Strout v. Cross, Austin & Ireland Lumber Co.

28 N.E.2d 890, 283 N.Y. 406, 133 A.L.R. 646, 1940 N.Y. LEXIS 889
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 24, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 28 N.E.2d 890 (Strout v. Cross, Austin & Ireland Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strout v. Cross, Austin & Ireland Lumber Co., 28 N.E.2d 890, 283 N.Y. 406, 133 A.L.R. 646, 1940 N.Y. LEXIS 889 (N.Y. 1940).

Opinion

*409 Lewis, J.

The plaintiff is the owner of a substantial portion of the cumulative preferred stock issued by the defendant upon which, in 1937, there were unpaid accumulated dividends amounting to twenty-two and three-quarters per cent. The defendant then assumed to discharge in full its obligation for such arrearage when it paid a dividend declared to be “ in the amount of $22.75 per share ” of which the media of payment were two-fold — a small portion thereof was paid in cash, the balance was paid by distributing to preferred stockholders income notes issued by two of the defendant’s wholly owned subsidiaries. Having had no notice of the defendant’s plan thus to discharge its obligation to its preferred stockholders and never having consented thereto, the plaintiff retained that portion of the dividend paid in cash but rejected and returned to the defendant the income notes. It is the plaintiff’s claim that to the extent of the face value of the income notes the dividend was illegally declared and did not satisfy the defendant’s legal obligation to her as a preferred stockholder.

The Appellate Division has unanimously affirmed the judgment at Special Term dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint upon the merits. Upon the record, which is now before us by our leave, the plaintiff asks a diversity of relief — to a portion of which we believe she has established her right in equity.

The defendant is engaged in the lumber business in New York city. Its capital structure includes, in addition to other classes of junior stock, 7,500 shares of first preferred seven per cent cumulative stock of $100 par value. The first preferred stock is not widely distributed. Its entire amount is held by forty-one owners, one of whom is the plaintiff, who owns 515 shares. Between May 1, 1930, and April 30, 1935, the defendant suffered serious operating losses which impaired its working capital and caused the suspension of dividends on the first preferred stock from May 1, 1932, until July 31, 1935. In the fall of the latter year dividends on the first preferred stock were resumed and were paid for more than a year. Meantime, however, there *410 remained unpaid the arrears in dividends on the first preferred stock for prior years.

In the latter part of 1936 the business of the company improved and was such that its directors apparently anticipated earnings in excess of regular dividend requirements on the first preferred stock for the fiscal year ending April 30, 1937. We are told they were also aware that unless such earnings were paid out as dividends the company would be subject to a high surtax under the Federal undistributed earnings tax. As there were then due and unpaid upon the preferred stock twenty-two and three-quarters per cent of accumulated dividends, any dividends declared were required to be paid upon that stock. It was also determined by the company’s executives that its liquid assets had been so impaired and its bank indebtedness was so great that cash dividends sufficient to satisfy the Federal tax law were inadvisable. It was in those circumstances and in an effort to pay the arrears of dividends on the first preferred stock without disturbing the company’s needed liquid capital that the defendant’s board of directors took the action which the plaintiff claims adversely affected her rights as a holder of first preferred stock and led to the present controversy.

On April 16, 1937, when the accumulated arrears of dividends' upon 515 shares of first preferred stock owned by the plaintiff was $22.75 per share, amounting in all to $11,716.25, the defendant’s board of directors adopted the following resolution: Resolved, that a dividend in the amount of $22.75 per share be and the same hereby is declared upon the first preferred stock of this corporation, distributable to the holders of record of such stock as of the 20th day of April, 1937.”

Thereafter, but at the same meeting, the board adopted another resolution which made provision for the payment of the dividend of “ $22.75 per share,” theretofore declared, by distributing to the prefered stockholders for each share owned, two dollars and seventy-five cents in cash and twenty dollars face amount of fifty-year income notes issued by the *411 defendant’s subsidiaries. The resolution directing such payment was as follows:

.Resolved, that the dividend, in the amount of $22.75 per share declared upon the first preferred stock of the corporation and amounting to a total of $170,625.00 on the 7,500 shares of first preferred stock outstanding, be paid by the pro rata distribution to the holders of such stock of the following:
$100,000 principal amount of 5% 50 year income notes of Adams, Fowler & Hoffman, Inc.
“ $50,000 principal amount of 5% 50 year income notes of R. B. Everett Lumber Company, Inc.
$20,625 cash.”

In reference to the “ income notes ” of the defendant’s two subsidiaries, which were to be distributed by the defendant at their face value, it should be said that in each instance the note states that the interest thereupon of five per cent is payable semi-annually, if and only to the extent that the available net income, as that term is defined herein, of the [subsidiary] corporation shall suffice for such payment * *

The plaintiff, who resides in Denver, Col., had no notice of the dividend action by the defendant’s board of directors until she received from the defendant a circular letter dated April 21, 1937, addressed to all holders of its first preferred stock, and inclosing to her a check in the amount of $1,416.25 and two fifty-year income notes issued and registered in her name — one fifty-year note of Adams, Fowler & Hoffman, Inc., of the face amount of $6, 866.70, due April 30, 1987, and one fifty-year note of R. B. Everett Lumber Company, Inc., of the face amount of $3,433.30, due April 30, 1987. After advising her of the dividend action taken by defendant’s board of directors and having reviewed the business experience of the defendant company and its subsidiaries, the letter stated in part:

“ * * * The arrears in dividends on the First Preferred Stock of Cross, Austin & Ireland Lumber Company are 22%% which on an issue of $750,000 amounts to *412 $170,625. The clearing up of these arrears is the subject of this letter.

“ It will be seen from the foregoing that the parent company in addition to owning all of the Common Stock of the two subsidiaries, has held their Fifty Year Income Notes in an aggregate amount of about $165,000. These notes are entitled to cumulative interest at 5%. There is good reason to believe that these companies, under the supervision and control of the parent company, will be profitable enterprises and under ordinary circumstances Cross, Austin & Ireland Lumber Company would continue to hold its entire investment in them.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.E.2d 890, 283 N.Y. 406, 133 A.L.R. 646, 1940 N.Y. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strout-v-cross-austin-ireland-lumber-co-ny-1940.