Finch v. Warrior Cement Corp.

The Chancellor.

These two cases were heard together. The parties complainant, however, sue in entirely different capacities. In one of them the complainants sue as stockholders of Gulf (one of them also claims to be a creditor and sues likewise as such), and in the other the complainant sues as a stockholder of the Warrior Company. The relief asked in the respective suits is of course entirely different. Accordingly I shall in the ensuing opinion treat the two cases as distinct. First then, as to the case of

Finch, et al., v. Warrior Cement Corporation, et al.

In this case the complainants seek by their original bill to set aside the transfer by the Gulf of its assets to the Warrior. They attack the transfer on the ground that it was fraudulent because made without consideration in furtherance of a scheme to deprive the complainants of their rights as proportionate equitable owners of the Gulf assets and because further the directors of the Gulf in order to serve their prospective interests in the Warrior induced the majority stockholders of the Gulf to consent to the transfer by making false representations of fact. They pray that the trans*52fer and. all acts done in furtherance thereof be decreed to be null and void, that receivers be appointed for the Gulf Company, that the Warrior Company shall deliver to such receivers all the property, books, etc., of the Gulf now held by it, and that appropriate injunctive relief be afforded.

The complainants filed three amendments to their bill. These amendments, so far as the introduction of new allegations of fact are concerned, amplify some of the allegations in the original bill and add as an allegation of fact certain constitutional and statutory provisions of law found in the jurisdictions of Alabama and Tennessee. As nothing was made in the argument or on the briefs of those allegations concerning the laws of those states, I pass them by as not being of moment.

The amendments add to the original bill by asking additional relief in substance as follows: That if it be not practicable to set aside the so-called sale of assets, the complainants might have a decree for damages against the defendants, corporate and individual, sustained by them by reason of the transfer and that the sum so allowed to them might be decreed to be a lien on the Gulf properties acquired by the Warrior, subordinate, however, to the lien of the outstanding Warrior bonds.

The answers deny all the allegations of the bill and its amendments by which fraud is charged to have tainted the transactions complained of, insist by averment of facts and by denials of the bill’s allegations, that the proposal and all that was done thereunder was in pursuance of the laws of this state, where the corporate parties are domiciled, and in every way squared with the principle of equal and impartial treatment of every Gulf stockholder of the same class.

In view of what subsequently follows upon the subject of loches, it is unnecessary to enter upon a discussion of a great mass of facts relied upon by the complainants as a ground for rescinding the transfer because of alleged frauds in its prócurement. While thus relieved of the necessity, in order to reach a decision of the case, of entering upon a discussion of the evidence preliminary to a finding upon the question of fraud charged against the directors of the Gulf Company, I do feel in view of the serious nature of the charges made that I should say this, viz.: I can see *53no fraud in the administering of their duties by the Gulf directors or in Deer’s dealings with them. They had no community of interest, their negotiations were all at arms’ length, no class or/ group of stockholders was favored at the expense of others, everything that was proposed was entirely in the open, every person in interest including stockholders was fully and frankly advised upon all points, and the terms of the proposal were carried out faithfully and implicitly in obedience to all of its terms, the directors obtaining no more in the sequel than they were entitled to as stockholders, and then only in the same proportion as those who were non-director stockholders. Upon the point that Deer induced the exchange by falsely representing that he had a. patented waste heat drier, concerning which so much testimony was educed, my conclusion is that the complainants’ position cannot be sustained. Deer never represented that he had a patented waste heat drier. He did represent that he had perfected “a waste heat drier device or method with air seals,” and this was true. He has since obtained a patent for the discharging device which he represented at the time of his proposal that he had perfected.

