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Page 746
204 A.2d 746
42 Del.Ch. 106
B. S. F. COMPANY, a Delaware
corporation, Defendant Below, Appellant,
and
Glen Alden Corporation, a Pennsylvania
corporation,
v.
The PHILADELPHIA NATIONAL BANK, a National
Banking
Association organized under the laws of the
United States of
America, Trustee under Indenture dated as of
December 1,
1961 of B. S. F. Company, Plaintiff Below,
Appellee.
Supreme Court of Delaware.
Nov. 9, 1964.
Reargument Denied Nov. 24, 1964.
Page 747
[42 Del.Ch. 107] Appeal from the
Court of Chancery in and for New Castle
County.
Henry M. Canby of Richards,
Layton & Finger, Wilmington, and William R.
Glendon of Royall, Koegel & Rogers, New
York, N. Y., for B. S. F. Company.
S. Samuel Arsht and William S.
Megonigal, Jr. of Morris, Nichols Arsht &
Tunnell, Wilmington, and Anthony H. Whitaker
and Donald A. Scott of Morgan, Lewis &
Bockius, Philadelphia, Pa., for Philadelphia
National Bank.
David F. Anderson of Berl, Potter
& Anderson, Wilmington, for Glen Alden
Corporation.
WOLCOTT and CAREY, Justices, and
WRIGHT, Judge, sitting.
WOLCOTT, Justice.
This is an appeal from a judgment
for the plaintiff in a declaratory judgment
action The plaintiff is The Philadelphia
National Bank (hereafter 'Trustee'), Trustee
under an Indenture securing an issue of
debentures of the defendant, B.S.F. Company
(hereafter 'B.S.F.'). The result has
Page 748
been to adjudge B.S.F. in default under the
Indenture. In the event of default by B.S.F.
under the Indenture it is required to redeem
the debentures secured thereby at 105%.
Two questions are presented by
this appeal, viz., (1) under the
circumstances of this case, was the sale by
B.S.F. to Glen Alden Corporation (hereafter
'Glen Alden') of its stock interest in
American Hardware Company a sale of
'substantially all' of its assets, and (2)
[42 Del.Ch. 108] if such sale is a sale of
'substantially all' of its assets, is B.S.F.
in default under the Indenture?
B.S.F., a Delaware corporation,
is the successor of a former manufacturing
company which, in 1954, sold all of its
manufacturing facilities for $4,000,000.
B.S.F. used the cash thus obtained to
purchase approximately 25% of the
outstanding stock of American Hardware and
all of the stock of a factoring company
called New York Factors, Inc. In 1955 B.S.F.
announced to its stockholders that it was
management's intention to devote the assets
of B.S.F. to the acquisition of control of
various businesses when such opportunity
became available.
In May, 1956, at a time when
75.5% of B.S.F.'s assets consisted of
American Hardware stock, it applied to the
Securities and Exchange Commission for
exemption from the Investment Company Act.
In October, 1956, the S.E.C. by order found
that B.S.F. was a special situation since
its activities primarily were that of the
business of American Hardware and,
accordingly, held that B.S.F. had ceased to
be an Investment Company. Following this
exemption from the Investment Company Act,
B.S.F. continued to increase its investment
in American Hardware.
In December, 1961, B.S.F. and the
Trustee entered into the Indenture in
question to secure subordinated debentures
of B.S.F. in the principal amount of
$2,500,000 which B.S.F. proposed to offer
for public sale. In this connection a
Prospectus was issued by B.S.F. which, inter
alia, showed the value of the assets of
B.S.F. From the Prospectus it appears that
the value of American Hardware stock held by
B.S.F. had increased from a cost of
approximately $5,900,000 to $10,350,000,
which constituted at the time at least 75%
of the total assets of B.S.F. From the
Prospectus it also appears that the major
income of B.S.F. for the preceding four
years was the dividends from American
Hardware stock.
The offering thus made of the
debentures was successfully carried through
and B.S.F. thereafter used a major portion
of the proceeds to buy additional shares of
American Hardware stock to [42 Del.Ch. 109]
increase its total holdings to 349,220
shares, representing 32% of American
Hardware stock outstanding.
