Penn v. Pemberton & Penn, Inc.

53 S.E.2d 823, 189 Va. 649, 1949 Va. LEXIS 208
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 20, 1949
DocketRecord No. 3480
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 53 S.E.2d 823 (Penn v. Pemberton & Penn, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penn v. Pemberton & Penn, Inc., 53 S.E.2d 823, 189 Va. 649, 1949 Va. LEXIS 208 (Va. 1949).

Opinion

Hudgins, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a controversy between the minority and the majority shareholders of Pemberton & Penn, Inc., a solvent corporation. J. Pemberton Penn, at the time of his death in 1947, was a director, president, and owner of 1,500 shares, or one-third of the outstanding stock of the corporation. The other 3,000 shares were owned by George R. Penn, Richard T. Penn, Elizabeth Penn Carter, and Everett E. Carter, who were, and are, officers and directors. J. Pemberton Penn, Jr., and American National Bank & Trust Company qualified as personal representatives of J. Pemberton Penn, and instituted this suit alleging that the purpose for which the corporation was formed had failed, praying that the corporation be dissolved, and that its assets be distributed under the supervision of the court. A decree was entered denying the prayer, and dismissing the bill. Complainants obtained this appeal.

Pemberton & Penn is, and has been, a close corporation since 1917, when James G. Penn, Rucker Penn, Ben R. Penn, George R. Penn, and J. Pemberton Penn acquired all of its outstanding stock.

The primary purpose for which the corporation was formed was to conduct a leaf tobacco business, with its principal office in Danville, Virginia. From 1918 to 1939, it was active and successful in the conduct of this business. [652]*652The total sum the five Penns invested in the corporation was $190,000. During the period stated it paid each of them a substantial salary annually, declared cash and stock dividends from time to time, and increased its net worth to more than $1,000,000.

The corporation bought green tobacco on auction warehouse floors in the flue-cured area (Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia) by its own employees, or on orders given to other buyers who were paid on a commission basis. It bought tobacco “on order” for the Japanese Government for which it was the sole agent. This tobacco was redried in its redrying plant in Danville and shipped to Japan. The great bulk of tobacco was bought by the corporation for its own account, processed or redried by others near the place where bought, and then stored on the Atlantic seaboard either in Newport News or Norfolk. The tobacco was then offered for sale by sample and most of it bought by European customers.

In 1939, Ben R. Penn died and his 1,500 shares of stock were inherited by his daughter, Elizabeth Penn Carter. She transferred 50 shares of this stock to her husband, Everett E. Carter, both of whom were later elected directors and officers of the corporation. In 1942 James G. Penn and Rucker Penn died. The 3,000 shares owned by them were purchased by the corporation for $110.00 per share, and the stock cancelled. In October, 1947, J. Pemberton Penn died, and his 1,500 shares passed to his personal representatives in their fiduciary capacity. The offer of the corporation to purchase this stock at $147.00 per share was declined by appellants who thereafter demanded a dissolution of the corporation and a distribution of its assets. This demand was refused and this suit instituted.

The pertinent provisions of Code, section 3810b, authorize a court of equity “to wind up” and dissolve a corporation, though solvent, whenever the principal purpose for which it was formed has failed, or when the management of the corporation has been abandoned by its officers and directors.

[653]*653This statute, in part, is declaratory of the general rule that a court of equity has inherent power, on the request of minority stockholders, to dissolve a solvent corporation when it appears that the directors or a majority of the stockholders have been guilty of fraud or gross mismanagement, or where the principal purpose for which the corporation was formed has become impossible of attainment. Bowen v. Bowen-Romer Flour Mills Corp., 114 Kan. 95, 217 P. 301, 43 A. L. R. 238; Annotations 242, 318; Annotations 61 A. L. R. 1212, 91 A. L. R. 665; see article entitled “Judicial Power to Wind up a Corporation at the Suit of a Minority Stockholder,” Columbia Law Review, Vol. XL, 220.

In accord with this general rule, we held in Brennan v. Rollman, 151 Va. 715, 145 S. E. 260, that equity had power to take possession of and liquidate a solvent corporation at the instance of minority stockholders only in the event that it clearly appeared that the purposes for which the corporation was formed had become impossible of attainment, and to permit the business to continue would be manifestly ruinous to its stockholders.

Since the finding of the trial court was based on evidence taken ore tenus, all conflicts have been decided against appellants, and we must consider the evidence in the light most favorable to appellees, the successful litigants in the lower court. So considering the evidence the record presents the following facts:

There are two methods of conducting a leaf tobacco business, the principal purpose for which the corporation was created. One is to buy “on order.” This means that the buyer on the warehouse floor is acting as agent for another and using such other’s money to pay for the tobacco bought. Usually the tobacco so bought is redried by the buyer and held subject to the owner’s shipping orders. This method of conducting the business necessitates redrying machinery and large storage space.

The other method is where a dealer buys tobacco on his own account. He may have others buying on commission [654]*654for him, but he pays his own money for the tobacco and the tobacco is his. He may redry it himself or he may have others redry it for him. He usually stores it in a public storage plant, frequently near a seaport. He seeks a purchaser, domestic or foreign, and offers it for sale by sample to any one who may be interested.

Pemberton & Penn used both methods in the conduct of its business. The tobacco it bought on order of the Japanese Government was redried at its plant in Danville and from there shipped to Japan. Most of the tobacco acquired by this corporation was bought for speculation and was re-dried by others near where bought, shipped to the seaboard and stored until a purchaser was obtained.

In 1937, the Japanese Government severed its business relations with the corporation. Consequently, the corporation had no immediate need for its redrying machinery, equipment and its storage space. The directors unanimously agreed that it was for the best interest of all stockholders to sell the redrying machinery and equipment, and to rent the storage space to the Dan River Mills. This relieved the corporation of the expense of keeping idle machinery which would deteriorate in value, and eliminated the necessity for keeping a large force of employees to work in the redrying plant.

The conditions in Europe in 1939, resulting from the outbreak of World War II, were such that no profitable business could be conducted with the European dealers. No ships were available to transport tobacco, and even if they had been, the European customers were so impoverished that they could not pay for it.

The unsettled and chaotic conditions in the European and Asiatic countries were reflected, certainly in the tobacco business, in this country. This business is highly speculative even under normal conditions. These abnormal conditions made the successful conduct of the business even more uncertain.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.E.2d 823, 189 Va. 649, 1949 Va. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-v-pemberton-penn-inc-va-1949.