Vanden Bosch v. Michigan Trust Co.

35 F.2d 643, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3037
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 17, 1929
Docket5200, 5201
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 35 F.2d 643 (Vanden Bosch v. Michigan Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vanden Bosch v. Michigan Trust Co., 35 F.2d 643, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3037 (6th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge.

These appeals grow out of an equity receivership in the court below of the Worden Groeer Company, a Michigan corporation. The question involved in 5200 is whether Mrs. Hills, a holder of so-called preferred stock, is a creditor. Formerly, under the statutes and decisions of Michigan, there have been the two familiar classes of stock — -preferred and common; and it was clear that a preferred stockholder was not a creditor, but was entitled only (in addition to his dividend rights) to a preference over the common stockholder in the distribution of assets after all the debts were paid. We understand that prior to 1893 it had sometimes been provided in the articles or by-laws that the preferred stock might be paid off and redeemed under conditions and limitations there fixed; and to recognize this practice, or for other reasons, the Legislature, in 1893, by Act No. 187, expressly provided for the issue of the preferred stock, with limitations and rights that were appropriate, and stated that the preferred stock “shall be subject to redemption at par at a certain time to be fixed by the by-laws of said corporation, and to be expressed in the certificates therefor.” The same statute fixed the dividend and voting rights of the preferred stock, and specified no preferential right, as to capital, except to provide; “If for aiiy reason said corporation shall cease business or become in *644 solvent, then after the payment of all liabilities and debts, the remainder of the assets of said corporation shall be applied, first in payment in full of all preferred stoek and then unpaid dividends dne thereon, and the balance divided pro rata, share and share alike, among the holders of the common stock.” This phrase, “shall be subject to redemption,” at the time fixed may have been optional or obligatory — a privilege or a duty. It may be inferred that controversies arose on this point. At any rate, in 1917, by Act No. 254, these words “shall be subject to redemption” were superseded by the words “shall be redeemed.” The statute of 1917 also contained no provision giving or protecting any capital priority to the preferred stock, save as it reenacted the above quoted provision of the act of 1893.

In 1919, the articles and by-laws of the corporation had been so amended as to provide for an issue of preferred stock and “that all of said preferred stoek shall be redeemed by the corporation at par on January 1, 1925,” reserving an option to redeem earlier at a specified premium any or all of such pre-' ferred stock. Later, Mrs. Hills purchased her preferred stock, and the certificate issued to her contained the recital, “the preferred stoek shall be redeemed at par plus accrued and unpaid dividends on the first day of January, 1925, and may be redeemed at the option of the company on any dividend date prior thereto” at a specified premium and upon specified notice. Prior to January 1, 1925, the total of this preferred stock issued and outstanding was about $800,000. The corporation had foreseen the impracticability of withdrawing from the business money enough to pay off this stoek, and had provided for a new issue of preferred stoek, maturing in 1955, to be substituted for the old as far as possible, and whieh would be sold to get new money to pay off those old preferred stockholders who would not substitute. Accordingly, many preferred stockholders then or later exchanged for certificates of the new issue, some refused to exchange, and by sufficient insistence procured payment in cash, and others, including Mrs. Hills, had declined to accept the new stoek, but had not taken any steps to compel payment, when, about January, 1926, it was discovered that the corporation had suffered large losses theretofore unknown to directors and stockholders, and that its credit was nearly or quite exhausted. Thereupon some nonresident creditors filed a bill in the nature of a creditor’s bill, alleging that the assets were much greater than the liabilities, but that a receivership was necessary in order to preserve the- going business; the corporation consented; a receiver was appointed of all the property of the corporation, and was vested with all the property and rights of every kind whatever of the corporation, with authority to carry on the business and to sell and dispose of any of the property of the corporation, if in the ordinary course of business, or, with the permission of the court, even if not in the ordinary course of business. It should be added that in July, 1925, the corporation had declared the regular semiannual dividend (3% per cent.) upon the issue of old preferred stoek then outstanding, and cheeks purporting to be for this dividend had been received by the stockholders, including Mrs. Hills, without objection or any question as to the character of the payment.

Pursuant to the order that all creditors file their claims with the master, Mrs. Hulls asked allowance of her debt for $5,000, based upon the promise contained in the certificate, the master disallowed the claim, and the District Court on exceptions affirmed the disallowance, holding that Mrs. Hills was not such a creditor as to be entitled to parity with the others. Appeal No. 5200 is taken in her interest, and challenges this conclusion.

It is the claim of the appellant that pri- or to the maturity date her status was mainly that of a creditor holding an unmatured debt, although with that status modified in some particulars, but that, upon the arrival of the redemption date, she became, in all respects, a creditor entitled to demand immediate payment of the debt in full. The receiver, in the interest of general creditors, claims that she continued to be merely a preferred stockholder holding a broken promise to redeem, and that, at least until she took some steps to enforce the promise, she had that .status only. So far as we are advised, or can learn, this question is practically one of first impression. There is no construction by the Supreme Court of Michigan; similar statutes calling for this imperative redemption, if they exist elsewhere, do not seem to have been passed upon; and the intent of the Legislature must be inferred, as well as may be, without help of this kind.

We see no basis for thinking that the mere arrival of the maturity date can work any magic change in the true character of the relationship. If appellant was dominantly a stockholder in 1924, she continued to be in 1925. She held the certificate, she had never given up the dividend or voting rights, she had only ,a promise to redeem — and that she had always had. If appellant’s conten *645 tion is now right, it must be, we think, because under this statute so-called preferred stockholders are- from the beginning dominantly creditors — creditors, true, with limited and deferred rights, but none the less eventually to receive their money back like other creditors. To say this is to work a revolutionary change in the long accepted principles; those who are to be asked to give credit must revise familiar standards of credit ; and a corporation which, so far as stoek was represented by commercially available assets, had only preferred stoek, would have no basis of credit whatever, because its liabilities and commercial assets would evenly balance. If the Legislature intended such complete upsetting of known standards, it could easily have used express words; on the contrary, it is said only, “shall be redeemed”; and continued to provide that in ease of liquidation the preferred stoek shall be subject to all debts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 F.2d 643, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3037, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanden-bosch-v-michigan-trust-co-ca6-1929.