Sellers v. Bancroft

2 A.2d 108
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 18, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 A.2d 108 (Sellers v. Bancroft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sellers v. Bancroft, 2 A.2d 108 (Del. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Complainants are holders of shares of 7% cumulative preferred stock issued by the defendant under authority of an amendment to its charter adopted June 29, 1926.

Said stock has a par value of one hundred dollars per share; calls for an annual seven dollar per share dividend which is cumulative and must be paid before any dividends may be paid to the common stock; is entitled to receive in case of involuntary liquidation of the company or its voluntary dissolution one hundred dollars per share and an amount equal to all unpaid cumulated dividends plus a premium of ten dollars per share; is redeemable at one hundred and ten dollars per share plus an amount equal to the unpaid dividends cumulated thereon; has the benefit of a sinking fund for its retirement; and is entitled to the right to elect one less than a majority of the board of directors in case the corporation defaults in the payment of the stipulated dividends for four successive or six non-successive quarterly periods. The preferred stock has certain other protective rights in relation to the creation of indebtedness, the issuance of additional shares of its own class and the creation of any new class outranking it in priority of preferences.

On the creation of the preferred stock in 1926, the only other stock outstanding was an issue of common stock, which is now the only stock entitled to vote except as the preferred stock may vote in certain instances.

The designation, preferences, rights, privileges and voting powers of the preferred stock are set forth in Article III of the certificate of incorporation as amended on June 29, 1926. Paragraph 7 of said article is of such importance to the issue presented by the demurrer as to warrant its quotation in full. It is as follows:

"7. So long as any Preferred Stock shall remain outstanding, then without the affirmative vote or written consent of the holders of 75% of the shares of Preferred Stock at the time outstanding, the designations, preferences and voting powers of the Preferred Stock, and the restrictions or qualifications thereof, shall not be changed or altered; provided, however, that the par value, dividend rate and redemption price of the Preferred Stock, and the amount payable to the holders thereof in the event of the voluntary or involuntary liquidation, dissolution, or winding up of the corporation, shall not be reduced without the affirmative vote or written consent of the holders of one hundred per cent (100%) of *Page 110

the shares of Preferred Stock at the time outstanding.

This paragraph of the amended charter was attempted to be altered by the stockholders by an amendment purporting to have been adopted in accordance with the statutory procedure provided for in Section 26 of the General Corporation Law under which the corporation exists. Revised Code 1935, § 2058. The complainants challenge the legality of the purported amendment.

The challenged amendment was assumed to have been adopted on December 11, 1936. It retained paragraph 7 of Article III in its entirety as originally written except in two important particulars. These particulars consisted in this — the figure of seventy-five per cent. was changed to sixty per cent. and the figure one hundred per cent. was changed to sixty-five per cent. The result was, if the amendment was lawfully operative, that whereas before its alleged adoption the consent or affirmative vote of seventy-five per cent. of the preferred stockholders was necessary for the corporation to be able to change or alter the designations, preferences, voting powers, restrictions or qualifications of the preferred stock, and one hundred per cent. to reduce the par value, dividend rate and redemption price thereof, after the amendment the required percentages of the preferred stock's consent or vote in order to legalize those changes were sixty per cent. and sixty-five per cent. respectively.

At the meeting of stockholders in December, 1936, when the proposed amendment was acted upon, only fifty-five per cent. of the outstanding preferred stock voted in favor of the amendment and thirty per cent. thereof voted in opposition. The complainants contend that the amendment was incapable of lawful adoption unless seventy-five per cent. of the preferred stock voted favorably with respect to the matters to which that percentage of vote was applicable, viz., the change or alteration of "the designations, preferences and voting powers of the preferred stock," and one hundred per cent. of preferred stock voted favorably with respect to the matters to which it was applicable, viz., the reduction of the "par value, dividend rate and redemption price of the preferred stock and the amount payable to the holders thereof in the event of voluntary or involuntary liquidation, etc." As the amendment did not receive the favorable vote of those percentages, the complainants assert the amendment was never legally adopted.

The defendant contends that the specified percentages of favorable votes of the preferred stockholders were not required as a condition of the amendment's lawful adoption. It contends that only a majority vote of the preferred stock was necessary, and that therefore the amendment was lawfully adopted.

After the alleged adoption of the amendment of December 11, 1936, viz., on August 1, 1937, the defendant sent to its stockholders notice of a plan for the readjustment of its capital structure which it proposed should be effectuated through an amendment to its certificate of incorporation. Unpaid dividends were then accumulated on the preferred stock since October 31, 1931. The proposed amendment, if adopted, would alter very substantially the rights of the existing preferred stock in numerous particulars. It would reduce the dividend rate from seven per cent. to five per cent., the dividends would accumulate only in case they had been earned but not paid in any year, the redemption price and the amount due on each share in case of liquidation were reduced, and the contingencies on which the preferred stock could elect one less than a majority of the board of directors would be more exacting than before. The proposed amendment also created new classes of stock which need not now be described, and provides a non-mandatory method of capitalizing the preferred dividend in arrearages.

The company invited written consents of the preferred stockholders to the proposed amendment and later called a special meeting of its stockholders to act thereon. Said meeting was held on November 10, 1937. The proposed amendment is claimed to have received the favorable votes of 20,595 shares of the preferred stock, which is about seventy-two per cent. of the total preferred stock then outstanding, exclusive of what was held in the treasury of the company.

[1] Among the shares voted in the affirmative there were 1,159 shares which were accepted as voted by the two executors of Joseph Bancroft. The bill alleges, however, that one executor voted affirmatively and the other negatively. That being so, I do not see by what principle those shares should have been counted as voting in the affirmative. If counted at all, they might with equal reason have been counted in the *Page 111

negative. The voice of one executor was entitled to as much weight as was that of the other. It was not the function of the judges of the election to interject themselves momentarily into the executorship and assume to resolve its internal differences.

But the matter of the voting of these 1,- 159 shares does not appear to be of any decisive moment, for without them there still remained enough favorable votes of preferred stock to satisfy the sixty per cent. and sixty-five per cent.

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Bluebook (online)
2 A.2d 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sellers-v-bancroft-delch-1938.