Kaye v. Kentucky Public Elevator Co.

175 S.W.2d 142, 295 Ky. 661, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 321
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 5, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 175 S.W.2d 142 (Kaye v. Kentucky Public Elevator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaye v. Kentucky Public Elevator Co., 175 S.W.2d 142, 295 Ky. 661, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 321 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

Minority stockholders of a corporation have sought a declaration of rights favorable to their interests and injunctive relief against action of the majority stockholders deemed to be detrimental. They appeal from an adverse judgment rendered on the allegations of their petition to which the court sustained a demurrer. The statement of the case, therefore, is as it is therein alleged.

The Kentucky-Public Elevator Company has 2000 shares of common and 3500 shares of 5% cumulative preferred stock. The par value of each class is $100. Under its charter the preferred stockholders have the same voting powers as common stockholders in the event of nonpayment of two semi-annual dividends, which condition -exists. Upon dissolution of the corporation they are entitled to receive unpaid accumulated dividends and the payment of their stock before anything may be distributed to the common stockholders. The appellants, Lewis G. Kaye and three others, own 575 shares of the common stock. Several railroad companies operating in Louisville own all of the preferred and much of the common stock.

The appellants, Kaye and Marshall, resigned as directors in protest of the actions involved in the suit. It is alleged that there remained only two bona fide directors, Dixon and Smith, who personally own five shares each; that the other three, who are officers of the railroad companies, are disqualified from acting as directors as they do not in fact own any stock in the corporation, their stock having been transferred to them only for the- purpose of qualification and with the power of attorney for re-transfer appearing on the certificates simultaneously endorsed in blank and immediately delivered to the railroad companies. It is charged, therefore, that there are only two genuine directors and not a quorum of eligible directors for the transaction of business.

*663 The corporation owns a grain elevator in Louisville which it has leased for several years to Early & Daniel Company, a corporation, which furnished the railroad companies much profitable business. It is charged the leasing contract was dictated by the railroad companies and its terms were favorable to the lessee and unfavorable to the lessor, the Elevator Company, which has not been operated at a profit. In June, 1943, the railroad companies, particularly the Louisville & Nashville Railroad'Company, entered into negotiations with Early & Daniel Company to sell it all of the Elevator Company’s property for $341,025.59, “thus favoring and retaining the possession of a valued shipper and customer” of all the railroad companies. Another prospective purchaser of the property “approached the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company with an offer to purchase said property for cash and at a price substantially in excess of that offered by Early & Daniel Company.” It was declined upon the ground that the other offer had been accepted, subject only to the details necessary to conclude the transaction, although in fact there had been no legal acceptance. Other stockholders had never been consulted or given an opportunity to vote or to obtain a more favorable offer. An amended petition states that three days after the filing of this suit and service of process upon several of the defendants, the “purported” directors had adopted a resolution accepting the offer of Early & Daniel Company and directing the officers of the corporation to execute the necessary contract and conveyance and that such a contract had been only then formally entered into. It is pleaded: “The purported purchase price of said property is insufficient for the payment of the debts of said corporation and of the sums due the preferred stockholders thereof and if consummated these plaintiffs and other common stockholders of said corporation will receive nothing for their stock interest. Said corporation has no other assets except cash and accounts receivable which are insufficient to pay all corporate debts.”

Following charges as to what the defendants purposed doing to complete the sale, it is alleged: “Such action is not for the best interests of plaintiffs or other common stockholders of the Elevator Company, but' is wholly destructive of their interests. If said property is offered for sale to the highest bidder or if the fact that same is for sale is made known and some person or per *664 sons are authorized to make a sale of said property, whose sole interest is to sell same for the highest and best price obtainable, and whose efforts are not controlled by consideration of the traffic to be obtained for the railroads from the purchaser of said property or by consideration of the necessity for favoring said purchaser because of profitable business relations, past and prospective, between said Railroad and Railway Companies and said purchaser, then a higher and more favorable price for said property can be obtained. ’ ’

The majority of stockholders “without consultation with or the approval of the common stockholders” had consented, in writing, that the corporation be dissolved. It is alleged that it has been dissolved “except as same is continued in existence by law for the purpose of winding up its affairs. ’ ’

The plaintiffs prayed for a declaratory judgment to the effect that the owners of the preferred stock, by reason of their domination of the affairs of the corporation and their actions as summarized above, and the absence ■of a quorum of eligible directors, occupy a fiduciary relationship to the corporation and its common stockholders, and have violated their fiducial obligations. It is asked that they be enjoined from acting as trustees in the liquidation of the company; that the sale and transfer of its property to Early & Daniel Company be enjoined, ■and that a receiver be named by the court to take possession of the property and make a fair sale thereof.

The foregoing is a close abridgment of what we regard as the allegations of the petition material to the decision and of the relief sought. An answer and reply had been filed before the court passed on the demurrer to the petition, but they have been disregarded.

Several interesting legal questions relating to corporate management and dissolution are discussed in the briefs, but it does not seem necessary to treat them here.

The Kentucky Statutes require that a director of a corporation “shall own in his own right not less than three shares of its capital stock.” KRS 271.230. The predecessor of this statute, Section 551, Kentucky Statutes, was construed as permitting a fiduciary, a personal representative of a deceased stockholder, to serve as' a director. Schmidt v. Mitchell, 101 Ky. 570, 41 S. W. 929, 72 Am. St. Rep. 427. Since a corporation itself cannot *665 act as a director in another in which it owns stock, a person legally authorized to represent the former corporation and vote its stock may so act. 19 C. J. S., Corporations, Section 726a.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 S.W.2d 142, 295 Ky. 661, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaye-v-kentucky-public-elevator-co-kyctapphigh-1943.