Sellers v. Joseph Bancroft & Sons Co.

17 A.2d 831, 25 Del. Ch. 268, 1941 Del. Ch. LEXIS 22
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 31, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 17 A.2d 831 (Sellers v. Joseph Bancroft & Sons Co.) 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. Joseph Bancroft & Sons Co., 17 A.2d 831, 25 Del. Ch. 268, 1941 Del. Ch. LEXIS 22 (Del. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

This case is before this court on final hearing on an agreed statement of facts. It involves the validity of a purported amendment of the certificate of incorporation of the Joseph Bancroft & Sons Company, which is alleged to have been duly adopted at a stockholders’ meeting held November 10, 1937. But the precise question to be determined is whether that amendment received the requisite vote of the 7% cumulative preferred stockholders, or whether it is invalid, at least as to stockholders of that class who failed or refused to vote their stock in its favor. [274]*274It appears from the agreed statement of facts and from the admitted allegations of the bill that the complainants are in that class, as Marianna Silliman caused the 50 shares of preferred stock owned by her to be voted against such amendment, and the 114 shares, owned by Mary G. Sellers, were not voted at all.

In determining the validity of the. alleged 1937 amendment, it is necessary to consider the provisions of a prior charter amendment of June 29, 1926, and, also, to determine the validity of an alleged subsequent amendment of that provision at a stockholders’ meeting held December 11,1936. Some of the same questions were before the late Chancellor on demurrer to the complainants’ bill, and were definitely decided by him; others, though perhaps not decided, were at least discussed in principle. See Sellers, et al., v. Joseph Bancroft & Sons Co., 23 Del. Ch. 13, 2 A. 2d 108. Most of the material facts now before this court were set out in that opinion; though, for the sake of clarity, it will be necessary to repeat some of them. •

The 7% cumulative preferred stock was issued by the defendant company in 1926, pursuant to the provisions of Article III of its certificate of incorporation, and the complainants purchased their stock at that time. It then had certain specified rights and privileges which the Chancellor set out in his opinion, with some particularity, in disposing of the demurrer; all of which were of a contractual nature, and appear in the statement of facts preceding this opinion.

Section 26 (§ 2058, Rev. Code 1935) of the General Corporation Law provides that amendments to certificates of incorporations, which “alter or change the preferences, ' special rights or powers given to any one or more classes of stock,” must receive a majority vote of the particular class affected thereby. But Section 5, sub-section 11 of the same act (§ 2037, Rev. Code 1935) also provides:

“The Certificate of Incorporation may also contain provisions requiring for any corporate action the vote of a larger proportion of the stock or any class thereof than is required by this Chapter.”

[275]*275The majority rule provision of Section 26 may, therefore, be entirely supplanted by the inclusion of other and different provisions in a certificate of incorporation; and, pursuant to the provisions of Section 5, sub-section 11, by the amendment undeniably adopted June 29,1926, Section 7 of Article III of the defendant’s corporate charter provides:

“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 and 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 the shares of Preferred Stock at the time outstanding.”

The 1926 amendment, therefore, provides in substance:

1. The designations, preferences and voting powers of the preferred stock shall not be changed or altered without the affirmative vote or written consent of the holders of 75% of the shares of that stock then outstanding.

2. The par value, dividend rate and redemption price of the preferred stock, and the amount payable on liquidation, shall not be reduced without the affirmative vote or written consent of the holders of 100% of the shares of that stock then outstanding.

Article X of the certificate of incorporation of the Bancroft Company, also, provides:

“The Corporation reserves the right to amend, alter, change or repeal any provision contained in this Certificate of Incorporation, as from time to time amended, in the manner, now or hereafter prescribed by statute, and all rights of stockholders, directors and officers are subject to this reservation; subject, however, to the provisions of Article III hereof.”

By an alleged amendment of Section 7 of Article III of the defendant’s certificate of incorporation, which purports to have been regularly adopted at a stockholders’ meet[276]*276ing held December 11,1936, the required voting percentages of the preferred stock, previously provided for, were reduced to 60% and 65% respectively; but no other changes in that certificate were then made, or attempted.

The agreed facts show that at that meeting only 15,045 shares of the 7% cumulative preferred stock, or approximately 55% of that issue, were voted in favor of the adoption of that amendment, and 8,090 shares, or approximately 35% thereof, were voted against it. Precisely the same facts were before the Chancellor at the argument on the demurrer, and he pointed out that the purported amendment affected the voting powers of the preferred stock and the contract rights of the holders thereof, and as it had not received the prescribed 75% affirmative vote, definitely required by Section 7 of Article III of the defendant’s certificate of incorporation, it was void. Sellers, et al., v. Joseph Bancroft & Sons Co., 23 Del. Ch. 13, 2 A. 2d 108. I am in entire accord with that conclusion and with the Chancellor’s reasoning. This disposes- of the defendant’s contention that the alleged passage of the 1936 amendment by a mere majority vote was not inconsistent with the rights secured to the preferred stockholders by the provisions of the prior amendment of June 29, 1926. This conclusion has an important bearing on the decision of this case, and is not inconsistent with Aldridge v. Franco-Wyoming Oil Co., 24 Del. Ch. 126, 7 A. 2d 753. The distinction is pointed out in the opinion of the court in the latter case.

At the subsequent stockholders’ meeting held on November 10, 1936, a readjustment plan of the capital structure of the defendant company was, also, submitted for approval, and an amendment to its certificate of incorporation to carry out that plan was likewise proposed. The validity of this amendment is the precise question to be determined. By it, it was proposed to reclassify all of the outstanding preferred stock of the defendant company, held alike by assenters and non-assenters, into a newly created class of [277]*277preferred stock. If valid, it will affect the outstanding 7% cumulative preferred stock issued pursuant to the 1926-amendment in the following respects:

(1) . The dividend rate will be reduced from 7% to 5%.

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Bluebook (online)
17 A.2d 831, 25 Del. Ch. 268, 1941 Del. Ch. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sellers-v-joseph-bancroft-sons-co-delch-1941.