Meyerhoff v. Bankers Securities, Inc.

147 A. 105, 105 N.J. Eq. 76, 1929 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 74
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 7, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 147 A. 105 (Meyerhoff v. Bankers Securities, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyerhoff v. Bankers Securities, Inc., 147 A. 105, 105 N.J. Eq. 76, 1929 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 74 (N.J. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Bankers Securities, Incorporated (which will be called the defendant, because for the purpose of this decision none of the individual defendants need be noticed), was incorporated in 1922 for the purpose of acquiring and investing in securities of various kinds. Its main business consisted of securing shares of capital stock of several banking institutions in Bergen county. The complainant, Meyerhoff, who originally filed this bill, is the holder of thirteen shares of the stock of the defendant and he has since been joined as a complainant by one Harry Schall, who is the owner of ten shares out of a total issue of one thousand five hundred and forty shares. *Page 77

On the 18th of February, 1929, a special meeting of the stockholders was held at which there was adopted a resolution wherein it was recited that the legislature had enacted a statute which made it unlawful for the defendant to acquire any more capital stock of the above-mentioned banking corporations and that it was deemed advisable to dispose of all of the assets in the manner hereinafter referred to. Therefore, it was resolved that the board of directors were authorized to sell and convey all the assets of the corporation, real and personal, to such persons and at such prices as in the judgment of the board should seem proper, "providing only that the total amount received from the sale of the assets so authorized shall be not less than the sum of $184,800," and that immediately thereafter the directors should distribute the proceeds of sale pro rata and "retire said shares for a sum not less than $120 per share, and leaving only sufficient moneys in the corporation, if necessary, to provide for the voluntary dissolution of Bankers Securities, Incorporated."

The bill and the supporting affidavit allege that the plan intended to be followed is to transfer all the assets of the defendant to the City National Bank of Hackensack in consideration of the payment of $200,000. All but five of the stockholders of the defendant are also stockholders of the City National Bank and are to be given an opportunity to subscribe to the issue of capital stock of a corporation to be formed and to be called City National Company, Incorporated, in order to comply with the exception to chapter 273 of the laws of 1928. The obvious purpose of organizing this last-named company is to engage in the business now being conducted by the defendant. Clearly, the other five shareholders will not be eligible under this plan to secure any of the stock of City National Company, Incorporated. These allegations are not denied.

The bill also alleges that the complainant, Meyerhoff, received no notice of the special meeting at which the above-mentioned resolution was adopted. This charge is directly met and denied by the answering affidavits and must await *Page 78 final hearing. Citizens Coach Co. v. Camden Horse RailroadCo., 29 N.J. Eq. 299.

It is also charged in the bill that the shares of stock of the defendant are worth very much more than $120, and that in consequence there will be great discrimination against the complainants and in favor of these shareholders who are likewise stockholders in the bank. The proofs upon this point are rather indefinite and are more than met by the denials on the part of the defendant. This also will have to await final hearing.

The main point dealt with upon the argument of the order to show cause was as to the legal authority of the stockholders to adopt the resolution of February 18th. This argument falls under two heads — (a) the right of the stockholders to strip the corporation of all its assets so as to destroy its power to continue its prosperous business, and (b) the right to evade the provisions of section 31 of the General Corporation act and effect a virtual dissolution, at least so far as the complainants are concerned.

It seems to me that the attempt to practically dissolve this defendant corporation cannot be allowed to continue. I realize that the conveyance and transfer of all the assets of the company does not technically amount to a dissolution of the charter, as was said by Vice-Chancellor Green in Sewell v. East Cape, c.,Co., 50 N.J. Eq. 717. But a moment's reflection is necessary, however, to perceive that to all practical intents and purposes such will be the effect so far as these complainants are concerned. The principles upon which it seems to me this question must be determined were elaborately discussed in the leading case of Kean v. Johnson, 9 N.J. Eq. 401. The facts in this case are so well known and reference to it has been made by this court and the court of errors and appeals so frequently that it would be a waste of time to repeat them here. The master by whom that opinion was written has so clearly and fully discussed the rules involved, and so elaborately illustrated them by decisions of the greatest weight, that it would be beyond my power to more clearly set them forth. It is but necessary to *Page 79 reproduce the first two paragraphs of the head notes which read as follows:

1. When a board of directors, or a majority of stockholders, deviate from the originally contemplated undertaking, the "rights" of other and dissenting stockholders are "affected;" as against them they cannot legally do it.

2. A majority of stockholders in a prosperous corporation cannot, at their own mere caprice, sell out the whole source of their emoluments and invest their capital in other enterprises, where the minority desire the prosecution of the business in which they had engaged. The contract is that their joint funds shall, under the care of specified persons, generally called directors, be employed, and that for certain specified purposes.

The opinion then proceeds to minutely examine and describe the relationship and the rights and obligations of the incorporatorsinter sese and to show the actual harm that would befall the minority stockholders in their investment in the capital stock of a prosperous corporation, if they were obliged, in invitum, to relinquish their holdings in return for even the fair cash value thereof, which would, of course, be of less value as compared to the holdings, unless that cash could be reinvested to substantially equal advantage. Not only does the defendant admit its prosperity but it is stressed in the affidavits filed in its behalf.

The case to which reference has just been made involves the construction of certain provisions of a statute, but the reasoning of the opinion was absolutely essential to determine the meaning of the language of the act there under consideration. In that case, it will be recalled, the act authorized one railroad company to purchase the road constructed by a separate, smaller railroad company. The complainant's bill was filed to enjoin the consummation of the purchase, to have it canceled, and to prevent the issue of any bonds or the execution of any mortgage. It is necessary to state this because the argument advanced in the interest of the defendant is that there will be no change in the nature of the business in which the proposed new company will engage. Although the first of the above-quoted head notes speaks of a deviation "from the originally contemplated undertaking," it will be *Page 80

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 A. 105, 105 N.J. Eq. 76, 1929 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyerhoff-v-bankers-securities-inc-njch-1929.