Woodson v. Lee

389 P.2d 196, 73 N.M. 425
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1963
Docket7277
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 389 P.2d 196 (Woodson v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodson v. Lee, 389 P.2d 196, 73 N.M. 425 (N.M. 1963).

Opinion

MOISE, Justice.

Plaintiffs brought suit herein to collect from defendants a pro rata share of $257,-334.90 of mineral income received by defendant Fernandez Company between 1939 and 1959, and claimed by plaintiffs to be due them under an agreement denominated a “Certificate of Participation” dated June 16, 1939.

It appears that in 1937 the Fernandez Company was a ranching corporation with 500,000 shares of stock of a par value of $1.00 issued, outstanding, and fully paid. In that year defendant Lee purchased 189,824 shares from the heirs of A. B. McMillen, except plaintiff Katherine McMillen Woodson, being all the stock owned by them, at a price of 15^ per share. The endorsements of the stock to defendant Lee stated that the same were made and accepted subject to a reservation of “one-half (½) of the earnings from oil, if any, for a period of ten (10) years” from July 19, 1937, to be received by the respective grantors.

In the year 1939 a loan was negotiated by the corporation with Great Southern Life Insurance Company, out- of the proceeds of which the 287,965 shares of common stock in the defendant corporation not owned by defendant Lee were purchased by the corporation for $45,429.83, or approximately 15.8{i per share, and 66,000 shares of preferred stock were retired'at par. As a condition of the making of the loan, a requirement was made by the insurance company that the entire 500,000 shares of stock in the corporation free from reservations or encumbrances of any kind be pledged as security. Accordingly, it was necessary that the 10-year reservation of “one-half the earnings from oil” agreed upon in 1937 be eliminated. This was agreed to by the owners of the reserved interest in consideration of the execution of a certificate of participation in which the other stockholders also joined and participated. The instrument was dated June 16, 1939. The important provision of this agreement, and the one giving rise to this litigation is section 3 which reads as follows:

“That Floyd W. Lee and Fernandez Company agree with the parties to this instrument, and each of them, that all income which may be received by Fernandez Company from the date of this instrument, until twelve o’clock noon, on June 16, 1959, from production, extraction leases, rentals and/or royalties from oil, gas and petroleum and for other minerals on the lands of the Fernandez Company, now owned by it in fee, and which income shall not be required by the holder of any mortgage or lien on said real estate to be applied to the payment and liquidation of such mortgage or lien, and which income shall be for distribution to the stockholders of the corporation, shall be by the said Floyd W. Lee and Fernandez Company distributed upon the following basis, to-wit:
To Mrs. Florence McMillen, her heirs and assigns 56,947/500,000
To Mrs. May J. Koshland, her heirs and assigns 62,500/500,000
To Mrs. Louise J. Chadbourne, her heirs and assigns 62,500/500,000
To Eileen McMillen Lee, her heirs and assigns 18,983/500,000
To Pearce C. Rodey, individually and as guardian of the estates of Alonzo Bertram Rodey and Sheila Katherine Rodey, minor children of Dorothy McMillen Rodey, deceased 18,983/500,000
To Katherine McMillen Woodson, her heirs and assigns 37,965/500,000
To Floyd W. Lee and to Fernandez Company the balance of such sums so to be distributed from the source and particular income hereinabove specified, in proportion to their holdings of stock.”

During the 20-year period that the participating agreement remained in effect the corporation received $258,702.36 of oil and mineral income. During this same period, with the exception hereinafter noted, the corporation followed a uniform and consistent method of keeping its books and preparing its annual statement, being the same as that in effect for several years prior to 1939. According to the financial statements of the company, the capital account was impaired during each and every one of the years from 1938 to 1958, excepting only the years of 1950, 1956, 1957 and 1958. No dividends were paid by the corporation during the period. At the end of 1958 the books disclose $40,218.65 capital surplus. In 1959 it appears that $1367.46 was collected from mineral leases, making a total of $41,586.11 which defendants admit was available at the end of the period for making payments under the agreement.

Plaintiffs are two of those entitled to share under the participation agreement. They contend that under the language of the agreement they should be adjudged their pro rata share of the entire mineral income received by the corporation, amounting to $258,702.36. The trial court agreed with this position and entered judgment on behalf of plaintiffs in the amount of $29, 440.32, being 11.38% of $258,702.36, mineral income received by the corporation during the 20-year period from June 16, 1939 to June 16, 1959.

From this judgment defendants appeal. They concede that at the time of trial and now plaintiffs are entitled to $4740.81, being approximately 11.38% of $41,586.11, noted above.

The problem presented requires that we determine the meaning of the provision in the participation agreement in which the defendants agreed to distribute to the parties named therein, including plaintiffs in the percentages therein provided, the income from “production, extraction, leases, rentals and/or royalties from oil, gas and petroleum and for other minerals * * * and which income shall not be required by the holder of any mortgage or lien * * * to be applied to the payment and liquidation of such mortgage or lien, and which income shall be for distribution to the stockholders of the corporation. * * * ”

It is agreed that $258,702.36 was received by the corporation from oil and mineral leases and rentals during the twenty years that the participation agreement was in effect. It is also agreed that no part of this amount was required to be applied to the payment and liquidation of the mortgage or lien on the property and that the same has been paid in full. Plaintiffs contend that the money was accordingly income available for distribution to them, and that they are entitled to the same.

It is the position of defendants that income which is “for distribution to the stockholders” of a corporation is a dividend, and that under § 51-3-17, N.M.S.A.1953, distribution of any of these funds was prohibited so long as there was a capital deficit.

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Bluebook (online)
389 P.2d 196, 73 N.M. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodson-v-lee-nm-1963.