Smith v. Westchester Bronxville Realty Co.

78 Misc. 75, 137 N.Y.S. 690
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 78 Misc. 75 (Smith v. Westchester Bronxville Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Westchester Bronxville Realty Co., 78 Misc. 75, 137 N.Y.S. 690 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Tompkins, J.

This action is brought by a minority stockholder to restrain the officers of the Westchester Bronx-ville Realty Company from consummating a proposed bond issue, and carrying out the terms of a certain trust agreement which provides that, upon any distribution of the [76]*76assets and funds of the defendant company, the holders of the said bonds shall be entitled to receive, in addition to the full payment of the principal and interest upon such bonds, an equal share with the stockholders of the balance, until the one-half apportioned to the stockholders shall amount to $90,200 (the sum paid into the company’s treasury by the stockholders), and then the entire balance.

On a motion for an injunction pendente lite, this court held the proposed trust agreement and bond issue to be inequitable and unjust to the plaintiff, and such other stockholders as might not participate in such issue, and the plaintiff’s motion was granted. Upon the trial of this action, the facts do not essentially differ from those presented upon the said motion, although it now clearly appears that some action is necessary by the officers of the said corporation, to raise money for the purpose of saving its real estate from foreclosure and sacrifice.

While this court cannot interfere in the internal affairs of defendant corporation simply because there is a dispute between the plaintiff and the majority of stockholders as to the business expediency and good judgment of the general plan of financing it, still, if the particular plan proposed by the majority stockholders is inequitable and unjust to the plaintiff, and subversive of his rights as a stockholder, this court must, at his instance, make permanent the injunction and give him judgment accordingly.

The defendant corporation is a real estate development company and the proposed plan is the execution of an agreement with the Westchester Trust Company for the issue of two-year six per cent profit-sharing debenture gold bonds of the total face value of $250,000 of which it is proposed to issue and sell forthwith $90,000 face value of such bonds.

The defendant corporation is the owner of about-250 acres of land in the southeastern part of Westchester county, which it purchased about October, 1906, for $300,000, paying $50,000 in cash, and giving back a purchase money mortgage for $250,000, the lien of which is now $238,000, it having been reduced by the payment of $12,000, a portion of the land having been sold for that price. That small portion [77]*77is the only land that has been sold by the defendant corporation, and it has met the carrying charges, interest payments, taxes, etc., by borrowing from the stockholders, the plaintiff contributing without protest. Further money being necessary to meet interest charges that have accrued and are unpaid, and tax and interest charges that are about to accrue, the defendants have determined upon the issue of the proposed $90,000 face value of bonds.

The said agreement,' at article 3, section 3, provides that the lien of the proposed issue of bonds shall be as follows (of course, the purchase money mortgage of $238,000 is a prior lien) :

Section 3. “ Upon any distribution of the assets and funds of the Company, the holders of the bonds issued under this agreement shall be entitled to participate in a share of the said assets and funds of the- Company in the manner and to the extent following, namely:

From the gross amount of the assets and funds of the company upon any distribution thereof shall first be deducted (a) all sums paid or reserved for payment" of its usual and ordinary expenses of operation and administration and for interest, insurance and taxes; and (b)' an amount sufficient to provide for the payment of the indebtedness of the Company, including the principal of and interest upon the bonds issued under this agreement and then outstanding. Out of the balance of the assets and funds of the Company remaining after the deduction of the amounts aforesaid one-half of the amount of such balance shall be' divided and paid upon any distribution of the assets and funds of the Company to the holders of the said bonds,pro rata, according to the face value of the bonds held by them respectively; and the other one-half of the amount of such balance up to the sum of $90,200 shall be divided and paid to the stockholders of the Company as provided in its certificate of incorporation. Any amount remaining after the payment to the stockholders of the Company of said sum of $90,200 shall be divided and paid to the holders of the said bonds, pro rata, according to the face value of the bonds held by them respectively.

[78]*78In no event shall the holders of the bonds issued hereunder be liable for any losses sustained by the Company, and nothing herein contained shall be construed so as to make the holders of the said bonds or the Trustee partners with the Company or with each other.”

It is the provision providing for the distribution of the “ balance of the assets and funds of the Company remaining after the deduction of the amounts aforesaid ” which includes “ the principal of and interest upon the bonds issued under this agreement and then outstanding,” which requires this court to enjoin the consummation of the proposed scheme.

The Court of Appeals, in the case of Burrall v. Bushwick R. R. Co., 75 N. Y. 211, 216, says: “ The capital stock, is that money or property, which is put into a single corporate fund, by those, who by subscription therefor, become members of the corporate body. That fund becomes the property of the aggregate body only. A share of the capital stock, is the right to partake, according to the amount put into the fund, of the surplus profits of the corporation; and ultimately on the dissolution of it, of so much of the fund thus created, as remains unimpaired, and is not liable for debts of the corporation.”

And the statute law of this state provides that on the dissolution of a corporation and the payment of its creditors in full, if “ there shall remain any surplus in the hands of the receivers, they shall distribute the same among the stockholders of such corporation, in proportion to the respective amounts paid in by them, severally, on their shares of stock.” Gen. Corp. Law, § 264.

Referring to this statutory provision, the Appellate Division, second department, in the case of People v. Anglo-American S. & L. Assn., 60 App. Div. 389, 403, says: “ This is a clear and simple recognition of the principle that every stockholder has a quasi lien upon, or an interest in, all the assets of the corporation, for the value of his distributive share of such assets, after the payment of the corporate indebtedness. He is entitled to have a sale of assets for cash or its equivalent, and cannot be compelled to sub[79]*79mit to an exchange of his lien on the assets for a lien upon, or interest in, other securities.”

It will be noted that the proposed plan provides that the holders of the proposed bond shall, after payment in full of principal and interest, receive an equal share with the stockholders of the balance remaining until the one-half apportioned to the stockholders shall amount to $90,200 (the sum paid into the company’s treasury by the stockholders), and that then the bondholders shall receive the entire balance.

It is often said that the great distinction between stockholders and bondholders is that stockholders are partners in the enterprise, while bondholders are creditors.

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Related

Burrall v. . Bushwick Railroad Company
75 N.Y. 211 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)
People v. Anglo-American Savings & Loan Ass'n
60 A.D. 389 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 Misc. 75, 137 N.Y.S. 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-westchester-bronxville-realty-co-nysupct-1912.