What took place between the Gulf Company and the Warrior Company assumed the form of a sale by the former of all its assets to the latter. Our statute (Section 64a of the General Corporation Law [as amended by 34 Del. Laws 1925, c. 112, § 13]) authorizes the sale by a corporation of all of its assets upon such terms and conditions as its board of directors deem expedient and for the best interests of the corporation when authorized by a majority of the voting stock at a stockholders’ meeting called for the purpose of considering the question, or when authorized by the written consent of the holders of a majority of the voting stock; provided, however, that the certificate of incorporation may require the vote or written consent of a larger proportion of stock than a majority. The certificate of the Gulf Company did not require a greater proportion than a majority consent as authority for the sale of its assets. The rule of the majority prevailed in its case.

Apparently proceeding under this section, the Gulf board recommended a sale in accordance with Deer’s proposal. Instead of calling a stockholders’ meeting for the purpose of securing an authorization by the stockholders of the sale so recommended, *54they resorted to the alternative plan of securing the written consent of a majority. Such consent was obtained.

Thus far the procedure of the statute was followed. But from this point on, those in charge of the business appear to have departed from the conception that a sale was being effected," for though all the assets of Gulf were turned over to Warrior, the stock of the latter which supplied the consideration was not paid to the selling corporation as it should have been. It was, instead, distributed direct to the assenting stockholders of Gulf in harmony with the plan of Deer’s proposal and a proper proportion was held and is now held for the benefit of the dissentients ready for delivery if they see fit to take it. This course is sought to be justified by the Gulf directors upon the theory that what really took place was not a sale by Gulf to Warrior, but in reality a reorganization of the former, and inasmuch as the same result which the direct distribution sought to accomplish could and would have been accomplished by paying the Warrior stock to Gulf and then had it distributed by the latter through dissolution proceedings, no objection to the transaction ought to bé allowed.. I cannot .accede to this proposition, /if the Gulf Company undertook in substance to effect a reorganization of itself, and the-statutory provision governing a sale of all corporate assets was resorted to as a suitable method, it would be laying down a dangerous, rule to hold that at the last.and consummating stage of the business the statute’s scheme might be entirely abandoned. If what is done comports in every way with the statute’s requirements then of course an objecting stockholder can interpose no obstacles. But where the only authority for the action rests .on the statute, it would in' matters of the instant kind, be exposing various interests both of stockholders and possible creditors to too great a risk of injury to allow the statutory authorization of a sale to be discarded short of its full and completed exercise. If the majority insisted on a sale as the method of reorganizing this company’s affairs, the complainants as stockholders were entitled to insist that the sale which was being forced upon them, and not something else, should constitute the entire extent of their submission. There is no way to compel the complainants to exchange their Gulf stock for Warrior stock. If the Gulf had received the Warrior stock as the *55consideration for its assets and could then upon dissolution have distributed it in kind, of course the complainants in the absence of any countervailing circumstances could have been forced to submit to becoming Warrior stockholders or lose all their rights. But that not having been done, how can the complainants be now driven to the position of becoming Warrior stockholders or lose all interest in the assets which formerly lay underneath their stock? They now find themselves in the situation of stockholders in a company whose entire assets have been disposed of to another and their company owns nothing in place thereof. This being so, they are entitled to some sort of relief.