In 1962 there was a change of
management in B.S.F. The new management was
almost immediately confronted with a series
of financial crises. B.S.F.'s management
thereupon began selling assets in order to
obtain cash to meet its liabilities. Thus,
was sold B.S.F.'s investment in
International Railways, United Industrial
and F. Weber Company, and the liquidation of
New York Factors completed in early 1963.
In January, 1963, B.S.F. entered
into an agreement with Glen Alden for the
sale to Glen Alden of all of the American
Hardware stock owned by B.S.F. The agreement
to sell to Glen Alden was preceded by the
fact that the management of American
Hardware would not permit the continued
exercise by B.S.F. of working control of
American Hardware. Despite efforts by the
B.S.F. management to regain control, this
was not accomplished and, thus, B.S.F. found
itself with a substantial investment in an
operating company over which it exercised no
control. The result of the loss of working
control of American Hardware was that B.S.F.
lost its exemption under the Investment
Company Act and was forced to re-register as
an Investment Company.
For these reasons, including its
financial needs, B.S.F.'s management
determined to
Page 749
sell its entire stockholdings in American
Hardware.
As part of the agreement with
Glen Alden B.S.F. obtained its shareholders'
approval under 8 Del.C. § 271, for the sale.
Section 271 requires stockholder approval
only for the sale of all of the assets of a
Delaware corporation.
As a part of the agreement of
sale to Glen Alden a Supplemental Indenture
was entered into under the terms of which
Glen Alden guaranteed the payment of
principal and interest of the B.S.F.
debentures.
In order to avoid a threatened
enjoining of the consummation of the sale,
B.S.F. set aside in a special fund out of
the proceeds of sale [42 Del.Ch. 110]
sufficient money to redeem, if necessary,
all outstanding debentures at the premium
required by reason of a default under the
Indenture.
The sale of the American Hardware
stock to Glen Alden by B.S.F. was solely for
cash. It involved no exchange of securities,
and no merger or consolidation of the
selling and purchasing companies or any
subsidiary of them.
At or about the time of the
consummation of the sale to Glen Alden,
B.S.F. notified its debenture holders that
it would continue in business as theretofore
and when suitable opportunities were
presented, it intended to invest the net
proceeds of the sale in equity securities of
other companies with the intention of
obtaining control of such companies.
From the purchase price paid in
cash by Glen Alden of $13,345,025,
representing a profit of approximately
$5,000,000, B.S.F. paid off $5,700,000 worth
of debt and has since used a substantial
portion of the balance to makes purchases of
the stock of other companies. The result of
this transaction has been to improve the
value of the B.S.F. debentures which rose on
the market from around $71 in January, 1963,
to approximately $86 in February, 1963.
Article II, Section 12 of the
Indenture is as follows:
'Section 12. That it [B.S.F.] will not
consolidate or merge with, or sell all or
substantially all of its property to, any
other company except upon compliance with
the provisions of Section 1 of Article XIV
hereof.'
The Trustee contends and the Vice
Chancellor held that the sale to Glen Alden
was in fact a sale of substantially all of
the property of B.S.F. and that B.S.F. has
not complied with the provisions of Article
XIV, Section 1 of the Indenture as required
by Article II, Section 12. Thus, it is
argued, B.S.F., is in default under the
Indenture.
Our first question is whether or
not B.S.F. has sold substantially all of its
assets within the meaning of the Indenture.
If it has, then it [42 Del.Ch. 111] must
comply with other terms of the Indenture for
the protection of the debenture holders.
The Vice Chancellor found the
fact to be that the sale to Glen Alden of
the American Hardware stock was a sale of in
excess of 75% of the total assets of B.S.F.
and was, accordingly, a sale of
'substantially all' of its assets. B.S.F.
contends on the other hand that the sale was
a sale of assets in the ordinary course of
business since its expressed purpose was to
invest in companies over which it had
acquired working control, and since it had
lost working control of American Hardware
and had no prospect of recovering it, the
furtherance of its stated business purpose
required the sale of the asset.
