Terry v. Penn Central Corp.

527 F. Supp. 118, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15802
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 22, 1981
DocketCiv. A. 81-3955
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 527 F. Supp. 118 (Terry v. Penn Central Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terry v. Penn Central Corp., 527 F. Supp. 118, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15802 (E.D. Pa. 1981).

Opinion

LOUIS H. POLLAK, District Judge.

This is an action for an injunction and for declaratory relief brought by the plaintiffs, Messrs. Terry and Hunt — Messrs. Terry and Hunt are citizens of Texas — against the Penn Central Corporation.

Colt, on its application resisted by plaintiffs, was permitted by me to intervene as a party defendant.

The shape of this proceeding has changed in the course of the very brief time since the initial papers were filed in the sense that what was initially sought was a preliminary injunction, but the parties have agreed that the hearing which has been conducted which involved two days of evidentiary hearings and a day of argument would constitute a hearing on the merits. What follows will comprise my findings of fact and conclusions of law with respect to this matter.

Some background may be useful at the start. As I have said, this is an action for injunctive and declaratory relief. It rests on a variety of bases both as to jurisdiction and as to cause of action. It is in some of its aspects a diversity action between citizens of Texas and a corporation which is incorporated in Pennsylvania and with its principal place of business in New York, namely, Penn Central. In that posture the case is one in which plaintiffs claim entitlements under the amended articles of Penn Central of which they, plaintiffs, are share *120 holders, holders of shares of stock in what is entitled a first series preference. They claim also under provisions of the New York Corporation Law and under the Pennsylvania Business Corporation Law and, finally, they make claims which, as will appear shortly, are, in effect, cumulative of the common law and statutory claims under the Federal Securities Statutes.

The plaintiffs Terry and Hunt own substantial blocks of the so-called $5.27 convertible preference stock, first series, of Penn Central which was issued to them, as will shortly appear, as the fruit of a transaction under which Marathon, in which Messrs. Terry and Hunt and others were principal shareholders, was acquired on Penn Central’s behalf through the medium of a wholly-owned subsidiary of Penn Central, namely, Holdings.

Mr. Terry, in addition to his substantial shareholdings, is a director of the Penn Central Corporation. It was one of the terms of the Penn Central/Marathon transaction that two members of the Marathon board, Mr. Terry, who was chairman of Marathon’s executive committee, and Mr. Woodfin, who was its chief executive officer, became members of the Penn Central board. Mr. Woodfin is not a plaintiff in this action.

Defendant Penn Central is the reorganized successor to the Penn Central Transportation Company, it having emerged from reorganization in October of 1978. The Penn Central Corporation is engaged in a variety of lines of business, of which railroading is not one.

The defendant Colt is likewise a Pennsylvania corporation with its principal place of business in New York.

What is sought under this lawsuit is to enjoin Penn Central and Colt from proceeding further with a proposed acquisition by Penn Central through Holdings of Colt unless and until the plaintiffs are afforded the rights that they assert that they are entitled to in connection with the Penn Central/Colt transaction.

In summary form, plaintiffs argue that they are entitled by the amended articles of Penn Central to a separate vote of the series of first preference shares of which they are members and that without approval of two-thirds of that series the Penn Central/Colt transaction cannot go forward. The same entitlement is claimed by plaintiffs pursuant to certain provisions of the New York Business Corporation Law. This claim of entitlement is at odds with the position of defendant Penn Central and also defendant Colt, though, of course, it’s not up to defendant Colt to be determining who votes for Penn Central.

It is Penn Central’s intention at the shareholders meeting now scheduled for October 29 that approval be conditioned on the achieving of a majority vote of that quorum of shareholders present or by proxy at the shareholders meeting and it is the position of Penn Central that that much will conform with requirements of the New York Stock Exchange and that no additional approval is required.

It is the further prayer of plaintiffs that they be held to be entitled to dissenters’ rights with respect to the proposed transaction, at least unless they have been determined under their initial claim to be entitled to the two-thirds series vote, whether under the articles or under New York law.

Under the third count of plaintiffs’ complaint they assert that, in any event, the transaction cannot be validly approved from the standpoint of Penn Central unless there is approval at the shareholders meeting by an absolute majority of all holders of all series and classes of Penn Central stock, not merely a majority of the quorum. That claim is said to arise under Pennsylvania law, statutory and/or case law, as, indeed, is the claim for dissenters’ rights under count two.

Finally, the claim under the Federal Securities Laws which is the basis for count four is that the proxy materials distributed by Penn Central and by Colt in connection with the proposed Penn Central/Colt transaction are misleading in numerous respects insofar as they do not specify the variety of *121 entitlements which plaintiffs have asserted in their first three counts.

The origin of this dispute can really be traced to Penn Central’s emergence, from reorganization. At that point in 1978 one of Penn Central’s principal assets was a huge loss carry forward and it was a major part of — and remains to this day and can be expected to continue for some years into the future — a major part of Penn Central’s business strategy, to develop ways in which that loss carry forward could be given maximum utility. The particular dominating strategy was to be the acquisition by Penn Central of various enterprises with strong income prospects, which income, turned to the benefit of Penn Central, would be sheltered for some extended period of time by this loss carry forward.

It was also a part of the Penn Central strategy that the acquisition program should be with a view to making Penn Central, indeed, a diverse collective of enterprises.

The first step taken by Penn Central to implement this strategy was to create the wholly-owned subsidiary, Holdings, which was to be the acquirer of the enterprises to be acquired. The first step in the program was the acquisition in 1979 of Marathon. As I have noted, Marathon was an enterprise which was substantially dominated as to direction by the group of persons of whom Mr. Terry and Mr. Hunt are prominent members in association with Mr. Woodfin.

To accomplish that transaction, basically what was proposed, put in simplest terms for summary purposes, was to make available through Penn Central a new class of preferred stock, a first series of which would be issued to Marathon shareholders in exchange for their Marathon interests. Penn Central authorized the issuance of 30 million shares of a new class of special preference stock. This was a series, of course, intended to be superior to its 100 million authorized shares of common stock.

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Bluebook (online)
527 F. Supp. 118, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terry-v-penn-central-corp-paed-1981.