Swanton v. State Guaranty Corporation

215 A.2d 242, 42 Del. Ch. 477, 1965 Del. Ch. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 22, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 215 A.2d 242 (Swanton v. State Guaranty Corporation) 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
Swanton v. State Guaranty Corporation, 215 A.2d 242, 42 Del. Ch. 477, 1965 Del. Ch. LEXIS 99 (Del. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

SEITZ, Chancellor:

Plaintiffs were preferred stockholders of State Guaranty Corporation (“Guaranty”), which merged into Allied Properties, a California corporation (both called “defendants”). Plaintiffs qualified for a statutory appraisal and the appraiser fixed $88.62 as the per share fair value. Both plaintiffs and defendants filed exceptions to the appraiser’s report and this is the decision thereo».

Guaranty was incorporated in 1927. Apparently it has been and was at the merger date a real estate holding company and investment company which operated through its wholly owned subsidiary, Allied Properties. Allied owned, operated or leased three hotels, four farms and ranches, twenty commercial properties and held other large parcels of real estate for investment. These properties are located primarily in the growth areas of California, with some holdings in Arizona, Nevada and Oregon. It also has a substantial portfolio of securities of non-affiliated companies.

Guaranty has two classes of capital stock; no par noncallable participating preferred stock and no par common stock. The preferred, which has equal voting rights with the common, is entitled to cumulative cash dividends of $1.30 per share per annum, and on dissolution would receive $25.00 per share plus accumulated and unpaid dividends before any distribution to the common. Subject to the stated dividend and dissolution preferences, the common is entitled to a dividend of 13 cents per share per annum and to $2.00 per share on dissolution. From any dividends declared over and above $1.30 for preferred and 13 cents for common, the preferred is entitled to one and one-half times the amount of dividends payable to common. On dissolution, after the priorities of $25.00 plus dividend arrearages on the preferred and $2.00 on the common, the preferred is entitled to one and one-half times the amount paid to common.

Of 280,000 shares of authorized common, Guaranty has outstanding 271,867 shares, all owned by State Guaranty Auxiliary Corporation (“Auxiliary”). Auxiliary has issued and outstanding 271,867 shares of common stock of which (as of January 31, 1962) 139,881 shares (51 plus %) were owned by the President of Guaranty, Robert S. Odell, and his wife. As of December 31, 1961, Guaranty had 368,908 authorized shares of preferred. Of those issued, 130,294 shares were held by subsidiaries, 48,795 were treasury shares and 129,639 shares were outstanding and entitled to vote. Of said 129,-639 shares, at least 30,663 were owned or controlled by directors of Guaranty on January 31, 1962

*244 Accumulated and unpaid dividends on the preferred amounted to $33.00 per share at the date of the merger. No dividends were paid on the preferred between 1931 and the second quarter of 1958. Since then, Guaranty has paid regular quarterly dividends at the rate of $1.30 per share per annum. No dividends have been paid on the common since 1931.

The statistical basis for the value fixed by the appraiser is as follows:

Per Share Weight

Asset Value $ 128.08 50% = $64.04 K/< n

Earnings Value 44.94 40% = 17.98 M n

Market Value 66.00 10% = 6.60 n

Appraised Value Per Share $88.62

Preliminarily, I point out that because of the voting and dividend rights of the preferred, it can be here treated, as the parties and the appraiser have tacitly recognized, as though it were common stock being appraised.

I shall now consider defendants’ first exception. They attack the 1960 earnings figure employed by the appraiser in the process of finding Guaranty’s average earnings to be used in capitalizing earnings. It is admitted by plaintiffs that, apart from the attorneys’ fee item which I shall next consider, Guaranty’s 1960 earnings were $49,-376.64. In his draft report the appraiser omitted 1960 earnings altogether for reasons not now pertinent. Motivated by an exception to this aspect of his draft report, the appraiser decided to include and did include 1960 earnings in his final report. However, the appraiser adjusted the company’s reported 1960 earnings upward by some $225,000. This item represented $225,000 paid by Guaranty in 1960 for legal expenses incurred several years before. The appraiser apparently thought this item had been deducted by Guaranty in computing its 1960 income. He felt that the amount should be restored to give a true picture of 1960 earnings, since the charge represented a nonrecurring expense incurred several years earlier. However, the fact is that the $225,-000 was not deducted from 1960 earnings. Rather, it was charged to a special reserve which had been created in 1951. Thus, other factors aside, the factual basis for the appraiser’s treatment of the item was nonexistent. Thus, in finding average earnings, $49,376.64 must be employed as Guaranty’s 1960 earnings. When this adjustment is made, Guaranty’s average per share earnings amount to $3.09.

I next consider defendants’ claim that Guaranty’s average earnings should have been capitalized by a factor of 7 and that the appraiser erred in using a multiplier of 14.

Defendants say their contention is supported by the Delaware cases and Professor Dewing’s work on “The Financial Policies of Corporations” (5th ed.}. They say, in any event, that the high multiplier employed by the appraiser was not warranted on the basis of either the type or earnings of the corporation involved. In predictable contrast, plaintiffs say the multiplier is too low and should have been about 20. Plaintiffs contend that the use of this number is justified on the basis of the price-earnings ratio of stocks generally in this area, but in any event because of Guaranty’s policy of buying or holding a great portion of its assets for capital appreciation rather than ordinary income. They say that the only logical place under the present facts to recognize the future growth factor (in the form of capital appreciation rather than *245 ordinary income) is by the employment of a higher multiplier than might ordinarily be justified.

This argument brings the court to the vital problem in this case, viz., the treatment of the financial consequences of Guaranty’s investment policy. It is apparent and not contested that the management of Guaranty has, over the years, operated the corporation with an emphasis on holding a large percentage of its assets for capital growth rather than income. Thus, it has purchased substantial amounts of non-income producing real estate and has used most of its income from other assets to cover expenses on all the properties and also to purchase some of the outstanding preferred stock. This policy has obviously been successful, as the admittedly very substantial increase in asset value reveals. Thus, many of Guaranty’s properties are located in the great boom areas of California. Much of such real estate is either vacant land or produces minimal income. Yet its fair value has increased tremendously. Indeed, almost half of Guaranty’s asset value is found in this general category.

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Bluebook (online)
215 A.2d 242, 42 Del. Ch. 477, 1965 Del. Ch. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swanton-v-state-guaranty-corporation-delch-1965.