Loring v. Lamson & Hubbard Corp.

143 N.E. 916, 249 Mass. 272, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 1024
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 23, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 143 N.E. 916 (Loring v. Lamson & Hubbard Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loring v. Lamson & Hubbard Corp., 143 N.E. 916, 249 Mass. 272, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 1024 (Mass. 1924).

Opinion

DeCourcy, J.

The plaintiff by this bill in equity (filed on April 10, 1923), seeks to compel the defendant, a Massachusetts corporation, to issue to him a certificate for five shares of its preferred stock, in exchange for five shares of preferred stock of Lamson and Hubbard Canadian Company, Limited, in pursuance of a vote of the defendant’s board of directors passed on January 27, 1919. Before considering the legality of that vote, the essential facts agreed upon must be summarized.

The defendant corporation was organized under the laws of this Commonwealth on January 15, 1918, with an original authorized capital of $10,000,000, one half of which was fifty thousand seven per cent preferred shares of the par value of $100 each. Its corporate purpose at the date of said vote, and when the plaintiff bought his stock in the [274]*274Canadian company (April 15, 1919), was dealing in furs, and included fur hunting and manufacture. It was intended to be both a holding and an operating company. In February, 1918, it purchased a fur-trapping and trading business in Canada. In November, 1918, the Lamson and Hubbard Canadian Company, Limited, was organized under Canadian law, with an authorized capital of six thousand shares of preferred and eighteen thousand shares of common stock. All of said assets in Canada were transferred in December, 1918, by the defendant to this Canadian company in return for the six thousand shares of the latter’s preferred and twelve thousand shares of its common stock. Although the preferred stock of the Canadian company was later increased, the conversion privilege voted by the defendant, and later herein set forth, was confined to the original six thousand shares.

In December, 1918, the defendant also owned all the common stock and apparently five thousand and forty-nine shares of the preferred stock of the Lamson and Hubbard Company, a Massachusetts corporation, which operated the business carried on in Boston for many years by Lamson and Hubbard. The defendant was also indebted to that company in a sum estimated at $196,000. A written agreement was made between these two Massachusetts corporations, dated January 20, 1919, providing among other things that the six thousand shares of Canadian preferred stock should be deposited with the Lamson and Hubbard Company as collateral security for said indebtedness; that eight thousand shares of the Canadian common stock should also be transferred by the defendant, — two thousand of which were to go into the Canadian company’s treasury, together with all the Canadian preferred stock pledged as collateral in excess of such amount as, reckoned at $90 per share, would equal the amount of the defendant’s indebtedness to the Lamson and Hubbard Company. The defendant also was to undertake the sale of said Canadian preferred and common stock: the price of the preferred to be ninety, and the usual commissions not exceeding five points to be allowed. Subsequently it was found that the amount due [275]*275from the defendant to the Lamson and Hubbard Company was $245,000, and the agreement of January 20, 1919, was modified. By mutual consent the six thousand shares of Canadian company preferred were not deposited as collateral; but four thousand of said shares and four thousand shares of its common stock were sold for $360,000, the proceeds used to pay the defendant’s debt to the Lamson and Hubbard Company, and the balance retained or applied for the benefit of the defendant; and two thousand shares of the Canadian preferred and four thousand common were transferred direct to that company as treasury stock, and later the proceeds of the sales thereof were applied for its benefit.

Meanwhile, on January 27, 1919, at a duly held meeting of the directors of the defendant, there occurred the following, according to the minutes: “ It was reported to the meeting that the sale of the preferred stock of Lamson & Hubbard Canadian Company, Limited, could be more readily made, the sale of the stock being for the purpose of financing the Company, in which this Corporation owns the control, if the Corporation should agree to exchange its own preferred stock for the preferred stock of Lamson & Hubbard Canadian Company, Limited, share for share, with an adjustment of interest, the same being recommended by the Executive Committee. ...

Thereafter, upon motion duly made and seconded,

Voted: That this Corporation exchange with any holders of Lamson & Hubbard Canadian Company, Limited, who may desire it, preferred stock of this Corporation for preferred stock of Lamson & Hubbard Canadian Company, Limited, share for share, with an adjustment of interest at any time on or before January 1, 1924.

“ Further,

“ Voted: That the President and Treasurer of the Corporation be authorized to carry out the purposes of the foregoing vote, and to announce to the holders of the preferred stock of Lamson & Hubbard Canadian Company, Limited, that the same may be exchanged for preferred stock of Lamson & Hubbard Corporation at any time within five years from January 1, 1919, share for share, such endorse[276]*276ment as may be necessary to carry out the stipulation to be authorized upon the preferred stock certificates of Lamson & Hubbard Canadian Company, Limited.

“ Voted: That the officers of the Company be authorized to certify to the Commissioner of Corporations an issue of stock of 6,000 shares preferred to be held for the purpose of exchanging for Lamson & Hubbard Canadian Company, Limited, preferred stock, as authorized by the foregoing vote in relation thereto.”

Thereafter the defendant authorized the publication of the conversion privilege by the bankers engaged to sell the Canadian shares, and a notation of it was stamped on some of the certificátes for shares they sold. The plaintiff’s five shares were bought from said bankers, on April 15, 1919, in reliance upon the vote and stipulation of the defendant for the exchange of shares, and he would not otherwise have purchased them. His shares were part of the original six thousand preferred shares. On April 9, 1923, he tendered his Canadian certificate, but the defendant refused to make the exchange. Ón January 27, 1919, and when the plaintiff bought, the Canadian preferred stock had a book value of at least $100 per share, and there were sales in the open market at that price. On April 9, 1923, its book value was nothing, and the intrinsic value the same. On this last date the book value of the defendant’s preferred stock was $69.33 per share, and the market value $17.

In substance, then, the plaintiff seeks to compel the defendant to issue to him five shares of its preferred stock in return for five shares of the capital stock of a foreign corporation which are now of no value. If that were all, clearly the defendant could not legally issue new shares of its stock for such a consideration. Under the business corporation law in force during the period involved (St.01903, c. 437, §§ 11, 14, 42, now G. L. c. 156, §§ 10, 15, 44, etc.) stock could be issued only for cash at par, property, services or expenses. Even if the rights of the plaintiff accrued when he bought the Canadian stock in April, 1919, as he contends, the defendant then received substantially less than par for the Canadian preferred shares owned and sold by it, and to which the con[277]*277vertible privilege was attached. The fundamental purpose of the statute is to prevent the issue of capital stock for less than par.

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Bluebook (online)
143 N.E. 916, 249 Mass. 272, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loring-v-lamson-hubbard-corp-mass-1924.