Matter of Kinney

18 N.E.2d 645, 279 N.Y. 423, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 874
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 18 N.E.2d 645 (Matter of Kinney) 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 Kinney, 18 N.E.2d 645, 279 N.Y. 423, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 874 (N.Y. 1939).

Opinion

Finch, J.

Respondent G. R. Kinney Co., Inc., is a domestic corporation. Prior to the recapitalization on June 17, 1937, it had issued and had outstanding two classes of stock, 50,479 shares of eight-dollar cumulative preferred, and 160,000 shares of common, both without *426 par value. There was also authorized but unissued a class of $100 par value preferred stock consisting of 15,453 shares.

The eight-dollar cumulative no par value preferred stock was entitled to the dividend of eight dollars per share annually before payment of any dividends on the common stock. Upon dissolution or liquidation each holder was entitled to receive $100 per share and all accrued dividends before any payment in distribution might be made on the common stock. Upon redemption this preferred stock was entitled to preference over the common stock' to the extent of $115 per share, plus all unpaid dividends.

Immediately prior to recapitalization, the stated capital of the Kinney Company, as shown by its books, was as follows:

50,479 shares of $8 cumulative preferred stock at a stated value of $50 per share.. $2,523,950

160,000 shares of common stock at a stated value of $10 per share................ 1,600,000

Total stated value................ $4,123 ,950

Up to the date of the plan for recapitalization, there were arrears of dividends on this cumulative preferred stock amounting to $47.66 2/3 per share, or a total of $2,406,165.67.

At a meeting of stockholders of the Kinney Company held May 12, 1937, a written plan of recapitalization was duly authorized over the objection of Alex M. Hamburg, one of the petitioners, by the holders of two-thirds of the preferred and common stock. Thereafter, on June 17, 1937, an amendatory certificate of incorporation in two parts, which together carried out the plan of recapitalization, was duly filed with the Secretary of State.

Through these amendments there was created a new class of preferred stock consisting of 67,306 shares of *427 five-dollar cumulative prior preferred stock, which was given priority over the existing eight-dollar cumulative preferred stock, both as to the payment of dividends and as to prior claim upon distribution of assets. In the event of dissolution, the five-dollar cumulative new preferred was entitled to $105 per share, if voluntary, and to $100 per share if involuntary, before any distribution was made on the old eight-dollar preferred or on the common stock. The board of directors might prepay dividends or redeem at $105 or purchase at private sale, the whole or any part of this five-dollar prior preferred stock. If either the amount earned annually, or the assets upon distribution should prove insufficient to permit full payment to the new preferred, then the entire amount available was to be distributed ratably only among the holders of the new preferred, to the exclusion of the old preferred and the common stock.

The number of shares of common stock was increased from 160,000 to 210,000.

The amended certificate reduced the stated capital of the corporation to $2,687,350 and changed the common stock from a no par value stock with a stated value of ten dollars a share to a par value stock with a par value of one dollar a share.

The resulting reduction in the stated capital, totaling $1,440,000, was transferred to surplus.

The five-dollar cumulative prior preferred stock and the common stock were offered in exchange for the eight-dollar cumulative preferred stock at the rate of one and one-third shares of five-dollar cumulative prior preferred stock and one share of common stock for each share of eight-dollar cumulative preferred stock.

There was eliminated from the certificate of incorporation the following provision: “ The holders of preferred shares of One Hundred ($100) Dollars par value and preferred shares of no par value shall share ratably in all preferences and privileges and no issued *428 stock of one class of preferred stock shall in any way be superior to the other.”

The petitioners, having duly filed their petition, requested an appraisal of, and payment for, their shares of old preferred stock. The application was denied at Special Term, and such denial affirmed at the Appellate Division, two justices dissenting.

The sole question is whether the holders of the old preferred stock have had their preferential rights altered by the amended certificate of incorporation and may claim appraisal and payment in accordance with the provisions of the Stock Corporation Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 59, § 38, subd. 12 [now subd. 9]). This provision of the Stock Corporation Law reads as follows: “ If the certificate alters the preferential rights of any outstanding shares, any holder of. such shares not voting in favor of such alteration may * * * object to such alteration and demand payment for his stock, and thereupon such stockholder or the corporation shall have the right, subject to the conditions and provisions of section twenty-one, to have such stock appraised and paid for as provided in said section.”

In Matter of Dresser (247 N. Y. 553) we held that such statute has no application where the preferential rights of one class of outstanding stock over another class are left unchanged by the 'aprended certificate, but both classes of such outstanding stock are made subject to the preferential rights of a new class of stock to be issued. The old preferred was not retired in Matter of Dresser, and while the value of the old stock may have been affected, the preferential rights remained the same, subject only to the preference of the new class. In other words, the authorization of a new class of preferred stock, which is to be superimposed upon an outstanding preferred stock, does not “ alter the preferential rights ” as between the classes of the shares of the corporation which were outstanding prior to the time that the new class of *429 preferred stock was superimposed, and hence does not warrant an appraisal within the terms of the Stock Corporation Law (§ 38, subd. 12 [now subd. 9]).

On the other hand, in Matter of Silberkraus (250 N. Y. 242) a different state of facts was presented. There the preferential rights of the old stock were not preserved. The stock itself ceased to exist. It was not only involuntarily retired, but the new class of preferred stock created by the new certificate provided changed preferential rights and new restrictions upon rights which had previously inhered in the preferred stock now eliminated. In other words, there we had a case where the preferential rights of the outstanding preferred stock were altered as between it and the common stock. Whether these changes would prove beneficial or detrimental to those who had previously held the old preferred stock, we did not inquire. It was sufficient that the amended certificate changed these rights as between the outstanding preferred stock and the common stock.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.E.2d 645, 279 N.Y. 423, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-kinney-ny-1939.