Action by a holder of 480 shares of the preferred stock of the defendant corporation to restrain a proposed issue of common stock unless the holders of both the preferred and common are permitted, upon the same terms, to subscribe therefor. A temporary injunction was obtained by an order to show cause, upon the return of which plaintiff’s motion for an injunction pendente lite was denied. From the order denying the motion plaintiff appeals.
The defendant is a domestic corporation with an authorized capital stock of $7,000,000, divided info 140,000 shares of the par value of $50 each, of which $3,500,000 is preferred and $3,500,000 common stock. The preferred stock is entitled to cumulative dividends at the rate of six per cent per annum and to preference in the distribution of assets until the par value and accumulated dividends have been paid and “ to no further dividend or distribution.”
There are now outstanding 33,230 shares of the preferred, and 50,000 shares of the common stock, leaving 36,770 shares of preferred and 20,000 shares of common unissued. Prior to the commencement of this action the directors of the defendant resolved to issue 10,000 shares of the unissued common stock and to allow the holders of the issued common stock to subscribe for the same, ratably, at par. The market value of the common stock was then about $80 per share, while the market value of the preferred was about $47. The plaintiff demanded that he be allowed to subscribe pro rata for the common stock, along with its other holders. His request was refused and he thereupon commenced this action. The court below denied his motion for an injunction pendente lite, but *138upon condition that he be allowed to subscribe for an equivalent amount of preferred stock at par.
The principal ground of plaintiff’s alleged cause of action, as set forth in his complaint, is that the holders of the common stock have been given the right to subscribe, at par, for stock which is worth about thirty dollars more than par, while the same right has not been extended to the holders of the preferred stock. I am unable to see how the plaintiff can sustain his alleged cause of action, or that he has any reason to complain. Where a corporation has property in excess of the amount of its capital stock, the excess is surplus which may be divided among the stockholders entitled to share therein, either.in money or property. (Williams v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 93 N.Y. 162.) As a holder of the preferred stock the plaintiff could claim no interest in such excess. So long as the dividends upon his stock were paid, and the defendant had property equal in value to the amount of its outstanding capital stock, after the payment of its debts, the corporation, if it saw ñt to do so, could distribute all the rest of its assets among the holders of its common stock and the plaintiff would have no ground for complaint.
It is not claimed that the capital stock of the defendant has been impaired, or that it could not legally issue the additional-stock at par. That being, so, whatever value the stock had above par represented surplus and was available for distribution among the holders of its common stock. Whether this was done by selling the stock at its market value and then distributing the excess, or by issuing the stock to the holders of the common at par,.does not concern the plaintiff. He cannot insist that the corporation build up a large surplus nor object to a distribution of its property, when duly authorized, among the holders of common stock, so long as his dividends are paid and its capital remains unimpaired.
It is urged, however, and with some force, that the plaintiff, as a stockholder, had the right to share proportionately in any issue of stock, under the principle laid down in Stokes v. Continental Trust Co. (186 N. Y. 285). In so far as this contention is based upon the plaintiff’s asserted right to participate in the profits derived from the issue of the common stock *139below its market value, it is unsound and cannot be sustained. The issue of stock will, however, reduce the plaintiff’s proportionate interest in the corporation, but in considering this phase of the question there is one point in which the present case differs materially from the Stokes case and from the case of Page v. American & British Mfg. Co. (129 App. Div. 346). In each of those cases the change was made in the authorized capital stock, while in the case now before us the stock which it is proposed to issue is a part of the stock authorized in the defendant’s certificate of incorporation.
The plaintiff, as already indicated, holds 480 shares out of an authorized capital issue of 140,000- shares, about one two hundred and ninety-first of the number of shares stated in the certificate of incorporation. It is, to say the least, doubtful whether the fact that- all the shares authorized had not been issued gave him an inherent right to any greater proportional interest than this. (Curry v. Scott, 54 Penn. St. 277.) Of course he would be entitled to protection against discrimination and oppression in subsequent issues of stock, but it does not follow that where all the authorized stock of a corporation is not at once subscribed for and issued, the subscribers to whom stock is issued can, in the absence of bad faith, insist upon participating pro rata in subsequent issues. On the contrary, section 53 of the Stock Corporation Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 59; Laws of 1909, chap. 61) provides that where the whole capitaj stock has not been subscribed at the time the certificate is filed, the directors may thereafter open books of subscription, and I do not understand that a subscriber, upon receiving his stock, thereby acquires any inherent right to preserve the existing ratio between his stock and the stock issued and outstanding at that particular time. If, in the Stokes case, the additional stock which was sold to Blah* & Co. had been authorized in the defendant’s certificate of incorporation, it is by no means certain that the plaintiff could have successfully complained of the transaction.
But even assuming that the plaintiff is entitled to preserve his present proportionate interest in the defendant, I am of the opinion that the court below was right in refusing an injunction pendente lite. Under the order appealed from the plain*140tiff is afforded an opportunity to increase his holdings in the ■same ratio offered to the holders of the common stock. He owns but one one hundred and seventy-third of the stock now outstanding and, as already said, the principal ground of his complaint is not that this interest will be diminished, but that he is entitled to share in the benefits accruing to the holders of the common stock owing to the fact that the new stock, can he sold above par, He has no just cause of complaint upon this ground. Indeed, if he has an inherent right to a proportionate interest in the corporation at the present ratio and desires to preserve that right, he can do so, and then recover for any damages he may sustain by adopting that course.
The record presents no indication whatever of bad faith or improper motive in the proposed issue of stock, and so far as appears no other stockholder objects. Under the circumstances, I do not think that a court of equity should interfere by injunction and prevent what appears to be the wish of a large majority of the stockholders of the defendant in order to protect the plaintiff in what is, at most, a rather unsubstantial right which it-is possible for him to protect in another.way.
The order appealed from, therefore, should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Ingraham, P. J., Scott, Miller and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.