Lake Superior District Power Co. v. Public Service Commission

26 N.W.2d 278, 250 Wis. 39, 170 A.L.R. 680, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 252
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 26 N.W.2d 278 (Lake Superior District Power Co. v. Public Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake Superior District Power Co. v. Public Service Commission, 26 N.W.2d 278, 250 Wis. 39, 170 A.L.R. 680, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 252 (Wis. 1947).

Opinion

FRitz, J.

In this opinion the appellant, Public Service Commission, is called the “commission” and the Lake Superior District Power Company is called the “utility.” The principal question on this appeal is raised by the commission’s contention that the court (1) erred in adjudging the reversal of the commission’s declaratory ruling that the provisions of. sec. 184.10 (1), Stats., which required a fee to be paid in connection with a public-service corporation’s application to the commission for approval of the issuance of its securities are applicable to a transaction proposed by the utility in relation to its shares of stock; and (2) likewise erred in adjudging the amendment of said declaratory ruling to read that,—

*43 “The split-up of the outstanding common stock of” the utility from shares having a par value of $75 each into shares having a par value of $20 each, with no change in the total par value amount of common stock outstanding, which split-up was approved in a proceeding by the commission “did not constitute an issuance of securities subject to the fees or taxes provided in section 184.10 (1), Wisconsin statutes, even though such split-up of common stock resulted in changing the voting rights and consequent power of control of the business and affairs of Lake Superior District Power Company, as previously vested in the common and the preferred stockholders as groups. The changes in the rights of the preferred stockholders or in the characteristics of the preferred stock, which changes were approved by the Public Service Commission . . . did not constitute an issuance of securities subject to the fees or taxes provided in section 184.10 (1), Wisconsin statutes. No fee or tax was, or is payable under section 184.10 (1),” Stats., by the utility “in connection with the application filed by that company with the Public Service Commission of Wisconsin for approval of the transactions proposed in, and approved by such commission. . . .”

Sec. 184.10 (1), Stats., provides":

“Each public-service corporation on filing an application for authority to issue any securities to which.this chapter is applicable shall pay with such application, prior .to the issuance of a certificate, a fee of one dollar per thousand for each thousand dollars par value of each authorized issue of securities, but in no case less than ten dollars for any issue.”

The commission claims that the fee of $2,670, which it demanded under that statute as a condition for the utility obtaining the commission’s approval of the utility’s proposed reclassification of its shares of common stock was proper because the exchange of its shares for the proposed new shares at different par value per share, but for the same total par value, — in connection with the amendment of the utility’s articles of incorporation so as to (1) give its common, stockholders preemptive rights to purchase future issues of common stock; *44 (2) increase from one half to two thirds the affirmative vote required of the preferred stockholders to permit the utility to do certain acts; (3) reduce the amount of unsecured indebtedness which it might incur without the specific consent of the preferred stockholders; and (4) reduce the time in which preferred stockholders might control the board of directors in the event of defaults in the payment of preferred stock dividends,— constitutes the shares which are to be received by stockholders in such exchange, a separate and additional issue of securities, which is therefore subject to the $1 fee per $1,000 prescribed by sec. 184.10 (1), Stats.

On the other hand the utility contends (1) that fee is to be paid only on an initial issue of capital stock; (2) that no such fee is payable by a public-service corporation on a reclassification — as in this case — of its shares of common stock by having its stockholders exchange and receive in place of their proportionate holdings of its entire issue of 35,600 shares of common stock of $75 par value, amounting in the aggregate to $2,670,000, 133,500 shares of $20 par value, amounting in the aggregate likewise to $2,670,000, which is the amount of the common stock it had been and still continued to be authorized to issue; and (3) that the exchange of shares of stock thus received by the stockholders does not result in any increase in the total amount authorized to be issued, nor does it constitute a new or additional issue of capital stock, because of which it can be considered the “issue of securities,” within the meaning of that term as used in sec. 184.10 (1), Stats.

In considering those contentions and claims of the respective parties, it is important to note the history of the provisions in ch. 184, in relation to the fee imposed on “each authorized issue of securities.” In the statutes of 1925, sec. 184.09 provided that no public-service corporation should “issue any stocks, certificates of stock, bonds, notes, or any other evidences of indebtedness” until it first obtained authority from the commission, and sec. 184.21 imposed a fee only upon the *45 issuance of “bonds, notes, or other evidences of indebtedness but no fee was imposed upon the issuance of any stocks or certificates of stock. By ch. 534, Laws of 1927, security or securities was defined in sec. 184.01, Stats., to “mean and include every share of stock, certificate of stock, bond, note or other evidence of debt issued by a public-service corporation;” and sec. 184.09 was amended to refer only to “securities” without specifying the various types; and there were some verbal changes in the fee provisions in sec. 184.21, but payment of fees, which was required to be paid thereby, was still confined to the issue of “evidences of debt.” Stock issues were still not subject to any fee payment. In 1931 the definition of securities in ch. 184 was amended to read, — and still reads in sec. 184.01 (3), — “‘Securities’ means capital stock and evidences of indebtedness of a public-service corporation; . . .” and in 1931, sec. 184.21, which since 1925 imposed the fee upon the issuance of “bonds, notes, or other evidence of indebtedness,” was renumbered as sec. 184.10 (1) and made applicable to the “issue of securities.” Thus it is evident that it was never intended to impose the payment of ajee upon the mere certificates of stock. During the time separate shares of stock and certificates therefor were referred to in ch. 184 the.fee imposed by any provisions therein was limited to bonds and other evidences of indebtedness. The fee was not made to apply to the issuance of securities generally until the definition of securities was changed to eliminate individual shares of stock, so that now the fee is imposed solely upon the issuance of capital stock. A mere change in the number of units or shares outstanding, without any increase in the total “capital stock” does not involve the issuance of any capital stock. A stock split-up is simply a further division of the existing units of capital stock. Any attempted construction of the present statutes to the contrary is definitely negatived by the above-stated history of ch. 184. Moreover, even without taking that history into consideration, the language presently used in *46 chs. 182 and 184 admits of no other conclusion as to the meaning of the Statute.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.W.2d 278, 250 Wis. 39, 170 A.L.R. 680, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-superior-district-power-co-v-public-service-commission-wis-1947.