To what sort of relief then are they entitled? They say first that they are entitled to have the entire transaction set aside. This, it seems quite clear, they should not have. They have waited too long to ask it. They filed their bill on September 28, 1926. They were informed at least about ten months in advance of filing their bill of what was proposed to be done and was in fact being done. The transfer of the assets was made, first mortgage bonds upon the property in a large amount were being sold to the public, from the proceeds $146,000 of their own company’s bonds were proposed to be and were paid off, and new construction and the tearing out and renovation of old construction at the plant were being paid for. If the complainants desired that their company should recover the assets and continue the business, they should have acted promptly and not have sat by while the purchasing company and the new interests were altering their situation in a most substantial manner. Inasmuch as there was no actual fraud or bad faith in the transaction, the equity which underlies the doctrine of loches appeals with especial persuasiveness for recognition here. On this aspect of the case, therefore, the conclusion is that the complainants as stockholders have delayed too long to be granted the relief of rescission and restoration. Marks v. Merrill Paper Mfg. Co., (C. C.) 188 F. 850, on appeal (C. C. A.) 203 F. 16; Tanner v. Lindell Ry. Co., 180 Mo. 1, 79 S. W. 155, 103 Am. St. Rep. 534; Johnson v. United Rys. Co. of St. Louis, et al., 227 Mo. *56423, 127 S. W. 63; Wright v. Tacoma Gas & Electric Light Co., 53 Wash. 264, 101 P. 865; Berkeley County Court v. Martinsburg, etc., Co., 92 W. Va. 246, 115 S. E. 448; Dana v. American Tobacco Co., 73 N. J. Eq. 736, 69 A. 223; Venner v. Chicago City Ry. Co., 236 Ill. 349, 86 N. E. 266; 3 Cook on Corporations (7th Ed.) 732. I have examined all the cases cited by the complainants upon the subject of loches and find nothing in them at variance with the conclusion just stated.

But a refusal to grant the relief of cancellation does not mean that the complainants as stockholders are to be deprived of any relief whatever. The alternative prayer of their amended bill is that, in event cancellation is not decreed, they be awarded a decree for damages and a lien. That they are entitled to a decree for damages in an amount representing the value of their stock based upon its proportionate share of the total net assets of the company is a form of relief to which they are entitled. Tanner v. Lindell Ry. Co., supra; Lauman v. Lebanon Valley R. R. Co., 30 Pa. 42, 72 Am. Dec. 685; Jones v. Missouri-Edison Electric Co., (C. C. A.) 144 F. 765; Petry, et al., v. Hardwood Electric Co., 280 Pa. 142, 124 A. 302, 33 A. L. R. 1249.

What then is the value of the complainants’ shares which should be allowed them as compensation? The complainants own both preferred and common stock of the Gulf Company. The evidence upon this question of value is exceedingly voluminous. To undertake to review it and critically examine it would extend this opinion to an inordinate length. It has to do with the values to be placed on the company’s tangible properties, consisting of rock and sand deposits, coal mines, plant and equipment, with location, transportation and power facilities present and prospective, past history of the properties in the hands of present and prior owners, ability and inability of the business to yield profits, financial perplexities of the Gulf Company, etc., from the total of which liabilities are to be deducted. No evidence was produced showing market value of the shares. Deer’s proposed price was predicated on the value of these assets. While the proposal does not in terms say so, yet by plain inference and by what was done in carrying it out, it is apparent that pet value of assets was what was meant. An audit, which happened at the time to be already *57in the cdurse of preparation by the Gulf’s regular auditor, was referred to as supplying the information upon which the price to be paid should be determined, Deer guaranteeing not less than sixty cents on the dollar for the preferred stock. The completion of the audit showed the net assets to have a value which worked out to a trifle less than the guaranteed sixty cents on the dollar for each share of Gulf preferred stock, the common of course being worth nothing. The validity of this audit is vigorously assailed by the complainants who contend that the true net value of the assets would give to the preferred stock a per share value equal to par and accrued dividends. A pivotal point upon which the controversy touching value turns, respects the proper appraisal to be made of the company’s tangible assets of quarry, coal mines, plant and equipment. The complainants rely on the so-called Manufacturers’ Appraisal report prepared as of December 31, 1920, supplemented by additions since that date. This report appears never to have been so seriously regarded by the directors to warrant its incorporation in the books of the company. A later appraisal was made by the American Appraisal Company as of July 1,1923, two years before negotiations with Deer were ever thought of. This report the directors accepted as authoritative for the company and accordingly entered it upon its books. These two reports furnish the respective starting points from which the parties reach their divergent results upon the question of values. I accept the view that the appraisal made by the American Appraisal Company is the one that should govern, because while neither was made with the Deer proposal in mind, yet the latter was, without any thought of Deer and his proposal, accredited by the responsible managers of the corporation as correct. In the presence of such pronounced conflict of views between expert witnesses upon the question of values, given now that a controversy has arisen, I think that the judgment of the directors, dispassionately formed when harmony prevailed in the corporation, by which the American Appraisal report was emphatically approved as against the prior one, should be accepted. I may say further that the experts who appeared as witnesses at the trial in support of the American Appraisal report impressed me at least as favorable as those experts who appeared in support of the higher appraisal previously *58made by the Manufacturers’ Appraisal Company. Some allowance is also to- be made for the lapse of time intervening between the two reports. The reports in question were supplemented by adults made by auditors engaged by the respective parties. Without going into details touching the audits, this should be said. The audit made by Christian for the Gulf Company was in the regular course, he having been engaged by the company to do that work for a number of years past, and he happened to be in the midst of it again when the Deer negotiations were opened. The auditor engaged by the complainants was specially engaged to appear as a witness in this suit, and his testimony at points quite frankly reveals that he was aiming to give as rosy a complexion to the figures as he possibly could.

