Wittenberg v. Federal Mining & Smelting Co.

133 A. 48, 15 Del. Ch. 147, 1926 Del. Ch. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 19, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 A. 48 (Wittenberg v. Federal Mining & Smelting Co.) 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
Wittenberg v. Federal Mining & Smelting Co., 133 A. 48, 15 Del. Ch. 147, 1926 Del. Ch. LEXIS 18 (Del. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This case presents the question of whether the defendant may against the protest of preferred stockholders, the preferences of whose stock are such as the statement of facts shows, declare dividends on its common stock when, by reason principally of the depletion of ore bodies, the capital assets are impaired to the extent of about seven million dollars. In another form the question is, whether, there being a ¿Efficiency of net as[151]*151sets below its paid in or invested capital, the directors may in the process of calculating the net profits of the defendant mining corporation for dividend purposes particularly on its common stock, calculate the same by subtracting from the gross amount received for its finished product, only the cost of mining, milling, marketing the same and overhead charges,, without charging off anything for the value of the ore taken out.

The question has been discussed from two points of view, viz., how stands the matter in the absence of statutory provisions, and, second, what is the answer where a statute is involved? The defendant contends that under the conception which the general law gives to the term “profits” when applied to a corporation of this type, the above method of calculating the same is permissible, and that when the same term appears in the Delaware statute the same import is to be given it that had theretofore been ascribed to it by the general laye In examining this argument, I shall first look into the general law upon the question without regard to our special statutory provisions, and then refer to the Delaware statute and its bearing on the subject.

The general rule is that corporations cannot declare dividends except out of profits. This rule requires that the invested capital shall be kept intact. 1 Morawetz on Private Corporations, (2d Ed.) § 435; 6 Fletcher’s Cyclopedia of Corporations, §§ 3660, 3685; 5 Thompson on Corporations, (2d Ed.) § 5305; 2 Machen on Modern Law of Corporations, § 1313; 2 Cook on Corporations, (8th Ed.) § 546. As I read the briefs there is no dispute between the solicitors for the respective parties upon the proposition that this is the rule for corporations generally. But the defendant contends that if the corporation be a mining company or an oil company, or a concern that is exploring a patent or a leasehold, profits may exist notwithstanding there be a depletion of the corporate capital. Companies of this kind are said to be wasting asset corporations. It is understood by everybody that such concerns live on themselves; they thrive by consuming their capital. Every ton of ore taken from a mining company’s mine and every barrel of oil taken from an oil company’s wells depletes the capital pro tanto. So does the mere passage of time deplete the assets of a company organized to exploit a patent or a leasehold. In this respect wasting asset cor[152]*152porations are distinguishable from the ordinary mercantile or manufacturing concern. Stockholders are entitled to expect the latter, unlike the former, to employ their capital in the acquisition of profits and not to dissipate it in driblets in the form of dividends, There being this difference in the nature of the two types of corporations, it is argued that while profits cannot be said to have been earned in the cas'e of the ordinary industrial enterprise so long as an unrecouped portion of the capital has been lost, yet in the case of the wasting asset corporation profits as the term is. understood may exist even though the capital has been and is being depleted. If capital assets consisting of ore are taken out of the. ground, their transmutation into the form of a pure metal does not destroy their character as capital. If it be conceded that the proceeds from their sale, less only the cost of mining, milling, marketing and overhead, may be regarded as available for dividends, the result nevertheless remains, that dividends are being paid in part at least from capital, there being no charge-off for the value of the removed ore. To describe earnings so derived as profits is totally unjustified in reason, so far I mean as the same are contributed to by the value of the ore taken out. If, therefore, the defendant can be permitted to regard the value of its ore taken out as available for dividends, it must be on the theory, not that its value had ceased to represent a capital asset and may properly be regarded as contributing to “profits,” but on the theory that with mining com-panics the general rule which forbids the making of dividends out of capital is not applicable. The use of the word “profits” in connection with this aspect of the subject is a misnomer. A dividend, when made from proceeds constituted as were those in this case, is made in part at least from capital invested and not from profits.

Now, aside from all statutory provisions, is there any authority to the effect that proceeds derived in reality from capital assets, in the form of ore, may be regarded as available for dividends ? If so, it is apparent that in the case of a mine the day is sure to arrive when the continued operation of the mine will have exhausted it, and the stockholders will find that all their capital has been paid out to them in installments-in the form of dividends. If there is only one class of stock, so far as stockholders are con[153]*153cerned no harm can be done by such a course of conduct, beyond the possibility that some of them may perhaps have not appreciated the fact that dividends so received really constitute a partial distribution of capital and so may have been deluded into losing their investment by spending all the dividends upon the theory that they represented earnings or profits as generally understood. Certain it is, however, that where this is done, each stockholder (there being but one class) will have ultimately received his pro rata share of the capital assets. Instead of receiving such share in a lump sum as upon liquidation, he will have received it by bits in the course of what might be called liquidation of capital by installments.

If, therefore, there is no statute to interfere, and creditors are not involved, it may with some reason be argued that a so-called wasting asset corporation ought to be permitted to writeoff nothing "for its depleted capital assets when there are no preferences among stockholders, because unless this be so the only alternative would be for it to accumulate great cash reserves simply to abide the approach of a distant day for final distribution. Why not, reason suggests, permit the cash equivalent of consumed capital to be distributed to its ultimate owners pari passu with its accumulation, instead of compelling the mining or oil producing corporation to turn itself into what the solicitors for the defendant describe as a huge investment trust for the investment of accumulated cash reserves — an activity entirely unrelated to the sort of enterprise which the corporation and its officers are supposed to be especially equipped for?

In line with this reasoning the defendant cites the English case of Lee v. Neuchatel Asphalt Co., (1889) 41 Ch. Div. 1, 58 L. J. Chan. Div. 408 (1889), as authority for the proposition that value of the ore in place and removed need not be charged off against receipts from which dividends may be declared. That case does so hold. It appears to be the leading authority on the subject. As I read that case, however, it has no persuasiveness as an authority (' in the instant one. This is for two principal reasons.

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 48, 15 Del. Ch. 147, 1926 Del. Ch. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wittenberg-v-federal-mining-smelting-co-delch-1926.