B.S.F. argues that since the
common law prohibited the sale of all or
substantially all of a corporation's assets
for the reason that such a sale would
prevent the corporation from carrying out
the purposes for which it was organized thus
defeating its contract with its
stockholders,
Geddes v. Anaconda Copper Mining Co., 254
U.S. 590, 41 S.Ct. 209, 65 L.Ed. 425, it
follows that a sale of assets, no matter how
large, was not a prohibited sale if it
fulfilled corporate purposes.
Lange v. Reservation Mining & Smelting Co.,
48 Wash. 167, 93 P. 208.
Page 750
We, however, are concerned with
the proper construction of language of an
Indenture securing an issue of debentures.
This Indenture is to be interpreted under
the law of Pennsylvania since it was the
place of execution and performance.
Harris v. New York Life Ins. Co., 27 Del.Ch.
170, 33 A.2d 154. It appears to be the
law of Pennsylvania that in interpreting a
contract courts must give consideration to
the circumstances under which it was made,
the situation of the parties at the time and
the contingencies against which they wished
to provide.
City of Philadelphia v. Philadelphia Transp.
Co., 345 Pa. 244, 26 A.2d 909.
We are of the opinion that this
question is not necessarily to be answered
by references to the general law concerning
the sale of assets by a corporation. The
question before us is the narrow one of what
particular language of a contract means and
is to be answered in [42 Del.Ch. 112] terms
of what the parties were intending to guard
against or to insure.
The debentures with which we are
dealing are unsecured and subordinate to all
other indebtedness of B.S.F. It is,
therefore, quite obvious that such security
as they have is afforded only by the
limitations imposed by the Indenture upon
the activities of B.S.F. The debentures were
offered to the public on the basis of a
Prospectus showing that American Hardware
stock was about 75% of the assets of B.S.F.
and that dividends on it accounted for most
of the company's income. Presumably the
debentures were purchased on the faith of
that, and presumably the Indenture was
intended to insure that this major asset
would not be dissipated.
The record before us, we think,
amply supports the holding of the Vice
Chancellor that this was a sale of
'substantially all' of the assets of B.S.F.
within the meaning of Article II, Section 12
of the Indenture. It is certainly true that
the American Hardware stock comprised more
than 75% of the total assets of B.S.F. and
that it was the only substantial
incomeproducing asset of B.S.F. In the
light, therefore, of the basic purpose of
the Indenture, we think the Vice Chancellor
was correct in holding it to be a sale of
'substantially all' of the assets of B.S.F.
No other conclusion seems justified since
the major asset leading to the purchase of
the debentures has been disposed of. It
follows, therefore, that this sale falls
within the purview of Article II, Section 12
of the Indenture. This means that other
provisions of the Indenture, inserted for
the protection of the debenture holders,
come into play.
This leads us to the second
question, viz., whether or not these other
provisions of the Indenture have been
complied with. As we have pointed out, the
Vice Chancellor held that such provisions
had not been complied with, and that B.S.F.
was accordingly in default under the
Indenture and thus required to redeem the
debentures at a premium.
This question is governed by the
provisions of Article IV, Sections 3E and 4
of the Indenture. Article IV, Section 3E,
after such a sale by B.S.F. provides that
'each Debenture shall after such * * * [42
Del.Ch. 113] sale be convertible into the
kind and number of shares of stock or other
securities or property of the Company
[B.S.F.], or of the corporation * * * to
which such sale shall be made, * * * to
which a holder of the Capital Stock issuable
upon conversion of such Debenture
(immediately prior to such * * * sale) would
have been entitled upon such * * * sale by
virtue of such holding.'
Article IV, Section 4 of the
Indenture provides that B.S.F. will not sell
its assets to any other corporation unless
the acquiring corporation executes a
Supplemental Indenture providing that 'the
Debentureowners may thereafter convert the
Debentures for or into the same kind and
amount of stock, securities and/or assets as
may be issuable and are payable by the terms
of such consolidation, merger or transfer
with respect to the number of shares of
Capital Stock of the Company into which such
Debentures are convertible immediately
Page 751
prior to such consolidation, merger or
transfer.'
The requirement for the execution
of a Supplemental Indenture by the
purchasing corporation is repeated in
Article XIV, Section 1 which requires the
acquiring corporation to assume the due and
punctual payment of principal and interest
of the debentures and the performance of all
covenants and obligations placed upon B.S.F.
by the Indenture 'including, without
limitation of the foregoing, the covenants
and obligations contained in Section 4 of
Article IV hereof.'