Now having before them the appraisal which they had disinterestedly and in the exercise of their best judgment previously accepted and also the report of their auditor, the directors concluded that the net assets of this corporation would yield in value not more than enough to pay sixty cents on the dollar to each share of preferred stock. It is important to remember in this connection that the evidence, instead of showing that the directors had some peculiar personal interest of their own to serve in forming whatever judgment they did, or some personal advantage to gain by their action, shows the contrary to be true. If they made a bad bargain, they injured themselves as well as others. The same is to be said of the ninety odd per cent, majority of stockholders who approved of the proposition. In this respect the situation is similar to that found in Robinson v. Pittsburgh Oil Refining Corp., et al., 14 Del. Ch. 193, 126 A. 46, where the presumption was accepted that the controlling authorities of the corporation were, in making a sale of assets, actuated by a bona fide regard for the interests of the corporation. If there is any fraud in this transaction, viewing it as a sale, it can only be in the fact that a price was named which was so far below a fair price as to indicate fraud in law. Certainly there is no warrant in concluding that there was actual fraud. Nor, in the light of the evidence touching values, the company’s financial condition, its earning power present and past, and .the presumption-in favor of the bona fides of both the directors and majority stockholders, can I reach the conclusion that a price *59yielding sixty cents on the dollar of preferred par value was so far, if any, below the fair value as to indicate fraud in law.

The finding accordingly is that the preferred stock was at the time of the transfer of the assets worth sixty cents on each dollar of its par and the common stock was worth nothing.

The complainants are holders of both preferred and common stock and are entitled to a decree to the extent just indicated. How the sum allowed shall be secured to them, whether by lien, through the instrumentality of a receiver or otherwise, the solicitors may perhaps agree upon. If not, a hearing upon the form of the decree will be had.

One of the complainants claims to be a creditor of the Gulf Company. The defendants say that if he is such, they are not advised of the fact and are willing, if he can show himself to be a creditor, to pay him in full. If he is a creditor, his situation is entirely different from that of a stockholder, and entirely different principles touching both rights and remedies are applicable to him in that status. I suggest that satisfactory bond be given him to secure whatever he might be able to recover in an action at law as a means of obviating the necessity of resorting to further proceedings in this suit for the ultimate recovery of what he claims to be due. If the defendants cannot suggest a satisfactory way of protecting the complainant who thus claims to be a creditor of the Gulf Company, it will then be in order for me to consider the matter further.

The foregoing disposes of the case of Finch, et al., v. Warrior Cement Corporation, et al. I now take up the case of

Steuerwald v. Warrior Cement Corporation, et al.

