Court Opinion

ID: 3613950
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:57:31.720599+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:24:28.773979
License: Public Domain

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The complaint herein has been dismissed at Special Term, and, from the unanimous affirmance by the Appellate Division of that dismissal, plaintiff appeals here as of right, asserting the presence in the case of a substantial constitutional question. The statute attacked for unconstitutionality is section 85, subdivisions 1, 5 and 7, of the Stock Corporation Law, which, as amended in 1936 (ch. 778) and 1937 (ch. 815) authorizes the merger of electric, gas or steam corporations, if approved by the Public Service Commission, where the merging or taking *Page 17 
corporation owns 95% or more of the stock of the merged, or taken, corporation. Before those 1936 and 1937 amendments ownership of all the merged corporation's stock was necessary for merger (although not necessary for consolidation). By a 1949 amendment (ch. 762) not of course applicable here, permission to merge when there is ownership of 95% of the taken corporation has been granted by the Legislature to stock corporations generally.
Following the procedures set out in section 85 (supra), there was merged into defendant Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc., on July 31, 1945, Brooklyn Edison Company Inc., in behalf of which latter corporation, plaintiffs bring this action, suing in their individual capacities as well. Just before that merger, which plaintiffs say was illegal and abortive, and for more than ten years prior thereto, defendant "Consolidated Edison" owned 1,244,165 of the 1,248,300 outstanding shares of "Brooklyn Edison" stock, or about 99.6% thereof. At that same pre-merger time, plaintiffs owned, as they had for some seventeen years, a total of 59 shares or 1/200 of 1% of Brooklyn Edison's stock. It is undisputed that the procedures established by section 85 (supra), for such a merger of utility companies, were followed: that is, Public Service Commission approval of the proposal was obtained after published notices and after hearings, then the board of trustees of Consolidated Edison adopted a resolution merging Brooklyn Edison into itself, the resolution setting forth all the terms of the merger as approved by the commission, and providing for the payment by Consolidated Edison of $135 per share for and upon surrender to it of such shares of stock of the Brooklyn, or merged corporation, as were not already owned by Consolidated, the surviving corporation. No meeting of the stockholders of Brooklyn Edison was held (§ 85, supra,
requires none) and no notice of the merger was sent to plaintiffs, or other outside stockholders of Brooklyn Edison, except the statutorily required notice, after the event. However, about a month later, Consolidated Edison sent to the outside stockholders of Brooklyn Edison, a letter pointing out that, under section 21 of the Stock Corporation Law, such stockholders, if not satisfied to accept the offered price of $135 per share for their holdings, might *Page 18 
have appraisers appointed by the Supreme Court to value the stock and report their findings to the court for its determination of the price at which stockholders would have to surrender. Some of the other Brooklyn Edison shareholders took such appraisal proceedings, but these plaintiffs did not, nor have they ever accepted the price offered by Consolidated Edison. Instead, they kept their Brooklyn Edison stock and brought this suit, attacking the merger, or attempted merger, as illegal and a nullity.
The first cause of action, brought by plaintiffs for themselves and for all other Brooklyn shareholders who may join in, says that section 85 (supra) permitting as it does, merger in the event of 95% or more ownership, without notice to, or consent of, the minority, deprives plaintiffs and Brooklyn Edison of their property without due process of law, denies them the equal protection of the laws, and impairs the contract rights of plaintiffs and of Brooklyn Edison, all in alleged violation of section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, section 6 of article I of the New York State Constitution, and section 10 of article I of the United States Constitution; an accounting is prayed for. The second, third and fourth causes of action in the complaint (each brought by plaintiffs on their own behalf and in behalf of Brooklyn Edison) set out alleged transactions between Consolidated Edison and Brooklyn Edison, before the merger, in which transactions, it is said, the former, dominating the latter, took advantage of that dominant position to benefit itself to the latter's detriment. Insofar as those three counts are pleaded by plaintiffs individually, they are plainly not maintainable since no individual stockholder has any such right of action (Niles v.New York Central  Hudson Riv. R.R. Co., 176 N.Y. 119). Insofar as those same three counts are set forth on behalf of Brooklyn Edison, the alleged wrongs they describe are actionable only if Brooklyn Edison still exists, that is, if there has been no effective merger of that entity into Consolidated Edison. Since we conclude that section 85 (supra), and its application to this merger, are not unconstitutional, we need not further examine into the internal sufficiency of the second, third and fourth causes of action, nor investigate the question of whether, if their allegations were otherwise sufficient, plaintiffs would still have to meet the *Page 19 
demands of section 61-b of the General Corporation Law (stockholders not owning 5%, or $50,000 worth, must give security, etc.).
