In re Northern States Power Co.

80 F. Supp. 193, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2060
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedAugust 30, 1948
DocketCivil Action No. 2673
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 80 F. Supp. 193 (In re Northern States Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Northern States Power Co., 80 F. Supp. 193, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2060 (mnd 1948).

Opinion

NORDBYE, District Judge.

This proceeding is before the Court upon the application of the Securities and Exchange Commission, pursuant to Section 11 (e) of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, 15 U.S.C.A. § 79 et seq., to approve a plan of the Northern States Power Company (Delaware), hereinafter referred to as the Delaware Company, as fair and equitable and as appropriate to effectuate the provisions of Section 11(b) of the Act.

The Delaware Company is a registered holding company under the Act and owns all of the common stock of the Northern States Power Company (Minnesota), hereinafter referred to as the Minnesota Company. The Minnesota Company is an operating public utility company furnishing electric and gas service in the States of Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota. It has subsidiaries which furnish gas and electric service in the States of Wisconsin, Illinois and Minnesota. This proceeding was instituted on June 3, 1942, when the Delaware Company filed its original plan with the Commission. However, a preliminary step in the process of bringing the Delaware Company into compliance with Section 11 of the Act took place in 1938, when the company was recapitalized and the voting power redistributed among the security holders.

The Commission has found that all parties recognize that the reason for the organization and existence of the Delaware Company no longer obtains. The Commission has concluded that, under Section 11(b) (2) of the Act, the corporate existence of the Delaware Company should be eliminated, and, to accomplish that result, the common stock of the Minnesota Company should be distributed among the stockholders of the Delaware Company. The stock of the Delaware Company is divided into 7% and 6% preferred and Class A and Class B common. The preferred stockholders are entitled to receive annually dividends of $7 and $6 per share before any dividends may be paid to the common. The preferred dividends, if not paid, are cumulative, and must be paid in full before any earnings are paid to the common. Upon liquidation, either involuntary or voluntary, the preferred stockholder is entitled to $100 per share, plus accumulated unpaid dividends, before any assets may be distributed to the common, and there is a call premium of $10 per share on the 7% preferred and $7.50 per share on the 6% preferred. A plan filed by the Delaware Company, as amended in certain respects at the direction of the Commission, to enforce and carry out its liquidation and dissolution has been approved by the Commission as fair and equitable to the parties affected thereby, and it has entered its order approving the plan. That plan is now before this Court for approval.

The capitalization of the Delaware Company may be stated as follows:

7% Cumulative Preferred Stock

391,077 shares outstanding,

par value $100..............$39,107,700

6% Cumulative Preferred Stock

391,099 shares outstanding

par value $100.............. 39,109,900

Class A Common Stock

341,551 shares outstanding,

$25 par value............... 8,538,775

Class B Common Stock

729,166% shares outstanding,

without par value........... 000

The only asset of the Delaware Company outside of current assets is the common stock of the Minnesota Company. Therefore, the primary problem for the Court in this proceeding is to determine whether the proposed allocation of the common stock of the Minnesota Company to the preferred and common stockholders of the Delaware Company amounts to an equitable equivalent of the rights surrendered by these stockholders. There are dividend arrearages amounting to $10.0625 per share on the 7% preferred stock, and $8,625 per share on the 6% preferred stock, aggregating $7,308,441.

The first plan proposed by the Delaware Company, hereinafter referred to as the first amended plan, provided for the payment of $2,540,000 in cash to the 7% and 6% preferred stockholders in reduction of the unpaid arrearages, and the plan re[196]*196classified the Minnesota common stock into 8,216,228 shares and proposed to distribute them as follows:

This plan apparently sought to allocate to the Delaware preferred a sufficient amount of reclassified common stock in Minnesota so-as to insure this class of stock a return of $5,084,133, which was the amount of annual dividends which would accrue on the preferred, and, in addition, compensation for their dividend arrearages not paid in cash and due consideration for liquidation preference and for loss of their preferred cumulative position in the assets and earnings of Delaware.- The first amended plan was based on a forecast of prospective annual earnings of the Minnesota Company available for the common stock of approximately $6,500,000. Theré were extended hearings on the first plan before the Commission in the years 1942 and 1943, and in 1944. From on or about June 25, 1942, to on or about June 23, 1944, preferred stockholders were represented in said hearings by the Armstrong Preferred Stockholders Committee, and thereafter said preferred stockholders were represented by the Armstrong Preferred Stockholders Committee and the Preferred Stockholders. Both classes of common stockholders were also represented. In April, 1945, the Commission, subject to some amendments of the plan which were thereafter filed, issued its opinion that the plan should be approved, and in October, 1945, issued its order ap>proving the plan. In approving the first amended plan, the Commission said, in referring to the ' Delaware common stock, “The allocation to the latter approaches the lower limits of what we consider to be a permissible range of fairness and equity but, in our opinion, it falls within that range.”

Thereafter, and on or about January 22, 1946, application was made to this Court for approval and enforcement of the plan. At or about that time, however, certain common stockholders petitioned the Commission to reconsider the plan, contending that recent conditions had rendered it unfair to the common stockholders. Alternate plans were suggested, and after consideration of the objections and a complete hearing afforded to all interested parties, the Commission reopened the hearings on the plan. There were thereafter extended hearings before the Commission in which the com; mon stockholders urged that the Minnesota Company stock earnings were substantially higher than the amounts on which the Commission’s findings were predicated in determining the fairness of the allocation. The preferred stockholders were joined by both the Minnesota and Delaware companies in contending before the Commission that the first amended plan was fair and equitable and that there were no changed condition's which impaired its fairness as to both the preferred and common stockholders. HoVever, .thereafter, and on or about November 28, 1946, the Commission vacated its order of 1945 approving the plan, and a few day's before the Commission issued its order, Delaware filed it's second amended plan which [197]*197was básed upon an estimated annual consolidated earnings of $7,200,000 applicable to the common stock of the Minnesota Company and which provided for an increased allocation of the Minnesota common stock to the Delaware common stockholders. The cash payment of $2,540,000 in reduction of preferred dividend arrearages was retained. The Minnesota common stock was reclassified into 8,922,744 shares. The proposed stock distribution was as follows:

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In re Electric Power & Light Corp.
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Bluebook (online)
80 F. Supp. 193, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-northern-states-power-co-mnd-1948.