In this case the complainant sues as a stockholder of the Warrior Company. She holds fourteen shares of its preferred stock and six shares of its no-par common stock. The amended bill seeks the cancellation of the twenty thousand shares of no-par common stock which the Warrior Company issued to Deer in pursuance of the plan outlined in Deer’s proposal to the Gulf Company, or, in case cancellation of all or part of the stock be not decreed, an accounting by Deer for the value of the shares uncancelled. The amended bill seeks also to hold the defendant Deer accountable *60for $26,000 and the defendant Paul S. Steward for $7,500 received by them respectively from the brokers who sold the bonds of the Warrior Company (referred to in Deer’s proposal to Gulf) as commissions upon that portion of the issue which they sold or assisted the brokers in selling. The amended bill has therefore two aspects which will be considered in order.

First, then, as to the right of the complainant as a Warrior stockholder to secure a' cancellation of or accounting for the twenty thousand shares of no-par common stock issued to Deer in obedience to the plan outlined in his proposal. It is contended that this stock was issued without any consideration. It being no-par stock the amount of the consideration received for it is of no moment, provided the quality of the consideration was such as to meet the constitutional requirement. Bodell v. General Gas & Electric Corp., 15 Del. Ch. 7, 132 A. 442. A portion of the consideration which Deer offered for the stock was clearly not a lawful one. I refer to that part which constituted an agreement to render future services to the company of one kind and another. Cooney Co. v. Arlington Hotel Co., 11 Del. Ch. 286, 101 A. 879; Scully v. Automobile Finance Co., 12 Del. Ch. 174, 109 A. 49; Bowen v. Imperial Theatres, Inc., 13 Del. Ch. 120, 115 A. 918. The part which embraced the right to use the waste heat dryer device which Deer had perfected and subsequently patented- was, I incline to think, a lawful consideration. But assuming that it was not and that no consideration whatever was given by Deer for the stock, is the complainant in position to complain? She knew exactly what stock the Warrior Company proposed to give to Deer in consideration of all that he proposed to do. The letter to the stockholders reached her containing a copy of the Deer proposal. Before exchanging her Gulf stock into Warrior stock she addressed a lengthy letter of criticism to the Gulf Company’s president, and asked to be enlightened upon several important aspects of the proposal. The treasurer of the Warrior Company, to whom the letter was handed for attention, replied lengthily to her communication, and further correspondence ensued. She was eventually advised that the -transaction had gone forward to completion, by which the Warrior took over the Gulf assets, and was informed in great detail concerning the issuance of the twenty thousand shares *61of no-par common stock to Deer and. what distribution Deer proposed to make of it, how many shares the holders of old Gulf common would receive, how many shares would go to those putting new money into the corporation and approximately how many Deer would retain for himself. With the fullest information thus frankly laid before her, she exercised her right to exchange her shares of Gulf, preferred and common, for Warrior stock, receiving fourteen shares of preferred and six of common, which she now holds. The common stock thus received was her allotment, under the Deer plan, out of the twenty thousand shares which she knew Deer was to receive. She thus not only knew of the circumstances attending the issuance of the shares to Deer before becoming a stockholder of Warrior, but in the most emphatic way approved thereof and assented thereto by taking her proper portion in the exchange. If creditors’ rights were being asserted against the issuance of the stock to Deer, we would be confronted with an entirely different situation' from that which we have here, where a stockholder seeks to undo that which her prior conduct, based on full knowledge, shows she had agreed to and participated in. Acquiescence and participation in an issue of stock, without consideration or for an insufficient consideration, will bar the right of the assenting stockholder to complain against its issuance. In this state the issuance of stock without consideration does not render the issue void, though an attempt to exempt the issue from liability to pay lawful consideration therefor is void. Du Pont, et al., v. Ball, et al., 11 Del. Ch. 430, 106 A. 39, 7 A. L. R. 955; Scully, et al., v. Automobile Finance Co., et al., 12 Del. Ch. 174, 109 A. 49. The dictum found in Ellis v. Penn Beef Co., 9 Del. Ch. 213, 80 A. 666, that stock issued without consideration is absolutely void appears thus to be not expressive of the law, as was recognized by the. Chancellor who uttered it in the later case of Scully, et al. v. Automobile Finance Co., just referred to. That stockholders who, with full knowledge, acquiesce in or ratify an illegal issue of stock, may thereafter be estopped from complaining against it, though not expressly so decided in this state, yet seems to have been accepted as true in the judicial discussions found in the recent Supreme Court case of Henderson, et al., v. Plymouth Oil Co., et al., 141 A. 197, post p. 347, and in the earlier cases of Cahall *62v. Lofland, et al., 12 Del. Ch. 299, 114 A. 224, before the Chancellor, and in the same case before the Supreme Court reported in 13 Del. Ch. 384, 118 A. 1. If mere acquiescence with knowledge will estop a stockholder, a fortiori acts of participation will do so. I accordingly hold that the assent and active participation on the part of the complainant, manifested by her exchange of Gulf stock for Warrior stock with full and complete knowledge of all the facts, bar her from any right to complain against the issuance of the twenty thousand shares to Deer, even though it be conceded that no or an inadequate consideration was paid by him therefor. 1 Cook on Corporations, (8th Ed.) § 30; 5 Fletcher, Cyc. Corp., § 3586; 14 C. J. 477, § 606.

