Treves v. Menzies
This text of 142 A.2d 520 (Treves v. Menzies) 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.
Opinion
Gino TREVES, Peter G. Treves, Susan Brockman, Sumuel I. Posen, Hugo Bauer, James J. Duane, Jr., and Margaret W. Duane, doing business under the firm name and style of James J. Duane & Co. and Thomas B. Hand, Plaintiffs,
v.
Duncan C. MENZIES, J. Patrick Lannan, Hunter S. Marston, H. Irving Pratt, W. F. Rockwell, Jr., Louis Ruthenburg, A. Lightfoot Walker, Robert E. Walker and John H. Wall and Servel, Inc., a Delaware corporation, Defendants.
Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.
Irving Morris, Wilmington, and Gallop, Climenko & Gould and Wolf, Popper, Ross, Wolf & Jones, New York City, for plaintiffs.
Aaron Finger, Wilmington, and Brown, Wood, Fuller, Caldwell & Ivey, New York City, for defendant, Servel, Inc.
MARVEL, Vice Chancellor.
Plaintiffs, who claim to own 1,660 shares of cumulative preferred stock of the defendant, Servel, Inc, out of 45,600 such shares issued and outstanding, have brought what they term a class action in which they primarily seek to have the Court enforce in their favor a charter provision *521 which, according to plaintiffs' contentions, entitles them now to be paid the full preferential payment due on such stock upon corporate liquidation. The unverified complaint alleges and the answer admits that most of the corporate defendant's assets having to do with its ordinary business have been[1] sold, but the parties differ as to the legal consequences of such sale insofar as the rights of preferred stockholders are concerned.
The charter clause under which plaintiffs now seek preferential liquidation payments provides, "Fourth * * * (5) Upon any liquidation, dissolution or winding-up of the corporation, whether voluntary, or involuntary, the preferred stock * * * shall be entitled, before any distribution shall be made to the common stock * * * to be paid the full preferential amount or amounts fixed by the Board * * *." The clause concludes, "* * * Neither a consolidation nor merger of the corporation with or into any other corporation or corporations, nor the sale or all or substantially all of the assets of the corporation shall be deemed to be a liquidation, dissolution or winding-up within the meaning of this clause."
In a second cause of action plaintiffs ask that this Court require the corporation to pay them accrued and unpaid cumulative dividends out of a large capital surplus now resting in the corporate treasury as a result of the sale of the assets of the corporation following stockholder approval at the meeting called for such purpose last September, and, as a result of such dividends, cause 7,200 preferred shares to be redeemed from a sinking fund.
It appears from the papers before me that following the Korean War an unfavorable trend in Servel's business affairs developed which finally resulted in the decision to withdraw from the refrigeration and allied fields and enter a different type of business. At the end of the summer of 1957, management decided to seek stockholder approval of a proposed sale of assets and at the same time to inform stockholders of an intention of applying the cash realized from such sale to the purchase of another type of business. The existence of an $18,361,000 tax loss carry-forward, which can be annually deducted in varying amounts from annual earnings through the fiscal year 1961, makes the acquisition of a new business most desirable. Neither plaintiffs, nor other stockholders attacked the proposed sale of assets, the present suit being concerned with the consequences of such sale.
The complaint does not set forth verbatim the charter provisions which necessarily control plaintiffs' contractual relations with the defendant corporation, plaintiffs taking the position that the act of the corporation in selling its assets raises an issue of fact, namely whether or not a liquidation, dissolution or winding up has actually occurred. They conclude that if such can be shown to have taken place, they are now entitled to preferential payments under the terms of the corporate charter and contend that this issue must necessarily be resolved by trial.
Servel, Inc. takes the position that there is no genuine issue of fact as to plaintiffs' contractual rights as preferred stockholders as set forth in the corporate charter, that there are no other issues properly before the Court on either cause of action, and attached to its motion for summary judgment of dismissal of both causes of action is an affidavit of the president of Servel, Inc. concerning stockholder action *522 on the sale of assets, a composite copy of the corporate charter, the proxy statement sent to stockholders in connection with the September 11, 1957 special meeting and the annual report to stockholders for the fiscal year ended October 31, 1957.
Plaintiffs do not question these documents as such but contend that as holders of preferred stock they will be able to establish that they are entitled to be repaid their invested funds out of the substantially liquid assets now held in the corporate treasury after proving that a voluntary corporate liquidation has in fact taken place, and that in any event on their second cause of action they are at least entitled to be paid back dividends (which have accrued but not been paid since 1954) out of capital surplus.
In support of such causes of action the Treves affidavit charges that the proxy statement of August 8, 1957 was misleading and that the Servel stockholders "* * * have never been asked to specifically vote upon the entry of Servel into new or different business ventures * * *" The amended complaint charges that the corporate directors have acted in bad faith and that plaintiffs are clearly entitled to receive dividends out of the some five million dollars surplus without director approval.
In my opinion the proxy statement informed the stockholders fully and explicitly as to what a favorable vote on the proposed sale of assets would entail and was not misleading, and I conclude that there is no genuine issue of fact insofar as plaintiffs' claim to preferential payments on dissolution is concerned. The corporate charter, which is the basic contract between the corporation and its stockholders and fixes their mutual rights and duties as to issued stock, specifically provides that a sale of all or substantially all of the corporate assets is not to be deemed a liquidation, dissolution or winding up within the meaning of charter clause Fourth (5). Summary judgment of dismissal as to plaintiffs' first cause of action is granted.
In the second cause of action the individual defendants are charged with having violated their fiduciary duty to the preferred stockholders in failing to declare dividends and to redeem such stock through a sinking fund. It is further contended in an unverified amendment to the complaint that the actions of such defendants "* * have been aimed at increasing the equity of the holders of the common stock, and of the interests of certain officers and directors and without giving due and proper heed or consideration to the rights of the holders of the preferred stock. This was not the result of unbiased judgment on their part but was in their self-interest * * *" The Treves affidavit, which presumably was filed to refute the sworn allegations of the Menzies' affidavit, further alleges that since May 1954 the director defendants have failed to consider the advisability of declaring a preferred dividend and that such "failure to consider" constitutes an abuse of discretion.
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142 A.2d 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/treves-v-menzies-delch-1958.