Musson v. New York & Queens Electric Light and Power Co.

138 Misc. 881, 247 N.Y.S. 406, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1043
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 Misc. 881 (Musson v. New York & Queens Electric Light and Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Musson v. New York & Queens Electric Light and Power Co., 138 Misc. 881, 247 N.Y.S. 406, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1043 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

Frankenthaler, J.

This is an action by a stockholder of the New York and Queens Electric Light and Power Company (hereinafter referred to as Queens) against that corporation and the Consolidated Gas Company of New York (hereinafter referred to as Consolidated). The complaint states that the plaintiff is suing in behalf of herself and all stockholders of Queens similarly situated who may come in and contribute to the expense of the action. It is alleged that prior to the year 1913 the plaintiff owned ten shares of the originally issued common stock of Queens, which consisted of 12,500 shares of preferred and 12,500 shares of common [883]*883stock, each having a par value of $100; that in 1913 Consolidated acquired 7,612 shares of preferred and 9,659 of common and, as majority stockholder, caused the Queens board of directors to be constituted of persons who were directors of Consolidated or of its subsidiaries; and that Consolidated then embarked upon a policy which had for its object the exploitation of Queens for the benefit of Consolidated, to the detriment of the other Queens stockholders. The complaint charges that in pursuance of this plan, Consolidated through its control of the board of directors of Queens, caused the dividend rate upon the five per cent non-cumulative preferred stock of Queens to be fixed at the rate of four dollars per annum from 1913 to 1921, despite the fact that the earnings available for such dividends averaged over twenty-six dollars per annum for each share, and that it thereby depressed the market value of the capital stock. It is further set forth that during the same period Consolidated depressed the market value of the Queens common stock by causing Queens to refrain from declaring a dividend upon that stock, although (after allowing for dividends at the full authorized rate upon the preferred stock) the earnings which were available for dividends on the common stock averaged twenty-one dollars per annum for each shard. The claims are also made that in furtherance of its plan Consolidated caused Queens to fail to report to its other stockholders “ all detailed information ” as to the operations and earnings of Queens, thus concealing from them the actual value of the Queens stock, and that between 1913 and 1922 Consolidated acquired by purchase in the open market 878 additional shares of preferred stock of Queens and 1,007 of common at the depressed value which its policy had brought about. The complaint proceeds to allege that Consolidated caused a stockholders’ meeting of Queens to be held on September 15, 1922, for the purpose of increasing the common stock of the latter company from 12,500 to 83,500 shares, and for the further purpose of authorizing the delivery of the newly created 71,000 shares to Consolidated in return for the cancellation of an indebtedness of $7,100,000 owing from Queens to Consolidated, of which $3,400,000 was represented by debenture bonds and the remaining $3,700,000 by open account; that the true and actual value of the 71,000 shares was in excess of $14,200,000, or more than $200 per share, which Consolidated well knew but caused to be concealed from the other stockholders of Queens; that Consolidated through the authorization secured at the-stockholders’ meeting acquired the 71,000 shares at less than half their actual value; and that Consolidated had secretly intended to have a dividend of seven per cent per annum declared upon the common stock immediately after the delivery of the 71,000 shares [884]*884to it, and. actually carried out that intention as soon as the shares were received.

The plaintiff’s grievance in respect of the foregoing allegations of the complaint is summarized in paragraph 14 of that pleading as follows: “By means of its policy and conduct as aforesaid, defendant Consolidated Gas Company of New York designed to and did create in the minds of the plaintiff and other stockholders of defendant New York & Queens Electric Light & Power Company the belief that their respective pre-emptive rights to subscribe to newly issued stock of defendant New York & Queens Electric Light & Power Company were worthless, although in fact such rights were of great value, thereby intending to prevent the exercise of such rights and thereby securing to itself the whole of such new issue of shares.” There follow a number of other paragraphs in which it is averred that since 1925 the earnings of Queens available for dividends upon its common stock have averaged more than thirteen dollars per annum for each share, thus justifying an increase in the dividend rate to at least ten dollars per annum for each share, and, further, that Consolidated caused Queens to make voluntary reductions of rates charged to the latter’s patrons with the object of neutralizing public dissatisfaction with the rates charged by Consolidated and its other subsidiaries from which the greater part of the income of Consolidated is derived. All these acts upon the part of Consolidated are characterized as “ a breach and abuse of the fiduciary duty imposed upon it in the circumstances aforesaid to secure and protect the rights and interests of plaintiff and other minority stockholders of defendant New York & Queens Electric Light & Power Company.”

Judgment is demanded (1) that the continuance of Consolidated’s policy of exploitation be enjoined; (2) that Queens be directed to render to all its stockholders a detailed report of its operations and earnings since 1923; (3) that Queens be directed to declare a dividend of not less than ten dollars per share upon its common stock; (4) that the issue of 71,000 shares to Consolidated be canceled, the shares returned to the Queens treasury and an opportunity afforded to the plaintiff and other minority stockholders to subscribe ratably to~them, and (5) that Consolidated be directed to account for all profits which have accrued to it upon the 71,000 shares.

It seems to be clear that neither the plaintiff nor any other stockholder of Queens had a pre-emptive right to subscribe to a proportionate part of the increase of 71,000 shares authorized at the meeting of September 15, 1922, the reason being that the preemptive right exists only where the new stock is issued for money, and not where it is to be used to purchase property for the cor[885]*885poration. (Stokes v. Continental Trust Co., 186 N. Y. 285, 286, 299, 300; Dunlay v. Avenue M Garage & R. Co., 253 id. 274, 278; Archer v. Hesse, 164 App. Div. 493, 497; Bond v. Atlantic Terra Cotta Co., 137 id. 671.) (See, also, 43 Harvard Law Review, 586, at pp. 606 to 608.) The 71,000 shares were not issued for money but for the purchase and extinguishment of the claims of Consolidated against the Queens company. These claims were property, assignable to others as well as to Queens, and no preemptive rights were, therefore, violated in failing to give the plaintiff or any other stockholder the opportunity of subscribing. Moreover, even if it be assumed that the plaintiff did possess a pre-emptive right to subscribe, her conduct has been such as to make it inequitable to permit her at this late date to overthrow the issuance of the 71,000 shares to Consolidated.

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Bluebook (online)
138 Misc. 881, 247 N.Y.S. 406, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musson-v-new-york-queens-electric-light-and-power-co-nysupct-1931.