Second, as to the complainant’s right to secure in behalf of the Warrior Company an accounting and payment by Deer and Paul S. Steward of the profits obtained by them as commissions on the sale of the bonds. Deer was a director and president and Steward a director of the Warrior Company. Before the company was formed Deer made his proposal to the Gulf Company. One of the terms of the proposal was that first mortgage bonds in the amount of $750,000 should be issued by the new company (Warrior). “I will cause,” he stated in his proposal, “the new company to contract for the sale of its bonds at a commission not to exceed ten per cent. I propose to actively assist in the sale of the bonds and for that purpose to aid the bond salesmen in forming a syndicate to buy the first $300,000 of bonds. ” This representation was made to the Gulf directors and by them passed on to the Gulf stockholders, who were invited to become Warrior stockholders. So far as the record shows, it is all of the information which Deer gave to the prospective stockholders of the new company concerning his relations to the bonds and their sale. The naming of a commission of not to exceed ten per cent, certainly did not mean that the officers and directors of the new company should not dispose of the bonds at less than a ten per cent, cost if possible’. If the bonds could have been sold for a less commission than that, it was the duty of the officers and directors to secure for the Warrior a better figure. When the Warrior was formed its directors authorized a contract with Luckadoo and Elmore, brokers, by which the latter were to undertake the sale of the bonds for a commission of ten per cent., *63the outside figure named in Deer’s proposal. The propriety of that contract is not assailed. It appears, however, that the brokers paid to Deer, president, and Paul S. Steward, director, commissions amounting to something in the neighborhood of $33,500, of which $26,000 went to Deer and $7,500 to Steward, for their assistance in the sale. I do not see how these commissions can be retained by the recipients. Deer’s statement in the proposal gives the distinct impression that his active assistance in connection with the sale of bonds was a part of the service he would render in consideration of the acceptance of his proposal under which he was to receive all the new company’s common stock, a considerable portion of which he would personally retain. Such is the reasonable interpretation to put upon the language of his proposal.

But aside from that, there are principles applicable generally to the fiduciary relations existing between officers ánd directors of a corporation on the one hand and the body of its stockholders on the other, which require that the profit made by Deer and Steward should be surrendered to the corporation. Those principles are laid down by the Supreme Court of this state in Lofland, et al. v. Cahall, 13 Del. Ch. 384, 118 A. 1, as follows:

“1. Directors of a corporation are trustees for the stockholders, and their acts are governed by the rules applicable to such a relation, which exact of them the utmost good faith and fair dealing, especially where their individual interests are concerned.
“2. They have no right to compensation for services rendered within the scope of their duties as directors, unless it is authorized by the charter, by-laws, or the stockholders of the company.
“3. They have no right to compensation for services rendered outside their duties as directors unless there had been an express contract to pay for such services, or, as some cases hold, unless the services were clearly outside their duties as directors and performed under circumstances sufficient to show that it was understood by the proper officers, as well as by the directors claiming compensation, that the services were to be paid for by the corporation.
“4. A contract to pay compensation for such services must be made with directors, or other proper corporate officers who have no personal interest, directly or indirectly, in the contract, and who are competent to represent the company in the transaction.”

