Matter of Fulton

178 N.E. 766, 257 N.Y. 487, 79 A.L.R. 608, 1931 N.Y. LEXIS 885
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 24, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 178 N.E. 766 (Matter of Fulton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Fulton, 178 N.E. 766, 257 N.Y. 487, 79 A.L.R. 608, 1931 N.Y. LEXIS 885 (N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

Hubbs, J.

This is a proceeding to appraise the value of four hundred eighty-one shares of the preferred stock of Van Beuren and New York Billposting Company, under section 21 of the Stock Corporation Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 59).

All of the stockholders of the appellant corporation, except respondent, voted to sell and transfer all of its assets, including its good will, to another corporation. The respondent, who owned four hundred eighty-one shares of preferred stock, did not vote in favor of such sale. He commenced this proceeding under section 21 of the Stock Corporation Law to have the value of his stock appraised. The par value of his stock was one hundred dollars per share and it had never sold above par.

At the date of the respondent’s dissent, there were outstanding two thousand four hundred seventy-one shares of six per cent preferred and two thousand four hundred seventy-one shares of common stock, all of the par value of one hundred dollars per share. The corporation had, therefore, capital stock outstanding totaling $494,200, all of which had been issued at par. It also had an accumulated surplus arising from undivided profits totaling $682,757.95. The appraisers fixed the value of the preferred stock at $238.15 per share. That figure was arrived at by dividing the sum of the surplus and capital stock issued, $1,176,957.95, by 4,942, the total number of shares issued, common and preferred. Thus *491 one-half of the surplus was allotted to the preferred stock.

If the method adopted by the appraisers was correct, it is quite apparent that the respondent, by dissenting and requiring an appraisal of his stock, thereby more than doubled the value of his stock which had never sold for more than par.

The method adopted by the appraisers was the method approved for the appraisal of preferred stock after a dissolution of a corporation in the case of Continental Ins. Co. v. United States (259 U. S. 156). We do not pass upon the question of the proper rule to be applied upon the distribution of surplus between common and preferred stock upon the dissolution of a corporation. The determination of that question is not involved in this case.

Under section 21 of the Stock Corporation Law, the duty of the appraisers is to estimate and certify the value of such stock at the time of such dissent.” We are required to determine the proper method of computing the “ value ” of each share of preferred stock on April 13, 1926, “ the time of such dissent.”

Proceedings to dissolve a stock corporation in this State are carefully regulated by statute, which prescribes in great detail all of the various steps in such proceeding. Article 7 of chapter 28, Laws of 1909, the General Corporation Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 23), regulates the proceedings for an involuntary dissolution and article 9 thereof applies to a voluntary dissolution. Section 185 of the statute, as amended (L. 1929, ch. 650), provides for the division of the surplus among the stockholders, after the payment of claims, in accordance with their respective interests.” Manifestly, their “ respective interests ” will depend upon the provisions of the certificate of incorporation and the wording of the stock certificates. In the absence of any provision giving a preference in the surplus to ¡a particular class of stock, it has been decided that such surplus shall be distributed "upon principles of *492 equal justice and equity among all the stockholders.” (James v. Woodruff, 10 Paige, 541, 546; affd., 2 Den. 574.)

At the time of the distribution of a surplus upon dissolution, the directors of' a corporation have ceased to function. The title to the surplus has vested in a receiver. The statute requires him to distribute it to the stockholders “ in accordance with their respective interests.”

This proceeding has no resemblance to an action or proceeding to dissolve a corporation. It is a purely statutory proceeding. The statute expressly provides for the fixing of the value of the stock of a going concern, as of the time of the dissent.

It has been said that a sale, not in the ordinary course of business, by a corporation of a substantial part of its business, “ so integral as to be essential for the transaction of its ordinary business ” (Matter of Timmis, 200 N. Y. 177, 181), entitles dissenting stockholders to have their stock appraised and paid for by the corporation. The statement that such a sale constitutes a practical dissolution ” of a corporation has been used, not to indicate that the corporation as such had ceased to exist but as a justification for holding that such a sale could not be made over the protest of dissenting stockholders without giving them the right to have their stock appraised.

While the sale of the assets of a corporation changes the character of the business of the vendor corporation, and establishes the right of a dissenting stockholder to have his stock appraised, it does not amount to an actual dissolution.

Matter of Timmis (200 N. Y. 177) is a typical case. In that case a substantial branch of the corporation’s business was sold, not in the ordinary course of business, and this court decided that the dissenting stockholder was entitled to have his stock appraised, not because the corporation was dissolved, but because the stockholder could not be compelled to continue as a stockholder in a. substantially different business. A reading of the opinion in that cai=>e *493 discloses that the corporation was not in fact dissolved or its business discontinued. It only discontinued one branch of its business and continued to carry on its other branches.

At common law, the assets of a corporation could not be sold without the consent of all stockholders. The right of two-thirds of the stockholders to require a sale is a privilege conferred by the Legislature. That privilege cannot be exercised to the detriment of the dissenting stockholders. To require them to accept less than a fair market price for their stock would be a distinct injury. It is true that there may be cases where the stock has a fictitious market price. To require the corporation in such cases to pay the market price of the stock owned by dissenting stockholders would work a hardship on the corporation and its remaining stockholders.

Under such circumstances the market quotations should be considered but not accepted as decisive of a fair market price. The market quotations at the time of the dissent may, in certain instances, reflect an expectation of increased value as a result of the proposed sale. A dissenting stockholder is not entitled to share in an enhanced value of stock due to the sale which he has opposed and from which he dissents. Market quotations are, therefore, to be considered only in so far as they reflect a reasonable basis for estimating market quotations which would probably have continued if a sale had not been made.

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Bluebook (online)
178 N.E. 766, 257 N.Y. 487, 79 A.L.R. 608, 1931 N.Y. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-fulton-ny-1931.