Kaifer v. Ohio Leather Co.

172 N.E. 280, 122 Ohio St. 476, 122 Ohio St. (N.S.) 476, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 386, 1930 Ohio LEXIS 223
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1930
Docket22135 and 22136
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 172 N.E. 280 (Kaifer v. Ohio Leather Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaifer v. Ohio Leather Co., 172 N.E. 280, 122 Ohio St. 476, 122 Ohio St. (N.S.) 476, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 386, 1930 Ohio LEXIS 223 (Ohio 1930).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

The plaintiff in error C. H. Kaifer filed a petition in the court of Common Pleas of Mahoning county, in behalf of himself and others, alleging in substance that the defendant the Ohio Leather Company was incorporated in 1901 with 2,500 shares of common stock and no preferred; that its capital stock was increased from time to time until on June 7, 1919, its capital stock was 20,000 shares of common and 20,000 shares of preferred; that on July 18, 1919, plaintiff acquired 40 shares of its preferred stock of the par value of $100 per share, with a cumulative dividend of 7 per cent, per annum and a redemption provision on January 1,1930, at $110 per share, plus accrued and unpaid dividends; that on March 1,1923, at a special *478 called meeting of the stockholders of the Ohio Leather Company more than two-thirds of the stock voted to reorganize under the No Par Value Act, and to issue 15,000 shares of 8 per cent, cumulative prior preference preferred stock of the par value of $100 each, and 10,000 shares of 7 per cent, cumulative second preferred stock of the par value of $100 each, and 75,000 shares of common stock without nominal or par value, and to require all stock of- the company, both common and preferred, then issued and outstanding, to be returned to the company for cancellation, and to issue in substitution therefor stock provided for under the reorganization, upon the following terms:

The holders of 7 per cent, cumulative preferred stock who pay to the company $50 per share shall receive one-half of one share of the new 8 per cent, preferred stock, and one-half of one share of the new 7 per cent, preferred stock for each one share of their stock, and also one share of the common stock without nominal or par value. The stockholders who do not contribute $50 upon the exchange shall receive for each share of preferred stock one-fifth of one share of the 7 per cent, preferred stock of the reorganized company and no common stock. Any stockholders who pay in $20 shall receive in exchange two shares of the no par value stock of the newly organized company. Those common stockholders who do not contribute $20 per share shall receive nothing.

Five hundred and ninety-one shares of preferred stock and 389 shares of the common stock represented at the meeting voted against reorganization. Plaintiff and others representing 1,147 shares of *479 the original issue of preferred stock refused to make the exchange and to surrender their stock.

No dividends have been paid on the stock in question since October 1, 1920. Dividends have been paid on the new issue of stock, and the retirement of 1,500 shares of the 8 per cent, preferred stock has been authorized.

Plaintiff prays, in substance, that such reorganization be declared ineffective in so far as it attempts to affect the status, priority, or par value of all non-assenting preferred stock.

The plaintiff in error Walter A. Beecher, in case number 22136, filed an amended cross-petition in the Court of Appeals in the case of C. H. Kaifer et al. v. The Ohio Leather Company et al., alleging his ownership of 336 shares of preferred stock of the same issue as averred by the plaintiff in error Kaifer in his amended petition, alleging substantially the same other facts as are alleged in Kaifer’s amended petition, and alleging further that on August 29, 1923, he protested in writing the plan of reorganization adopted by the defendant corporation. He prayed as did Kaifer in his amended petition.

Demurrers were filed in the Court of Appeals by the defendant in error corporation to both the amended petition of plaintiff in error Kaifer and the amended cross-petition of plaintiff in error Beecher, which were sustained in that court, and, the parties not desiring to plead further, final judgment was entered for the defendant in error corporation. Kaifer and Beecher filed separate petitions in error in this court, and the case thus bears two titles.

*480 It is the claim of both of the plaintiffs in error, first, that the defendant in error corporation, in its reorganization proceedings of February 1, 1923, and thereafter, failed to comply with the provisions of the No Par Value Act, Section 8728-1 et seq., General Code, then in force; second, that if such act be so construed as to authorize such a reorganization by the concurrence of less than all the stockholders such provision is violative of Article XIII, Section 2, and Article II, Section 28, of the Constitution of Ohio, and Article I, Section 10, and Article XIV, Section 1 of the Amendments of the Constitution of the United States.

The defendant in error, claiming an exact compliance with the General Code then in force, and asserting the power of the Legislature to enact legislation authorizing less than all the stockholders of a corporation to accomplish a reorganization affecting the rights of existing stockholders, urges that, irrespective of such questions, the plaintiffs in error ought not to prevail in this case in a court of equity by reason of the fact that they delayed the institution of this action to prevent the reorganization according to the adopted plan until hundreds of thousands of dollars had been invested by the public in the reorganized corporation, and until not only the status of such investors had been materially changed by reason of the inaction of the plaintiffs in error, but the status of the corporation itself had been materially changed by such delay.

The record before this court does not disclose when the action was first instituted in the court of common pleas. It does disclose that the case reached the Court of Appeals upon appeal on Sep *481 tember 2,1927, and it does disclose that the amended petition of the plaintiff in error Kaifer was filed subsequent to the first day of July, 1927, since that petition contains an averment that upon that date the defendant in error corporation passed a resolution to retire 1,500 shares of the 8 per cent, preferred stock; that it thereafter did retire 1,016 shares of such stock at $80 per share, and that at the time there was an accumulated unpaid dividend on the originally issued 1,147 shares of preferred stock of $47.25 per share.

It thus appears from the averments of the amended petition, it being an amended pleading as distinguished from a supplemental pleading, that this action must have been instituted later than July 1, 1927, several years after the reorganization of the corporation. It further appears from the averments of the amended petition that the action was not instituted until there had been issued 7,986 shares of 8 per cent, first preferred stock of the par value of $100 per share, 7,980 shares of 7 per cent, second preferred stock of the par value of $100 per share, and 48,657 shares of common stock of no par value, in pursuance of the plan of reorganization of February 1, 1923.

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Bluebook (online)
172 N.E. 280, 122 Ohio St. 476, 122 Ohio St. (N.S.) 476, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 386, 1930 Ohio LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaifer-v-ohio-leather-co-ohio-1930.