There is certainly nothing in connection with Deer that renders these principles inapplicable to his situation; nor can I find *64anything rendering them inapplicable to the situation of Paul S. Steward. The reason which underlies the rule forbidding officers and directors to profit themselves at the expense of the corporation is the same which underlies the law’s strict requirement that a trustee shall not be allowed to profit himself in administering the affairs of his cestui que trust. It is, that self-interest shall in no wise be permitted to conflict with duty for fear that the motive to serve the former will outweigh the sense of obligation to obey the latter. Now in this case, the directors were under the duty of contracting for the sale of the bonds at the best price obtainable. The cost .was not to be over ten per cent. — less if possible. If directors who authorized a ten per cent, contract with brokers should be permitted to share in the- commission, why may it not be said that they were, consciously or unconsciously, induced to favor such a contract by the prospect of their personal gain? Was not the corporation entitled to thave them pass their judgment upon the proposed contract without the interposition of the selfish prospect of obtaining a personal gain? It will not do to say that the ten per cent, flotation charge was a reasonable one. The question is, Was it the best that could reasonably have been obtained? It is manifest that, to the extent of the commission paid to Deer and Steward, the brokers were content to take less than the specified ten per cent. Why, then, may not the sum paid to Deer and Steward be regarded as paid at the expense of the corporation? If it be answered that except for the aid rendered by Deer and Steward the brokers could not have sold the entire issue, the answer is that Deer and Steward were directors and as such under a duty to render aid in securing capital for the company. Lofland, et al. v. Cahall, supra.

I am aware that the Supreme Court in the Lofland Case used language (page 391) from which the inference might be drawn that if the services rendered by the directors in securing the sale of their company’s stock or bonds were such as to amount to “exceptional or extraordinary efforts,” it might be proper for them to receive compensation for such services. But this is only an inference. If it was meant to express the settled view of the court, however, I think in this case, as the Supreme Court thought in that case, that the services rendered are not shown to have been such *65exceptional or extraordinary ones as to warrant the taking of a profit therefor. Besides, it would seem from the language of the Supreme Court in the Lofland Case that profiting directors were not competent to themselves put the value on their own services. But aside from that, the services rendered in this case do not appear to have required the exertion of any more exceptional or extraordinary efforts than did the services rendered in the Lofland Case; and certainly they were far less exceptional or extraordinary in character than were those referred to in detail in the case of Western States Life Assurance Co. v. Lockwood, et al., 166 Cal. 185, 135 P. 496, which was heard on a second appeal and again elaborately discussed by the California Supreme Court in the opinion reported in 173 Cal. 734, 161 P. 498. In the two opinions filed in that case all the arguments which are here advanced in support of the right of Deer and Steward to take the commissions were noted and rejected by an undivided court. See, also, as bearing on the subject, 4 Fletcher, Cyc. Corp., §§ 2303, 2319, and cases cited.

Deer and Paul S. Steward should be decreed to account for and pay to the defendant, Warrior Company, the amount of profits which they received as commissions. I do not recall any evidence in this voluminous record to the effect that' any other directors received such commissions. If there is any such evidence, I suggest that it be pointed out by the complainant’s solicitors before a decree is entered. I suggest also to the solicitors that they agree upon the exact amount which the evidence, undisputed as it is, shows Deer and Steward to have received, before a draft decree is presented. If they cannot agree, a hearing at chambers will be accorded. '