Murphy v. Richardson Dry Goods Co.

31 S.W.2d 72, 326 Mo. 1, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 808
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 3, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 S.W.2d 72 (Murphy v. Richardson Dry Goods Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Richardson Dry Goods Co., 31 S.W.2d 72, 326 Mo. 1, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 808 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

ATWOOD, J.

This case reaches us on cross-appeals advanced on the docket and comes to the writer by reassignment. The issues and facts thus presented will be briefly stated.

Plaintiff is the owner of five hundred shares of preferred stock of defendant, Richardson Dry Goods Company, which went into voluntary liquidation about January 1, 1928. This is a proceeding instituted by plaintiff, in his own behalf and in behalf, of other stockholders similarly situated who might join therein, to enjoin defendant from distributing any part of its assets to the common stockholders until it has first paid the preferred stockholders a dividend *4 of six dollars per share for each of the years ending December 31, 1926, and December 31, 1927, amounting in all to $60,000, and to compel defendant, after the eom|mon stockholders have received the par value of their stock, to allow the preferred stockholders to share with them in the surplus.

The trial court enjoined defendant from distributing the assets of the common stockholders until it has first paid the two dividends of $6 a share to the preferred stockholders with interest from December 21, 1928, but denied the preferred stockholders the right to share with the common stockholders in the surplus.

From the undisputed facts disclosed by the record we find that defendant was incorporated December 29, 1910, with a capital stock of $800,000, divided into 8,000 shares of the par value of $100 each, 3,000 shares being common stock and the remaining 5,000 shares being preferred stock. Defendant was engaged in the wholesale dry goods business in the city of St. Joseph, Missouri. Since going into liquidation all of its merchandise has been sold and most of its book accounts have been collected. In March and April, 1928, the pre* ferred stockholders were paid $500,000 representing the face value of their stock, and the ■ common stockholders have as yet received nothing. All of the debts of the company have been paid and the balance on hand consists of about $170,000 in cash, about $5,000 in good book accounts, and real estate consisting of two business buildings in St. Joseph. These buildings are carried on the books of the company at $271,000, which represents the cost, less a small amount of depreciation. The carrying charges on the real property amount to. $8,000 to $10,000 a year, exclusive of interest on the investment. Up to the time of the trial, efforts to sell or rent the buildings were unavailing, except as to a small space which was rented for $25 a month. All of the dividends have been paid regularly upon the preferred stock up to and including year 1925. No dividends were earned in the years 1926 and 1927, and during those two years the company lost in the neighborhood of $39,000 each year. No dividends have been paid on the common stock since 1920. No net profits were made after 1925. The articles of incorporation provide:

. . said preferred stock shall be entitled to a dividend of six per cent per annum; out of the net yearly income earned in any one current year before any dividend shall be made and paid on any of the common stock of said corporation, and which said preferred, stock shall, upon distribution of the assets of said corporation, be first paid in full before any of said assets are applied to any of the common stock, but that said preferred stock shall have no voting power, . .

On December 30, 1910', the following by-law was adopted:

“The preferred stock of this corporation shall be entitled to a dividend from the profits of the capital at the rate of six per cent *5 per annum cumulative and no more, and upon the winding up of the company, the holders of said preferred stock shall be entitled, after the debts of said corporation are paid, to receive from the remaining assets of said corporation the par value of said preferred stock before the holders of the common stock shall receive any sums in liquidation upon their holdings of common stock; but said preferred stock shall have no voting power.”

On March 28, 1924, the articles were amended so as to strike out the words ‘ ‘ but that said preferred stock shall have no voting power. ’ ’ With the exception of this amendment the provisions of the articles of incorporation have remained unchanged.

Each appellant presents a single assignment of error. Defendant-appellant says:

“The court erred in decreeing that the preferred stockholders are entitled to a dividend of six per cent for the years 1926 and 1927.”

Plaintiff-appellant says:

“The court erred in its refusal to enjoin the defendant from distributing in liquidation the remainder of the assets of said company to its common stockholders after the payment to its preferred stockholders of the dividends upon the preferred stock for the years 1926 and 1927, such relief being necessary to protect the rights of the plaintiff as a preferred stockholder to share with all other stockholders in the assets of the defendant company after the' payment of one hundred dollars per share to all stockholders, common and preferred. ’ ’

With reference to preferred stock dividends, defendant’s articles of association provide that “said preferred stock shall be entitled to a dividend of six per cent per annum out of the net yearly income earned in any one current year before any dividend shall be made and paid on any of the common stock of said corporation.” In Fletcher’s Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations, Yol. VI, sec. 3754, p. 6249, it is said:

“Dividends on preferred stock may be either cumulative or noncumulative. Sometimes the dividends are in express terms made to depend upon the profits of each particular year, so that the holders of the stock will not be entitled to any dividends in a particular year if there are not enough profits in that year to pay the same, or will be entitled only in so far as there are profits. In such a case, the dividends are not cumulative, and are not to be made up out of the profits, although sufficient, of subsequent years.”

The same doctrine is thus stated in Clark and Marshall on Private Corporations, Yol. 2, section 529d, p. 1643:

“Sometimes the dividends upon preferred stock are in express terms made to depend upon the profits of each particular year, so that the holders of the stock will not be entitled to any dividends *6 in a particular year if there are not enough profits in that year to pay the same, or will be entitled only in so far as there are profits. In such a ease, the dividends are not cumulative, and are not to be made up out of the profits, although sufficient, of subsequent years.” See also, 5 Thompson on Corporations (2 Ed.) see. 5349; 14 C. J. 421, see. 578; Dent v. London Tramways Co., 16 Ch. Div. 344; Staples v. Eastman Photographic Materials Co., 2 Ch. 303 (1896).

We do not think the limitation fixed upon payment of preferred stock dividends in the clause last above quoted from the articles inco-r'Poration is removed by the context which immediately follows (italics ours), “and which said preferred stock shall) upon distribution of the assets of said corporation, he first paid in full

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31 S.W.2d 72, 326 Mo. 1, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-richardson-dry-goods-co-mo-1930.