appointment of a receiver pendente lite or a liquidating receiver, as permitted by section 1108 A and B of the Business Corporation Law, 15 PS §2852-1108. Following the hearing, at which it appeared that the objects of the corporation had wholly failed and their accomplishment was impracticable, the court decreed that the corporation be wound up and dissolved, and that the corporation, by its officers and board of directors, continue with the liquidation of its assets and submit to the court a plan for the distribution thereof.

Subsequently, in approving the plan for the distribution of the assets of the corporation, the court adjudicated that the holders of the preferred stock were entitled to priority in the distribution of the assets; that the assets were insufficient to pay them in full; that there was no value in the common stock, and that the holders thereof were not entitled to share in the distribution.

Claimants’ position is that the services rendered by them were for the benefit of all preferred stockholders of the corporation indiscriminately, that although the proceeding for the involuntary dissolution of the corporation was nominally instituted for the trustees of Wage Fund as holders of a. large number of shares, it [278]*278was initiated for, and has resulted in, benefits to all such stockholders, that otherwise there would have been no means.by which the corporation’s existence could have been terminated, and, therefore, compensation for such services ought to be borne in the same proportion by all the preferred stockholders and allowed out of the funds of the corporation.

“The general rule is that a trust estate must bear the expense of its administration and the cases show that when a claim for counsel fees is made it must appear that the services for which fees are claimed were necessary; incidental benefit to cestuis is insufficient”: Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Co. v. Pittsburgh United Corp., 334 Pa. 107, 112. “Payment of counsel fees out of a trust fund is justified only where the attorney has performed services necessary to the creation or preservation of the fund out of which payment is sought”: Washington Trust Company Account, 350 Pa. 363, 368. In refusing the allowance of counsel fees to attorneys for various beneficiaries of the Cooperative Wage Fund to be paid out of the fund, Judge Finletter stated (in an unreported opinion filed June 27, 1944, under this caption) : “An analysis of the cases . . . discloses that the courts have consistently held in Pennsylvania, as in other jurisdictions, that counsel fees are payable out of a fund in court only when the services of an attorney operate to raise or increase the fund, or to protect or preserve it from dissipation.” See 49 A. L. R. 1149 and 107 A. L. R. 749.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Pa. D. & C. 274, 1948 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cooperative-wage-fund-pactcomplphilad-1948.