In re Standard Coated Products Corp.

183 Misc. 736, 50 N.Y.S.2d 521, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2369
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 183 Misc. 736 (In re Standard Coated Products Corp.) 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
In re Standard Coated Products Corp., 183 Misc. 736, 50 N.Y.S.2d 521, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2369 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinion

Patterson, J.

Each of the first four of the above-entitled proceedings has been brought in the Supreme Court, Westchester County, for the appointment of appraisers under section 21 of the Stock Corporation Law to value the stock of the respective petitioners- in Standard Coated Products Corporation, who have protested the merger of said corporation with Interchemical Corporation. The respondent corporation seeks to dismiss each of these proceedings on various grounds, and as an alternative moves to consolidate such of said proceedings as may not be dismissed with the fifth proceeding already pending in New York County.

On May 16,1944, the directors of respondent corporation voted to approve a proposed agreement of merger with Interchemical Corporation, and on May 26, 1944, mailed to its stockholders a notice of special meeting to be held on June 23,1944, to consider the proposed agreement of merger. The merger was thereafter approved by vote of the stockholders at the special meeting on [738]*738June 23, 1944, and was thereafter consummated on August 7, 1944.

On June 3, 1944, petitioner Bazar filed with respondent corporation a letter of objection to the proposed merger. On June 14, 1944, respondent corporation received a similar letter from petitioner Hausman. Thereafter, both petitioners Bazar and Hausman on June 23,1944, just prior to the stockholders’ meeting on said date, filed additional letters objecting to the merger and demanding payment for their respective stock. It appears that the second set of letters differed from the first only in that the second set more clearly made demand for payment. Petitioners Bazar and Hausman thereafter both served their petitions herein on August 14, 1944.

Respondent corporation claims that the sixty-day period of limitation prescribed for the commencement of proceedings under section 21 of the Stock Corporation Law should be measured with respect to the Bazar and Hausman proceedings from the date when demand first was made, and that accordingly said period of time in each case should be measured from the respective dates when the respondent corporation received the first letters of protest. Said petitioners, however, claim that once having protested the merger, they could withdraw their protest, or modify or renew it, at any time up until the date of the meeting at which the protested action was to be considered, and consequently that the time should be measured at least from the date of the last demand prior to the meeting, namely, June 23, 1944, Said petitioners further argue that, inasmuch as their demands for payment were necessarily predicated upon the approval by the stockholders of the proposed merger, therefore, their demands did not become complete or effective until the stockholders actually acted on the protested merger at their meeting. By reason thereof they claim that their time to commence proceedings must be reckoned from the date of the stockholders’ meeting, namely, June. 23, 1944, when the proposed merger was approved.

On June 9, 1944, respondent corporation received a letter from petitioner Klein objecting to the proposed merger and demanding payment for her stock. Petitioner Klein’s petition was not served until August 22, 1944. Respondent corporation seeks to dismiss the Klein petition on the same ground claiming that the sixtv-day period should be measured from the date said petitioner’s letter of demand was received and that her petition was not therefore timely served. Petitioner Klein takes the same position secondarily taken by petitioners Bazar and Haus[739]*739man, namely, that the effective date of her demand was the date of the stockholders’ meeting on which the protested action was taken. Petitioner Klein secondarily claims that respondent corpóration waived any' right to object to the time of the commencement of her proceeding by reason of the endorsement on the moving papers of an admission of due and timely service of the application.

Considering firstly the question of whether the sixty-day limitation of time prescribed in section 21 of the Stock Corporation Law should be measured from the date of receipt of the notice of demand for payment, or should be measured from the date of stockholders’ approval of the protested action, it is clear under the statute that the right to demand payment did not accrue until the approval of the contested action at the stockholders’ meeting. Section 21 affords the remedy of payment to a protesting stockholder only, in the words of the statute, “ In the event that the stockholders 0 * * have taken action * * If subsequent to receiving the notice of demand, the stockholders had failed to take action on the proposition to merge or had voted it down, then it is clear that a protesting stockholder would have had no right to payment for his stock, and his filed notice of demand would never have attained any legal significance whatsoever. The demand for payment was necessarily predicated upon the protested action being taken. Of course, the notice of demand had to be filed prior to the meeting at which the proposed action was to be considered as the statute so requires. The demand for payment therein contained, however, did not become complete or absolute until the proposition to merge was thereafter approved. It appears to me that the legal effect of the letter of demand was merely to give notice that if the protested action should be taken, payment would be demanded. Prior to the considered action being taken, there could be no basis for a demand for payment, and in this sense, the stockholders’ right to demand payment prior thereto was merely inchoate and did not become vested until the action actually was taken. By analogy if after approving the merger, the stockholders had thereafter abandoned it or rescinded their approval, the right to demand payment would have divested (see Matter of Millard Nos. 1-3, 221 App. Div, 113, affd. 246 N.Y. 546; Matter of O’Hara, 133 Misc. 184).

In my opinion, to. decide that the time limitation should be computed from the receipt of the notice of objection and demand required by the statute in advance of the meeting, might lead to abuses which would vitiate the very remedy which [740]*740the Legislature in enacting the statute intended to afford to nonconsenting minority stockholders. If the time were to be measured from the date of the notice, the corporation could outlaw the protesting stockholders ’ rights by the simple 'expedient of delaying the taking of action through the adjournment of the stockholders’ meeting beyond the sixty-day period.

While I am referred to no case directly in point, the reasoning in Matter of Stochwell (210 App. Div. 753) and in Matter of Seiler (239 App. Div. 400) appears controlling. In the Stochwell case, the court held that a nonconsenting stockholder need not await actual distribution of the stock subsequent to the protested meeting approving distribution before taking proceedings for the appraisal of his stock, as to hold otherwise would enable the corporation to delay distribution until after the short period of limitation provided under the statute there applicable had run. In the Seiler case, the court held that the nonconsenting stockholders’ rights to institute appraisal proceedings for payment accrued when the proposed reorganization involved therein was approved, and that they were not required to await the actual filing of the amended certificate of change.

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183 Misc. 736, 50 N.Y.S.2d 521, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-standard-coated-products-corp-nysupct-1944.