Osborne v. United Gas Improvement Co.

51 Pa. D. & C. 383, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 183

This text of 51 Pa. D. & C. 383 (Osborne v. United Gas Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborne v. United Gas Improvement Co., 51 Pa. D. & C. 383, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 183 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinion

MacNeille, P. J., and Milner, J.,

Plaintiffs by this proceeding in equity seek to enjoin the carrying into effect of a proposed pension plan for employes of The United Gas Improvement Company (hereinafter referred to as U. G. I.), approved by its board of directors and a majority of its stockholders at a special meeting held on February 29, 1944, when of 23,252,005 shares outstanding 13,582,097 shares were voted for the plan, and 1,698,165 shares were voted against it.

The complaining minority stockholders who are parties to this suit contend that the pension plan (which is referred to in the pleadings as the Retirement Annuity Plan) is illegal and its adoption is in violation of the rights of plaintiffs and of the minority stockholders, because:

1. The proxy sent out by the management of U. G. I. to its stockholders “failed to disclose the facts fully and in sufficient detail to enable stockholders to learn the full truth and all details and particulars concerning the said Retirement Annuity Plan”.

2. The proxy of the United Corporation as the holder of about 6,000,000 shares of U. G. I. stock voted at the special meeting of stockholders of U. G. I. was void because the stockholders of the United Corporation had not been called upon to approve or authorize the proxy.

3. U. G. I. is committed to liquidation.

4. The plan is unreasonable in that it provides for the payment of amounts which are excessive to certain U. G. I. officers.

5. The plan is illegal and is without consideration because it provides for payments for past service to persons who have already been fully compensated for their services.

6. The company does not have sufficient earnings out of which to make 'the payments to effectuate the plan

[387]*3877. The plan provides for appropriation of stockholders’ money and property “without a benefit in return”.

8. The plan is unconstitutional, illegal, and void.

We will take up the objections made to the plan seriatim.

1. Plaintiffs contend that the proxy information or statement sent out to stockholders by the management failed to fully disclose all pertinent facts with respect to the Retirement Annuity Plan. The proxy statement itself was received into evidence and is a part of the communication addressed to the stockholders by Walter E. Long, president of U. G. I., under date of January 24, 1944, including a printed letter of a page and a half, a formal notice of the special stockholders’ meeting, and the “proxy information” itself, which devotes four large printed pages to a clear and factual discussion of the Retirement Annuity Plan to be presented to the stockholders at the special meeting. This proxy statement sent out by U. G. I. was submitted to the proper division of the Securities and Exchange Commission of the United States. The pleadings in this case disclose that counsel for plaintiffs herein appealed to the Securities and Exchange Commission to intervene and adjourn the special meeting of the stockholders, and the Securities and Exchange Commission refused to interfere therewith. It is clear from an examination and reading of the proxy statement itself, and from the action of the Securities and Exchange Commission in refusing to interfere with the voting by the stockholders on the plan, that the statement is complete, sufficient, and adequately informative.

The vote of an overwhelming majority in favor of the plan, and the fact that such a vote could have been received only after investigation by the holders of large amounts of U. G. I. stock which comprise many of the important financial institutions in Philadelphia and [388]*388elsewhere, also indicate that upon the basis of the information supplied those holders were sufficiently informed of the plan and were satisfied to give the management their proxy to vote in favor of the plan.

We are of the opinion that the contention of plaintiffs in this respect is without any basis whatever and that the proxy statement contained all necessary information for the guidance of the stockholders.

2. A question-has been raised by plaintiffs with respect to the manner in which the U. G. I. stock owned by United Corporation was voted at the special stockholders’ meeting, at which time the pension plan was approved. Plaintiffs contend that the proxy covering the United Corporation stock should have been approved by a majority of the stockholders of the United Corporation. Defendants admit it was not so approved. Statement no. 3 in defendants’ exhibit no. 3, constituting a “supplement to record”, includes at its end a copy of the resolution adopted by the board of directors of the United Corporation on February 16, 1944, authorizing the president of that corporation to execute and deliver the management proxy at the U. G. I. special stockholders’ meeting held on February 29, 1944. The president of United Corporation executed and delivered the proxy, and as a result the stock was voted in favor of the plan.

The Business Corporation Law of May 5,1933, P. L. 364, sec. 508, provides:

“A corporation owning shares in another corporation may vote the same by its president, or by proxy appointed by him, unless some other person, by resolution of its board of directors, shall be appointed to vote such shares, in which case such person shall be entitled to vote the shares upon the production of a certified copy of such resolution.”

This provision is taken from the Uniform Corporation Act and is the general law in effect in most jurisdictions. See 13 Am. Jur. 531 (Corporations §493).

[389]*389It is thus seen that the United Corporation stock was legally voted, and in any event if the vote of this stock is disregarded it is readily apparent that the result would not be altered because the votes in favor of the plan would still constitute an overwhelming majority.

3. Plaintiffs contend that the U. G. I. is committed to liquidation of the remaining assets of the company and to dissolution, and that it “will not be a going company, actively engaged in business, for longer than five years at the utmost from January 1, 1944”.

The provisions of the Federal Public Utility Holding Company Act of August 26, 1935, 49 Stat. at L. 803, apply to defendant corporation. While it is true that the provisions of that act require geographical limitation and corporate simplification of holding companies, of which defendant corporation is one, those provisions neither require nor contemplate either liquidation or winding up. In integration proceedings before the Federal Securities and Exchange Commission under section 11 (e) of the Public Utility Holding Company Act, a plan was adopted for.the divestments by the U. G. I. of certain securities and other assets, as a result of which it has divested itself of certain securities, including stock in the Philadelphia Electric Company, Public Service Corporation of New Jersey, Delaware Power & Light Company, and other companies, and stock in these companies were distributed, together with cash, to its stockholders or exchanged in certain instances for its own preferred stock which it retired.

In 1942 the book value of the assets of the company was $332,764,642, and in April 1944 was $99,233,819, with an estimated market value of $52,500,000. Its income in 1940 was $22,565,000 and its estimated income for the year 1944 will be $728,951.

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51 Pa. D. & C. 383, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborne-v-united-gas-improvement-co-pactcomplphilad-1944.