In re Marcus

273 A.D. 725, 79 N.Y.S.2d 76, 1948 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4675
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 24, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 273 A.D. 725 (In re Marcus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Marcus, 273 A.D. 725, 79 N.Y.S.2d 76, 1948 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4675 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Peck, P. J.

This is a proceeding under section 21 of the Stock Corporation Law for the appraisal of fifty shares of common stock of B. H. Macy & Co., Inc., owned by petitioner, who was the sole dissenter from a resolution adopted by the vote of 1,332,408 shares, amending the certificate of incorporation to give voting rights to preferred stockholders. The stockholders ’ meeting at which the ámendment was adopted was held on October 30, 1945, making that the appraisal date. Macy stock sold on the New York Stock Exchange on that date at a low of 43% and high of 43%, which would give petitioner’s 50 shares a market value of about $2,175. It is not denied that petitioner has asked $20,000 for this stock.

[727]*727Apparently with the purpose of making the proceeding as elaborate and expensive for the company as possible, and with the hope of exacting a correspondingly high price in settlement, petitioner served the company with a subpcena calling for the production of all the books, records and working papers of the company and each of its subsidiaries relating to their financial condition, physical inventory and fixed assets as of the appraisal date, and had included in the order appointing the appraisers a provision that the appraisers should select a certified public accountant to prepare an audit as part of the expenses of the appraisal. Petitioner’s avowed purpose was to inquire into the value of all the underlying assets of the company and its subsidiaries, operating department stores in New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Georgia and California.

The company moved (1) to vacate the subpoena and for an order instructing the appraisers that 4 4 net asset value ’ ’ is not a proper standard for determining the value of petitioner’s shares and that the appraisers should not evaluate the physical assets of the company and its subsidiaries to determine the value of petitioner’s stock, and (2) to strike from the order appointing the appraisers the provision for their engagement of an accountant to make an audit. From a denial of its motions, the company appeals.

The question presented by these appeals is whether it is proper to make a valuation of all the assets of the company and its subsidiaries as a means of determining the value of petitioner’s fifty shares of common stock, or whether it is sufficient for the purpose to take the market value of the stock or make a valuation based on known factors, such as market value, book value, earnings, dividends and business conditions, without attempting a physical inventory and appraisal or audit.

The briefs remind us of the various factors enumerated in the decisions which should be taken into consideration in determining the value of stock. All of the decisions emphasize, however, that it is the facts of the particular case which determine the factors to be considered and the weight to be given them, and that market value is the controlling consideration where there is a free and open market and the volume of transactions and conditions make the market a fair reflection of the judgment of the buying and selling public. Nearly all the cases in which other factors have been given much weight have been eases where the market was not sufficiently broad or established to be accepted as representative. It is most pertinent, therefore, to contemplate the market in Macy’s stock at and about the appraisal date.

[728]*728Taking a period of six months from August 1,1945, to January 31, 1946, including three months before and three months after the appraisal date, we find that several hundred shares were traded nearly every day and that the daily average was approximately 700 shares. The market had a spread over this period from a low of thirty-five to a high of fifty-one. While there was an upward trend in keeping with the course of the market generally during this period, there were no notable fluctuations, and the market appears to have been a normal one in every way." The volume and action of the market around the appraisal date seem to be in keeping with the broader picture. In fact, the market appears to be the kind of market which warrants and requires that it be given full recognition.

Petitioner does not suggest any infirmity in the market. The breadth of the market is not challenged as insufficient to be representative of the opinion of those interested in buying and selling the stock. It is not suggested that the market was subject to any abnormal condition or influence to impair its validity as a normal market. All that petitioner says on this score is that market prices for a corporate stock are in large part a reflection of the statements published by the corporation, that inaccuracies in the corporation’s published statements of conditions and earnings will result in inaccurate market valuations, and that petitioner is entitled to prove that the corporation’s published statements do not accurately reflect its value, especially in view of the inflationary conditions existing in 1945. Indeed, the only inaccuracy suggested as likely is that in carrying fixed assets at cost and inventories at the lower of cost or market, in accordance with accepted and sound accounting practice, the company may have undervalued its assets in the light of inflationary conditions. It is on this possibility that petitioner seeks to turn the appraisal of her fifty shares of stock into an appraisal of the underlying assets of the corporation and its subsidiaries.

We agree with the holding at Special Term that it may not be held as a matter of law that a company’s valuation of its assets in its books and published statements is conclusive upon its stockholders in an appraisal proceeding. It does not follow, however, that a dissenting stockholder, pursuing his appraisal rights, may require the production at the "appraisal proceedings of all the company’s books, records and working papers to have the appraisers make what would amount to a revaluation of the company’s assets. In the first place, whatever consideration and weight might properly be given to net asset value under certain circumstances, it is clear that net asset value is not the [729]*729basis, if it is any substantial consideration, in determining the value of the stock of a department store or other industrial as a going concern. The assets are committed to the operation of the business, and inventories are constantly shifting by the process of sale and replacement, and any number of factors besides the naked value of physical assets will determine the success or failure of operations and consequent value, above or below net asset value, of the business. In the second place, net asset value, to the extent that it may be considered in this case, does not require or warrant a detailed revaluation of assets by the appraisers.

An appraisal proceeding should be kept within reasonable bounds depending upon the requirements of the particular case. An appraisal need not be an exhaustive excursion into every conceivable angle. It must be objectively fair, and if it is that by the most pertinent objective standards there is no occasion for a more extended investigation. A due sense of proportion must be observed, lest the expense of the appraisal be inordinately costly and the right and machinery of appraisal be abused.

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Bluebook (online)
273 A.D. 725, 79 N.Y.S.2d 76, 1948 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marcus-nyappdiv-1948.