Jay Ronald Co. v. Marshall Mortgage Corp.

265 A.D. 622, 40 N.Y.S.2d 391, 1943 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6373

This text of 265 A.D. 622 (Jay Ronald Co. v. Marshall Mortgage Corp.) 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
Jay Ronald Co. v. Marshall Mortgage Corp., 265 A.D. 622, 40 N.Y.S.2d 391, 1943 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6373 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Cohn, J.

This is a controversy submitted upon an agreed statement of facts.

[624]*624Since April, 1938, plaintiff has been the owner of 487 shares of the stock of defendant, Marshall Mortgage Corporation. The company was organized in the State of New York in 1926 with a stated and actual capital of $300,000. The total number of its authorized shares was, and still is, 100,000, all common stock without par value. The individual defendants are the officers and directors of defendant corporation.

On January 31, 1940, by proceedings duly taken the capital of defendant corporation was reduced from $300,000 to $100,000. When the reduction was effected there was no impairment in the original capital, the assets being of an actual value in excess of $300,000 over and above the liabilities, exclusive of the liability on the capital stock.

The stockholders had authorized the reduction at an annual meeting held on January 22, 1940, pursuant to a seasonable notice which had been sent to each of them advising that there would be considered “ a proposal to reduce the capital * * * to $100,000, and to transfer the surplus resulting therefrom to an account to be known as the paid-in surplus, which shall be used for all purposes for which a surplus may be used.” At the meeting a resolution authorizing the reduction of the capital and the transfer of the retired capital to a surplus account was duly adopted. Plaintiff, though present, refrained from voting. Thereafter and on January 31, 1940, a certificate of capital reduction was filed with the Secretary of State. The surplus of $200,000 thus created was then transferred to a corporate account designated as a surplus account.

Defendant corporation is engaged in dealing in real estate. At the time its capital was reduced, the corporate assets consisted principally of seven parcels of real estate and of numerous mortgages on real property. The holdings are in the nature of “ frozen assets.” There is no present or prospective market which would enable the corporation immediately to realize the full book value upon a liquidation of such property.

Plaintiff contends that the capital surplus of $200,000 created upon the reduction in capital cannot be retained by defendant corporation as a surplus or for any other purpose and that, together with interest, it must be distributed by the directors to the stockholders of record on January 31, 1940; that these stockholders have a vested right to the distribution among them of the capital surplus as of said date; that the right cannot be altered or impaired by statute passed since the corporation originally issued its stock; and that plaintiff is entitled to be reimbursed for reasonable expenses and attorney’s fees.

[625]*625Defendants, on the other hand, assert that the reduction in capital completed on January 31, 1940, was effected under the provisions of the Stock Corporation Law as then and now in force; that they were authorized by the Stock Corporation Law to add the amount of the retired capital to surplus; that the distribution of the $200,000 surplus is within the discretion of the board of directors; that any dividends directed to be paid out of any part of the surplus, when and if declared, must go to the stockholders of record at the time fixed by the directors for the payment of such dividend; and that attorney for plaintiff is not entitled to counsel fees to be paid out of corporate funds.

When the defendant corporation was organized in 1926, the Stock Corporation Law (§ 36, subd. 15) as amended by Laws of 1924, chapter 441, with respect to corporations whose capital stock was divided into shares of a stated par value, provided as follows: “ 15. If it be proposed to reduce the amount of capital stock pursuant to subdivision (A), the certificate may provide that the excess over the amount to which capital stock is reduced shall be returned in whole or in part to the stockholders pro rata, at such times and in such manner as the directors shall determine * * *.” Subdivision “ (A) ” read: To increase or reduce the amount of its capital stock where all of the capital stock is divided into shares having a par value.” (L. 1923, ch. 787.) The words “ according to their respective rights ” were subsequently substituted for “ prorata.” (L. 1927, ch. 396.) In 1929 (L. 1929, ch. 652) the Legislature amended the opening sentence of subdivision 15, section 36 of the Stock Corporation Law, so that the language of the subdivision would embrace corporations issuing shares without par value as well as those issuing shares of a fixed value. Thus, prior to 1929, there was no statutory provision for the discretionary return by directors of the retired capital to stockholders in whole or in part where, as here, the shares had no par value.

By chapter 334, Laws of 1939, the Stock Corporation Law (subd. 15 of § 36) was amended to read: ¡

“ § 36 * * * ;

15. If it be proposed to reduce the amount of capital pursuant to paragraph (G-), the certificate shall provide that the surplus, if any, resulting from such reduction shall be available for any one or more of the following purposes: (a) to be used for any purpose for which surplus may be used; or (b) to be reserved and used for specified purposes; or (c) to be returned [626]*626to the stockholders, according to their respective rights, at the times and in the manner specified.” It is this statute to which defendants point, as authorizing the action taken in connection with the reduction of capital and the retention of the resulting surplus of $200,000.

In the absence of statute upon the subject, the law in this State is settled that when the amount of the capital of a corporation has been lawfully reduced, the surplus fund actually created thereby, belongs to the stockholders, and they have the right to demand a distribution of such surplus among them in proportion to their respective shares, unless the rights of creditors are affected. (Seeley v. New York National Exchange Bank, 8 Daly, 400, affd. 78 N. Y. 608; Strong v. Brooklyn Cross-Town R. R. Co., 93 N. Y. 426; Jerome v. Cogswell, 204 U. S. 1; Roberts v. Roberts-Wicks Co., 184 N. Y. 257; 2 White on New York Corporations, p. 331; 11 Fletcher Cyclopedia Corporations [Perm. ed.], § 5150.) ‘ ‘ However, in this respect it is well settled that such right of the stockholder to share in any such reduction exists only in cases where the capital stock is reduced without constraint, and that where the reduction of the capital stock is made to meet an impairment thereof, the stockholders have no right to a distribution of any part of such funds.” (Harper v. State Bank of Paw Paw, 21 N. E. 2d 47, 49 [111.]; see, also, Strong v. Brooklyn Cross-Town R. R. Co., supra.)

The leading authority upon the question is Seeley v. New York National Exchange Bank (supra). There the facts were closely parallel to those presented here. In directing a return to a stockholder of his proportionate share of the retired capital of a banking corporation, the trial court (8 Daly, 400) used the following apposite language (p. 402): “ The abandonment by a corporation of all its corporate rights gives the stockholders a right to the distribution of all the net assets. Why should not an abandonment of a portion of those rights give the stockholders a right of distribution pro tanto?

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265 A.D. 622, 40 N.Y.S.2d 391, 1943 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jay-ronald-co-v-marshall-mortgage-corp-nyappdiv-1943.