The Supplemental Indenture
delivered by Glen Alden to the Trustee
provided that Glen Alden assumed the payment
of the principal and interest on all of the
B.S.F. debentures then outstanding and the
performance of all convenants and
obligations contained in the Indenture. By a
subsequent provision, however, the
Supplemental Indenture provided that for all
purposes of Article IV of the Indenture Glen
Alden assumed no responsibility for the
performance of the covenants contained in
such Article. This, we assume, was a refusal
on the part of Glen Alden to permit a
conversion of the B.S.F. debentures into
Glen Alden stock. This is the matter
complained of and in which the Vice
Chancellor held B.S.F. to be in default
under the Indenture.
[42 Del.Ch. 114] The reason given
by the Vice Chancellor for this holding is
that there is ambiguity in the provisions of
the Indenture, and since B.S.F. had prepared
the Indenture the familiar rule of
construction of resolving all ambiguities
against the draftor should be resorted to in
favor of the Trustee. Accordingly, he held
that there was a default under the Indenture
by reason of the failure to provide for the
conversion of the B.S.F. debentures into
stock of Glen Alden.
The difficulty we think with this
holding is that there is no ambiguity in the
Indenture. In the first place we note--and,
indeed, counsel are in agreement--that the
right of conversion of the debentures into
stock of B.S.F. is still preserved and the
debenture holders can exercise their
election to convert their debentures into
B.S.F. stock in accordance with the terms of
the debentures.
We think there is nothing in
Article IV, Sections 3E and 4 to require
provision for the conversion of the
debentures into stock of the acquiring
corporation unless, as a part of the
agreement of sale, the acquiring corporation
has delivered securities as a part of the
purchase price, which securities are
distributed directly to the stockholders of
B.S.F.
This seems clear from the
provision in Section 4 requiring the
Supplemental Indenture to provide for the
conversion of debentures into 'the same kind
and amount of stock * * * as may be issuable
and are payable by the terms of such * * *
transfer with respect to the number of
shares of Capital Stock of the Company into
which such Debentures are convertible
immediately prior to such * * * transfer.'
Similarly, in Section 3E
comparable language is found. This section
requires B.S.F. in the event of such a sale
of its assets to insure that each debenture
be convertible into the kind and number of
shares of the purchasing corporation 'to
which a holder of the Capital Stock issuable
upon conversion of such Debenture * * *
would have been entitled upon such * * *
sale by virtue of such holding.'
Despite the arguments made, it is
quite plain, we think, that the referred to
provisions of the Indenture were intended to
be applicable only to a transaction in which
shares of a different corporation were
acquired by the stockholders of B.S.F. as a
result of their stock holdings[42 Del.Ch.
115] and as a part of such sale. In that
event it would, of course, be desirable to
protect the debenture owners' right of
conversion in order to insure that a
conversion of the debentures would put the
debenture holders in a comparable position
with other stockholders of B.S.F.
In the case at bar, however, the
sole consideration for the sale of the
particular
Page 752
assets of B.S.F. was cash which has gone
into the treasury of B.S.F., and has been
used by it for its corporate purposes. The
debenture owner still has the option to
convert his debentures into stock of B.S.F.
which puts him on a par with other
stockholders.
To require therefore B.S.F. to
redeem at a premium the debentures by reason
of the transaction outlined above is to give
to the debenture holder a windfall since his
position in the corporate setup has not
materially changed. There are sufficient
assets to pay off the entire issue of
debentures and, presumably, that situation
will continue. In addition, by reason of the
Supplemental Indenture, Glen Alden has
guaranteed the payment of principal and
interest of the debentures. In all fairness
and equity, therefore, we fail to see how
these debenture holders have been injured,
particularly in view of the fact that
neither B.S.F. nor Glen Alden has done
anything prohibited by the Indenture
securing the debentures.
Accordingly, for the foregoing
reasons, the judgment of the Vice Chancellor
is reversed and the case will be remanded
with instructions to enter a declaratory
judgment upon the cross-motion of B.S.F.
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