Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corp. v. New York Trust Co.

184 F.2d 954, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3210
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 8, 1950
Docket71, Docket 21781
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 184 F.2d 954 (Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corp. v. New York Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corp. v. New York Trust Co., 184 F.2d 954, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3210 (2d Cir. 1950).

Opinions

SWAN, Circuit Judge.

This litigation involves the rights of holders of stock purchase warrants issued by Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corporation pursuant to a trust deed made with The New York Trust Company as trustee under date of December 1, 1928, with respect to a stock dividend declared by the corporation on July 12, 1950. The case is before us upon appeal from a summary judgment in a declaratory judgment action.1 Federal jurisdiction rests on diversity of citizenship. The issue decided below and now presented on appeal turns on the proper interpretation to be given to certain provisions, hereafter to be set forth, of the trust deed.

There is no dispute as to the facts. The warrants were issued in 1928 in bearer form. Each warrant certifies that subject to the provisions of the trust deed “and subject to the provisions hereof, for value received, the bearer hereof is entitled to purchase * * * full-paid and nonassessable shares of common stock of the Corporation, without par value, as it may exist at the time of such purchase, at any time or from time to time hereafter at the price of Thirty dollars ($30.) per share, upon surrender of this Warrant,” at the office of The New York Trust Company, “accompanied by payment of the purchase price.” Upon certain contingencies specified in the trust deed the so-called “basic purchase price” of $30 per share was subject to downward revision. To insure that stock purchasable under the warrants would be available, the trust deed required that stock certificates for an aggregate amount of 40,000 shares be delivered to the trustee and made the Trust Company the agent of the corporation to receive the purchase price and to deliver the stock certifi[956]*956cates' upon exercise of the warrants. The deed further provided that stock certificates deposited with the trustee “shall not be deemed legally issued or outstanding until so delivered by the Trustee. The Corporation will, however, at all times during the life of such Warrants* retain a number of authorized, but unissued, shares of the common stock of the Corporation represented by the stock certificates and stock .scrip certificates (if any) then on deposit with the Trustee, and/or which the Corporation may be required to deposit with the Trustee as hereinafter provided.”2 The final clause above quoted refers to section 7 of Article III, which is quoted in the margin.3

On July 12, 1950, by resolution of its directors, the. corporation declared a stock dividend in the amount of 40% per share of no par common stock “on each legally issued and outstanding share, of said common stock in the hands of the public,” such dividend “to be payable on October 16, 1950 from authorized but unissued shares to holders of such common stock as of the close of business on September 15, 1950.” The resolution fixed the price for the shares of stock issued as a dividend at $20.00 per share, and directed the treasurer of the corporation upon the issuance of the certificates representing such dividend shares to transfer from the Earned Surplus Account to the Common Capital Stock Account .the sum of $20.00 for each dividend share. The resolution also directed the proper officers to give to warrant holders outstanding under the trust deed and to The New York Trust Company as trustee the 60 day notice required by sectiori 10 of Article III, in case the Corporation “shall pay any stock dividend upon the outstanding common stock” or take other specified action which may affect the value of the stock purchase warrants.4

[957]*957Following the declaration of the stock dividend a controversy aróse between the corporation and the trustee with' respect to the rights of warrant holders. The corporation contends that a warrant holder must exercise his warrant before September 15, 1950 in order to share in the dividend. The trustee contends that the corporation must deposit with the trustee Stock certificates in an amount equal to 40% of the certificates now on deposit with the trustee, and that whenever a warrant holder may elect to exercise his warrant, he will be entitled to receive 1.4 shares upon paying the “basic purchase price” for one share. To resolve this dispute the present action Was brought, and each party moved for summary judgment on the complaint and answer. Without opinion, the district court gave judgment for the plaintiff corporation.

The appellants contend that in so doing the court disregarded the terms of section 7 of Article III, set forth in note 3, supra. We think their position is well taken. The warrants gave the holders thereof the privilege, unlimited in time, to purchase an aggregate of 40,000 authorized but unissued shares. In 1928 when the warrants were issued, a definite number of the company’s common shares were then outstanding. Had the warrant holders forthwith exercised their option to purchase, they would have acquired a definite percentage of the common stock. A stock dividend does not change the proportional interest of each shareholder in the corporate enterprise; it changes only the evidence which represents that interest. It is a mere “watering” of outstanding shares.5 If the corporation were at liberty to declare stock dividends without making provision for warrant holders, the percentage of interest in the common-stock capital of the corporate enterprise which the warrant holders would acquire, if they thereafter purchased the shares subject to warrants, could be reduced practically to the point of extinction. Of course part of the injustice could he avoided by reducing the price to be paid for each share purchased under the warrants, but the privilege the warrant holders originally had of acquiring a definite proportional interest in the com mon stock capital of the corporate enterprise would be lost without recourse unless their contract with the corporation contained some provision to protect it.6 The purpose of section 7 was to supply such protection. It is a covenant by the corporation.7

By this covenant the corporation recognized the possibility that a stock dividend might be declared and paid on outstanding shares before the warrants had been exercised, and promised in that event to deposit with the trustee stock certificates representing that [958]*958proportion of the dividend shares which the shares subject to the warrants bore to all the common shares, and that the trustee would deliver such dividend shares “without additional consideration,” together with the purchasable shares, when the warrant holder pays for the latter. There is no suggestion in the language of section 7 to set any limit on the time when the warrant holders must exercise their unlimited option to purchase common shares.

The appellee points to section 10, set forth in note 4,. supra, as setting such a limit. That section also is a covenant. By it the corporation merely promised to give the warrant holders and the trustee a sixty day notice “in case the Corporation shall pay any stock’ dividend” — or take other specified action — -“to the end that, during such period of sixty days, the holders of Warrants outstanding hereunder may purchase stock in accordance with such Warrants and be entitled in respect to shares so purchased to all the rights of other holders of similar stock of the Corporation.” Other holders of common stock will- receive distribution of dividend shares if they were stockholders on the record date.

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Related

Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corp. v. New York Trust Co.
184 F.2d 954 (Second Circuit, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
184 F.2d 954, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merritt-chapman-scott-corp-v-new-york-trust-co-ca2-1950.