Levin v. Mississippi River Corp.

59 F.R.D. 353, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14448
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 19, 1973
DocketNo. 67 Civ. 5095
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 59 F.R.D. 353 (Levin v. Mississippi River Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levin v. Mississippi River Corp., 59 F.R.D. 353, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14448 (S.D.N.Y. 1973).

Opinion

EDWARD WEINFELD, District Judge.

This is a motion pursuant to Rules 23 and 23.1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for approval of a settlement agreement of a class action brought on behalf of Class B stockholders of the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company [357]*357(MoPac), an interstate railroad. The plaintiffs in the class action are Alle-ghany Corporation (Alleghany), the owner of a majority of the outstanding shares of Class B stock, and two individual owners of such stock, Betty Levin (Levin) and Robert LeVasseur (LeVas-seur), who also assert derivative claims on behalf of and in the right of MoPac. The defendants include Mississippi River Corporation (Mississippi), the owner of a majority of the outstanding Class A stock of MoPac, and three individual defendants, directors of Mo-Pac, two of whom are also directors of Mississippi. In the event the proposed settlement is approved, applications for allowance of attorneys’ fees and expenses are to be considered following entry of final judgment.

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE CLASS A AND CLASS B STOCK

The capitalization of MoPac has been the subject of controversy and litigation for almost forty years. The Class A and Class B stockholders have been at odds over their respective rights and interests over a substantial period. Their differences were accentuated by MoPac’s restructured capitalization when in 1956 it emerged from reorganization proceedings filed in 1933. During those twenty-three years various proposed plans of reorganization failed to gain acceptance. Alleghany Corporation, the owner of about half of MoPac’s then outstanding common stock, had opposed reorganization plans proposed in 1940, 1944 and 1949 because none provided for the old common stockholders. Finally, a fourth plan, referred to as an “Agreed System Plan,” was proposed by the reorganization Trustee, approved by the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1954, accepted by Alleghany and other interests, and became effective March 1, 1956.1 The plan, which then seemed to be an ingenious way to compose differences among various security and equity interests, contained provisions which some objectors predicted “are sure to cause trouble.”2 And so it has come to pass. The equity interests have been at odds and in litigation ever since.

MoPac’s recapitalization upon its reorganization was structured so that the old preferred and common stock were replaced by two classes of stock, Class A and Class B. The Class A shares of the reorganized company were issued to the former preferred stockholders of MoPac, the debtor, with each share entitled to receive, when and as declared by the Board of Directors, noncumulative dividends, not to exceed $5 annually, and in the event of dissolution or liquidation, the first $100, together with any dividends declared and unpaid. The Class B shares were issued to the former common stockholders of the debtor, and after payment of the $5 dividend to the Class A stock, each share of Class B stock is entitled to receive dividends, without restriction, as the Board of Directors may [358]*358declare, and upon liquidation or dissolution of MoPac, the equity in excess of the Class A preferences. Each share of each class is entitled to one vote. The former preferred stockholders received approximately 1.9 million shares and the former common stockholders received approximately 40,000 shares, so that 98% of the voting stock is held by the Class A stock and 2% by the Class B stock.

Obviously, the Class A stockholders have the power to elect MoPae’s Board of Directors, as well as voting control with respect to other but not all corporate matters. On mergers, consolidations or reorganizations involving issuance of additional stock or the alteration of the rights of either class, approval by a majority of each class is required. Thus, in effect, the Class B stock has a veto power over such actions. In practical terms, the “ingenious” solution envisaged under the 1956 reorganization created a basic conflict between the two classes, with the equity ownership principally in the B stock, but with effective operating control in the A stock.

Mississippi began acquiring Class A stock in 1959 and by 1963 owned more than one million shares, constituting 58% of the outstanding Class A shares. It now owns 63%, or 1,158,395 shares out of a total outstanding of 1,864,052. Since 1963 it has elected the Board of Directors of MoPac. Alleghany, on the other hand, which has owned a majority of the outstanding Class B stock ever since it was issued upon the reorganization, now owns, subject to a voting trust, approximately 53%-, or 21,243 shares, of the total outstanding 39,731 shares. Thus the disparity of interest between the two classes of stock is further aggravated by Alleghany’s majority ownership of the B stock, which gives it an independent veto power over any corporate action that requires the separate approval of the B stock.

THE VOTING RIGHTS LITIGATION

The first litigation that the differing stockholders became embroiled in after the reorganization came in December 1963, when MoPac’s Board of Directors proposed the consolidation of MoPac and its 83% owned subsidiary, Texas and Pacific Railway Company (T&P), into a new corporation, Texas and Missouri Pacific Railroad Company (T & M). An application was filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission for an order under section 5(2) of the Interstate Commerce Act authorizing the proposed consolidation and for the issuance of securities by T & M under section 20a of the Act. The plan provided for an exchange of each MoPac share, regardless of class, for four shares of the new corporation and for an exchange of the T&P stock (other than that owned by MoPac) on the basis of one share of T & P for 4.8 shares of the new company. MoPac’s Board of Directors took the position that the Class B stockholders were not entitled to vote on the plan separately and apart from the Class A stockholders, and that it intended to submit the plan for approval to the collective vote of the Class A and Class B stockholders. In view of Mississippi’s ownership of a majority of the Class A stock, as well as all outstanding stock, the outcome of the vote on consolidation was virtually foreordained. Alleghany and other Class B stockholders filed actions in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri for a declaratory judgment that the plan required the approval of a majority of each of the two classes of stock and sought other relief. Upon a limited consolidation of the eases the district court held that MoPac’s Articles of Association and the applicable federal and state law required the separate approval of each class of shareholders.3 The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that separate class ap[359]*359proval was not required.4 On certiorari, the Supreme Court unanimously reversed the Court of Appeals, holding that:

“With reference to voting rights, we hold only that in a consolidation as proposed here, Missouri law must be applied and . . . that law requires the application of the Articles of Association of Mopac, which in turn, require the assent of the majority of the shareholders on a separate class-vote basis.” 5

Since a number of stockholders emphasize certain rhetorical statements in the Court’s opinion,6

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Bluebook (online)
59 F.R.D. 353, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levin-v-mississippi-river-corp-nysd-1973.