It is the settled law of this State that under the express reservation of power therefor in our State Constitution (art. X, § 1; see Clearwater v. Meredith, 1 Wall. [U.S.], 25, 39), "the Legislature has the right at any time it sees fit to alter, suspend and repeal the charters of corporations" (Colby v.Equitable Trust Co., 124 App. Div. 262, 265, affd. 192 N.Y. 535), that this constitutional provision is part of the contract or charter of every New York corporation (see Ashley v. Ryan,153 U.S. 436), and that it authorizes the Legislature to make appropriate non-confiscatory statutory provisions for mergers (Colby v. Equitable Trust Co., supra; People v. O'Brien,111 N.Y. 1, 46 et seq.; Matter of Bergdorf, 206 N.Y. 309, 313). It is fully as well settled that if the merger (or consolidation) is duly consummated in accordance with the statutes, the remedy of appraisal and payment is the only one available to dissenting shareholders, and that such dissenters on such an appraisal are entitled to receive fair and full compensation for all their rights (Matter of Timmis, 200 N.Y. 177; Logan v. NewAmsterdam Gas Co., 224 N.Y. 664; Anderson v. InternationalMinerals  Chemical Corp., 295 N.Y. 343, 350; see Matter ofFulton, 257 N.Y. 487, 494). It is settled, too, that statutes authorizing mergers may lawfully be applied even to corporations formed and stock acquired before their enactment (Colby v.Equitable Trust Co., supra). In short, the merged corporation's shareholder has only one real right; to have the value of his holding protected, and that protection is given him by his right to an appraisal (see Voeller v. Neilston Warehouse Co.,311 U.S. 531, 535). He has no right to stay in the picture, to go along into the merger, or to share in its future benefits. He has no constitutional right to deliberate, consult or vote on the merger, to have prior notice thereof or prior opportunity to object thereto. His disabilities in those respects are the result of his status as a member of a minority, and any cure therefor is to be prescribed by the Legislature, if it sees fit. In none of this do we see any deprivation of due process, or of contract rights.
Plaintiffs argue that an appraisal (of which they did not avail themselves) would not have brought them fair return for their *Page 20 
shares, since, as they say, the appraisers would not have reckoned as an element of value plaintiffs' proportionate interests in Brooklyn Edison's choses of action alleged in counts 2, 3 and 4 of this complaint. Indeed, as plaintiffs show, when other dissenting Brooklyn Edison holders went to an appraisal, the appraisers refused to value those same causes of action. We do not now attempt an all-inclusive listing of the items that such appraisers should add into their totals, any more than this court did in Matter of Fulton (257 N.Y., supra, at p. 494) but we say again, as in Matter of Fulton, and in Anderson v.International Minerals  Chemical Corp. (295 N.Y., supra, at p. 350) that "every right of a dissenting shareholder is to be appraised and paid for" (and see Wall v. Anaconda CopperMining Co., 216 F. 242, 244, affd. sub nom. Wall v. ParrotSilver  Copper Co., 244 U.S. 407). But, when the Legislature has provided for such an appraisal and for appropriate judicial control and review thereof, plaintiffs may not refuse such an appraisal and upset the merger itself, merely on their assertion that the appraisal, if had, would not have done them justice.
It should be said, in passing, that when the Legislature, in 1936, permitted the merger of utility companies, despite lack of 100% ownership of one by the other, it set forth reasons for so doing. A Joint Legislative Committee to Investigate Public Utilities reported to the Senate and Assembly on February 12, 1935 (N.Y. Legis. Doc., 1936, No. 78, p. 149) that "the consolidation of operating companies held by holding companies will tend to effectuate greater economies, more efficient management and rate reductions." The commission recommended "that legislation be enacted which will permit the merger of operating utility companies with less than 100 per cent of stock control, such mergers to be approved by the Public Service Commission." Evidence had been submitted to the commission to the effect, as the report shows, that simplification of holding and operating company relationships in the public utility field had been made difficult by the blocking tactics of small minority interests (the same "evil" described by this court many years before inMatter of Timmis, 200 N.Y. 177, 181, supra). We know from history that, in 1935, and for years thereafter, there was a nationwide demand for such simplification of the complex intercorporate structures of public utilities, and it is apparent *Page 21 
that the 1936 and 1937 amendments to section 85 were part of an effort to meet that demand.
Plaintiffs say that the amendments conferred "a special privilege on a special class of corporations", since they made an exception, as to public utility corporations, to the requirement, for merger, of 100% ownership. Plaintiffs say there is no reasonable basis for such preferential treatment for gas and electric corporations — indeed, they say the amendments were passed "for the particular benefit of Consolidated Edison." Whether the latter statement be true or not, the amendments to section 85 apply to all corporations of the particular class. That public utility corporations may, for a multitude of purposes and in innumerable ways, be subjected by Legislatures to treatment differing from that applied to other kinds of corporations, is too well settled for argument. And in this instance the Legislature had and stated a reason for this differentiation, as noted above.
In view of our conclusion that all the causes of action were properly dismissed for insufficiency in law, the defense of laches need not be discussed herein.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
LOUGHRAN, Ch. J., LEWIS, CONWAY, DYE, FULD and BROMLEY, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.