Schmitt v. Eagle Roller Mill Co.

272 N.W. 277, 199 Minn. 382, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 683
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 12, 1937
DocketNo. 30,995.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 272 N.W. 277 (Schmitt v. Eagle Roller Mill Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmitt v. Eagle Roller Mill Co., 272 N.W. 277, 199 Minn. 382, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 683 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Hilton, Justice.

Appeal from an order denying plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial in an action brought by and on behalf of the life beneficiaries of a trust to compel the declaration of a dividend on the shares of stock constituting the trust res.

The plaintiffs- are Anthony Schmitt, Jr., one of the two trustees; Katherine S. O’Donnell and Charlotte S. Foreman, the life beneficiaries, and Oliver C. Foreman, husband of Charlotte S. Foreman and one oí the directors of the corporation. The defendants are the Eagle Boiler Mill Company, the corporation concerned; C. A. *384 Taney, Sr., another of the trustees; Katherine M. Silverson, wife of the settlor of the trust; Charles Taney Silverson, son of the iatter and the remainderman of the trust; Edgar Veeck and Gerhard Spaeth; and John C. Siebenbrunner, B. J. Fast, George L. Schmidt, and George H. Vetter as interveners on behalf of the defendants.

The Eagle Roller Mill Company, located in New Ulm, Minnesota, was incorporated in 1891 with an original authorized and issued capital stock of $300,000 represented by 3,000 shares of common stock of the par value of $100 each. Charles Silverson is appropriately termed the “founder” of the company. With his brother William and the plaintiff Anthony Schmitt, Jr., he organized the business. It was an outstanding success. From 1891 to 1905 it earned $849,859.94, of which $378,900 was paid out in dividends, the balance being carried into the surplus account. The articles of incorporation were then amended and the capital account increased to $1,200,000 by the issuance of $600,000 in preferred stock, to draw six per cent cumulative dividends, and by $300,000 additional in common stock; both types were of the par value of $100 per share. This stock was all issued by outright donation thereof to the holders of the old common stock. The surplus account not being sufficient to offset the increase in the.capital structure thus made, an item of $450,000 was arbitrarily set up as good will. A provision of the articles required that a reserve account of $100,000 be set up to guarantee the payment of the dividends on the preferred stock as they accrued. That was done and has been kept up to date. Only the common stock has voting rights.

From 1905 until 1912 the company had earnings of $756,860.48, $100,000 of which was used to create the reserve for preferred stock dividends; a portion of the remainder was paid out in common stock dividends. At the end of 1912 there Avas in the surplus account, allowing full credit for the good Avill item, the sum of $367,457.72. Charles Silverson died in that year, and there Avas received as insurance because of his death $285,711.05. This was not included in the surplus account above stated.

This litigation arises out of a trust set up by Charles Silverson for the benefit of Katherine S. O’Donnell and Charlotte S. Foreman, *385 plaintiffs and Ms daughters by a first marriage, and a son, Charles Taney Silverson, one of the defendants, he having been born of a second marriage. After making several bequests to his wife, Katherine Silverson, Charles Silverson, by his will, .directed that all of the common stock owned by him, except such as might be needed to satisfy specific gifts, be placed in trust. One-third of the income therefrom was to go to each of his daughters during their respective lives, the remainder to the descendants of each, if any there should be. The other third was settled on his son, Charles Taney, who on reaching the age of 25 was to receive his one-third outright. This he received in 1933. There were provisions for lapses, none of which are important here except that one provided that if either of the daughters died without leaving descendants the remainder of the trust estate was to go equally to the son Charles Taney and the surviving daughter, except for the amount of §1,000 which could be willed by each of the daughters to each of their respective husbands. Should both daughters, leaving no issue, predecease Charles Taney Silverson, then the remainder of the entire trust res not otherwise provided for was to go to him. The two daughters are now both over 50 years of age, have been married over 20 years, and neither has any children. The son, at the time of the trial, was 26 years of age, married, and had one child. In the absence of unforeseeable events, it is very likely that the remainder of the entire trust will go to the remainderman. The defendant Eagle Roller Mill Company all along has been especially prosperous. It has paid on an’ average over 15 per cent annually in dividends on its common stock since the death of Charles Silverson in 1912. As a result each daughter has received more than §30 every day since the trust was created.

From 1912 to 1925 William Silverson actually controlled the company because of the fact that, by the will, he Avas appointed trustee AAith power to vote all the shares comprising the trust res, a total of 2,347. Entire harmony prevailed in the company management during that period. There were generous profits, totaling §2,874,603.53, of which §1,364,131.95 Avas paid out in dividends, *386 leaving a surplus of well over $1,000,000, including the good will item. In 1919 the company commenced the policy of buying up Some of its preferred stock as authorized by its articles. By 1934 those purchases had resulted in the company having 2,697 shares of such stock in its treasury in addition to 1,080 shares of common stock that had been bought back.

Commencing in 1925 internal dissension developed as to who should control the company. One H. L. Beecher and his associates, constituting a so-called New Ulm group, obtained control, the stock held in trust being voted on their behalf. The other group, called the Minneapolis group (as most of its members lived in Minneapolis), although opposed to Beecher most of the time, made his election to the presidency of the company unanimous. The lower court found as a matter of fact that during the period Beecher controlled the company, i. e., 1925 to 1933, his management and policies “met with the full approval of the plaintiffs Katherine S. O’Donnell and Charlotte S. Foreman and also the plaintiff Anthony Schmitt, Jr. As will subsequently appear, there is ample support for that finding. The policies pursued by Beecher as to the payment of dividends and the proportion of profit allowed to accumulate in the surplus account were not materially different than that about which the plaintiffs now complain, as hereinafter will more fully be set out. It was not until the time this litigation was commenced, 1934, almost ten years after the policies followed by Beecher were instituted, that the plaintiffs, despite their claims to the contrary, first seriously complained about the amount of dividends being paid by the company. In matters of this kind, where corporate action is concerned, it is essential that the parties claiming to be aggrieved be not guilty of delay. To do so works to the disadvantage of all concerned. The company planned its course for years ahead without material objection from the now complaining parties and even with their apparent tacit approval as to most matters. Now to assert that they were dissatisfied is inexcusable in the absence of any justifiable reasons therefor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 N.W. 277, 199 Minn. 382, 1937 Minn. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmitt-v-eagle-roller-mill-co-minn-1937.