Jones v. Healy

184 Misc. 923, 55 N.Y.S.2d 349, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1846
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 184 Misc. 923 (Jones v. Healy) 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
Jones v. Healy, 184 Misc. 923, 55 N.Y.S.2d 349, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1846 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1945).

Opinion

Peck, J.

This is an action by shareholders of the Adams Express Company, a joint-stock association, to set aside an appraisal of their stock, made in June, 1944, upon their dis[926]*926senting from an amendment to the articles of association extending the life of the company from July 1, 1948, to July 1, 1998.

The articles of association provide that shareholders dissenting from any amendment 'shall be entitled to receive the true cash value ” of their shares at that time, as assessed by the president, secretary and treasurer of the company. These officers made an appraisal of the value of the shares as of June 6, 1944, the date of the amendment and plaintiffs’ dissent, and found the value to be $13.30 a share, as, against a market value as of that date of $12.25, a net asset value as calculated by the company of $17.41 a share, a liquidating value as calculated by the company of $15.69 a share, and a net asset value of $18.52 and a- liquidating value of $17.59 a share as calculated by the plaintiffs.1

The question is whether the appraisers erred, as a matter of law, in the theory or basis upon which they made the appraisal or in the factors which they considered or failed to consider in reaching their conclusion.

The formal appraisal arrives at “ true cash value ” by weighting the following figures: •

(1) A figure resulting from discounting net asset value ($17.41) by the percentage (31%) by which Adams stock in the market had sold under asset value during the preceding five months. The resulting figure was $12.01 a share and was given a weight of 5.
(2) A figure resulting from discounting the net asset value of Adams stock as of March 31,1944 ($16.53), by the percentage (23.6%) by which the shares of representative closed-end investment companies (15) sold on Jun'e 6, 1944, under their latest published net asset value, i.e., as of March 31,1944. The resulting figure was $12.63 and was given a weight of 10.
(3) A figure resulting from capitalizing the 1943 dividend paid by Adams to produce the average yield on June 6, 1944, share prices of the 1943 dividends of investment companies paying a comparable dividend. The resulting figure was $12.69 and was given a weight of 10.
(4) Mean market price of Adams stock on June 6,1944 (12%), given a weight of 10.
[927]*927(5) A figure (meant to relate Adams stock to the market performance of closed-end investment shares generally) resulting from adding to the market price of Adams stock seven months before ($10.75) the increment (10.7%) in market value of the shares of representative investment companies (15) during the seven months preceding June 7,1944. The resulting figure was $11.90 and was given a weight of 7.
(6) A figure resulting from a calculation identical to (5) but employing the percentage of market increment (13.85%) found for nine leverage investment companies for the same period. The resulting figure was $12.24 and was given a weight of 10.

The resulting weighted average of all these factors was $12.31 a share for Adams stock, to which the appraisers added $1 (ninety-nine cents) for intangible elements incapable of scientific valuation ”, reaching a true cash value ” of $13.30.

Plaintiffs’ attack upon this appraisal is twofold. First, the plaintiffs contend that Adams, as a joint-stock association, is essentially a partnership; therefore, as a matter of law, dissenting stockholders are entitled to a valuation of their shares on the same basis as a retiring partner would be entitled to a valuation of his interest in a partnership on liquidation; hence plaintiffs were entitled to the net value or liquidating value of their prorata interest in the assets of the company.

Second, plaintiffs contend that even if their concept of Adams as a partnership and of the dissenting shareholders as retiring partners is rejected, and the shares were to be valued on the same basis as the ■ shares of a corporation in like event, the appraisal was still manifestly erroneous because the calculations made by the appraisers reflected only market value, with an arbitrary addition of $1 a share, and did not take account of many other relevant factors.

The defendants contend that a joint-stock association like Adams is more akin to a corporation than a partnership and that the shares of dissenting stockholders should be valued on the same basis as shares of a corporation. The defendants further contend that the appraisal was a sound and scientific valuation of the shares, taking into consideration all relevant factors, and that the allowance of $1 over and above the resulting figure was a sufficient allowance for any factors which might have been considered but were not considered.

The court will follow the parties’ approach to this matter, and first consider the nature of a shareholder’s interest in the company and the basis upon which dissenting shares should be valued, and then consider whether the appraisal sufficiently [928]*928reflects all of the considerations which should have entered into the appraisal.

So much has been written in the decisions and texts on the nature of joint-stock associations that any review of the literature would be exhausting. The legal dissection and analysis of these associations for their kinship to corporations and partnerships has produced varying reactions as to whether the relationship is closer to the one or the other. It can be said in summary, however, that while the older cases, involving and emphasizing the individual liability of the shareholders, drew the analogy closer to a partnership, the later cases, involving and emphasizing other aspects of the association, have drawn the analogy closer to a corporation. It can also be said that as these associations have grown larger and stronger, the incident of the personal liability of shareholders has lessened in importance and the corporate qualities of the associations have assumed greater importance.

In order to give a review of the decisions which will adequately reflect the law on the subject and not be overly discursive, this opinion will refer only to the New York cases which may be regarded as milestones in the law of joint-stock associations and particularly pertinent to the case at hand.

Wells v. Gates (18 Barb. 554, 556-557 [1854]) .is a typical case holding the members of a joint-stock association personally liable for the indebtedness of the association, the court saying: Calling themselves stockholders, and théir firm an association, and the number of the members being considerable, cannot make the slightest difference in this respect. In this state, personal responsibility, to the full extent of the indebtedness to third parties, can only be avoided by the persons constituting any association, when they become a corporation, or a quasi corporation. Companies, or societies, which are not sanctioned expressly by the legislature, pursuant to some general or special law, are nothing more than ordinary partnerships; and the laws respecting them are the same.”

In Waterbury v. Merchants’ Union Express Company (50 Barb.

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Bluebook (online)
184 Misc. 923, 55 N.Y.S.2d 349, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-healy-nysupct-1945.