65 Conn. 355 | Conn. | 1895
The plaintiffs are the owners and holders of more than two hundred shares — indeed of a majority of all the shares — of the capital stock of the Derby Rubber Company, a joint stock corporation formed under the laws of this State and located at Derby. The defendant William C. Atwater is the president, and William F. Askam is the secretary, of said corporation. One of the by-laws, the 6th, of said corporation, provides in respect to annual meetings that: “ A written or printed notice of such annual meeting, and also of each special meeting of said corporation, specifying the place, day and hour of such meeting, shall be given by the president, or secretary, to each stockholder by leaving it with him or at his residence or usual place of business, or by depositing it in some post-office for transmission by mail, postage paid, addressed to him at his last known place of residence, at least five days before said meeting.” Another by-law, the 7th, enacts that: “ Special meetings of the stockholders of said corporation may be held at any time upon the notice hereinbefore specified, and the secretary or president shall give such notice upon the request in writing of stockholders holding two hundred shares of the capital stock of said corporation calling for such special meeting, and shall specify therein the object and purpose of such meeting.”
On the 4th day of April, 1894, the plaintiffs united in a written request to the defendants, asking them to call a special meeting of the stockholders of said corporation, specifying therein the object and purpose of such meeting, and also naming a place, a day and an hour for the holding of the same, which request was, on said day, placed in the hands of each of said defendants. But the defendants refused to
Mandamus, although it is an extraordinary legal remedy, is in the nature of an equitable interference supplementing the deficiencies of the common law. It will ordinarily be issued where a legal duty is established and no other sufficient means exist for enforcing it. When the object sought can be equally well obtained by other means, as by an action or by some other form of proceeding, then mandamus will not lie. Thus, the enforcement of merely private obligations, such as those arising from contracts, are not within its scope. The essential conditions without which the writ will not be issued to enforce the performance of a ministerial duty are : (1) that the party against whom the writ is sought must be under an obligation imposed by law to perform some such duty, that is, a duty in respect to the performance of which he may not exercise any discretion ; (2) that the party applying for the writ has a clear legal right to have the duty performed; and (3) that there is no other sufficient remedy.
In the present case the alternative writ, in point of form, contains allegations which show that all these conditions exist in favor of the plaintiffs. And as these are admitted by the motion to quash to be true, we are to inquire whether any of the allegations are insufficient in the law. The Superior Court found the insufficiency in the fact that the duty sought to be enforced was one imposed by the by-laws of the corporation. In its memorandum of decision that court said: “ The by-laws in question do not have the force or dignity of public law. Their office is a private one and the duties they impose are private, not public, in their nature.
This memorandum seems to indicate that the Superior Court was of opinion that a writ of mandamus was a remedy to be used only in cases where the duty sought to be enforced was one imposed by public law, and one the non-performance of which worked a public wrong; and that the alternative writ in this case was defective in both these particulars. But is this true? To speak first of the defect last mentioned —is it true that a mandamus is to issue only to enforce a duty in the performance of which the public at large has such an interest that its non-performance is in the nature of a public wrong? Perhaps the earlier cases, some of them, mentioned this as a necessary requirement. But even then it was not strictly insisted upon. The writ was often issued in cases where the question in controversy was rather upon some matter of private right, than upon a public one. The courts then followed the rule given by Lord Mansfield in Rex v. Barker, 3 Burr., 1267, that: “The value of the matter, or the degree of its importance to the public police, is not scrupulously weighed. If there be a right, and no other specific remedy, this should not be denied.” Rex v. Turkey Co., 2 Burr., 999; Rex v. Wildman, 2 Stra., 879; White's Case, 2 Raym. (Ld.), 1004; Case of Schriven & Turner, 2 Stra., 832; Dacosta & Russia Company, id., 783; Anon., id., 696.
In this jurisdiction this feature is substantially disregarded, and a mandamus is issued in cases where the duty is one imposed by public authority and its non-performance operates only as a private wrong. Thus, a justice of the peace may be required to correct his record at the application of one who has only a private interest in it. Smith v. Moore, 38 Conn., 105. A judge of probate may be required to amend his record so as to enable a party to take an appeal, though no person in the world is interested in the suit but
The other defect indicated by the Superior Court, and the one doubtless which had the greatest weight, seems to have been that the duty imposed on the defendants by the corporate by-laws, to call special meetings, was a duty im
We are brought then to the inquiry: Do these by-laws impose no obligation except such as rests wholly upon contract, and which involves no question of trust or official duty? Two or three observations may tend to elucidate this inquiry. In the first place, all corporations are the creatures of public law. Then, the duty which these by-laws command is a ministerial one. It is a precise act, accurately marked out, enjoined upon particular officers for a particular purpose. Amer. Casualty Ins. Co. v. Fyler, 60 Conn., 448; Brainard v. Staub, 61 id., 570.. And there is no adequate remedy to enforce this duty other than this writ. At least no other one has been suggested. An action on the case for damages, if that would lie, which is by no means certain, would not be an adequate remedy, for that would bring only pecuniary compensation, and the plaintiffs are entitled to have the very duty performed. Fremont v. Crippen, 10 Cal., 211; In re Trustees of Williamsburgh, 1 Barb., 34; Etheridge v. Hall, 7 Porter, (Ala.,) 47; People v. Mayor, 10 Wend., 395; Hull v. Supervisors of Oneida, 19 John., 259; McCullough v. Mayor, 23 Wend., 458; People v. Taylor, 1 Abb. Pr. N. S., 200; Spelling on Ex. Relief, § 1375. The equitable proceeding for specific performance obviously could not be brought, for that lies only where there is a contract obligation. It may be that an action in the nature of a bill in equity eould be also maintained by one of the stockholders in behalf of the corporation, to compel the president
The by-laws of a corporation doubtless express — as does its charter — contract relations; but it is a contract between the corporation and each of the stockholders, and not one of the stockholders with one another. The officers and directors of a corporation hold a position of trust. Especially is this so as to officers who are chosen by the command of the statute. Section 1950 of the General Statutes requires all joint stock corporations to elect one of its directors to be the president, and also to elect a secretary; and although these officers are chosen by the corporation, their duties may be and often are prescribed by the general laws of the State. Duties so prescribed, when of a ministerial character, may always be enforced by mandamus.
The General Statutes, § 1945, after providing for the calling of the first meeting of a joint stock corporation by any two of the corporatoi's, proceeds to declare that “ a written or printed notice of each subsequent meeting of such corporation, specifying the place, day, and hour of such meeting, shall be given by the president or secretary to each stockholder, by leaving it with him, or at his residence or usual place of business, or by depositing it in some post-office for transmission by mail, postage paid, addressed to him at his last known place of residence, at least five days before said meeting.” The by-laws of the Derby Rubber Company provide that the president or secretary shall give such notice of a special meeting at any time upon the written request of the holders of two hundred shares of the stock of the company.
The statute, by establishing the only mode in which special meetings may be called, makes it the imperative duty of the president or secretary to give the prescribed notice, whenever it is properly required. It is left to each corporation to determine for itself under what circumstances a special meeting .is to be held. The by-law, which is relied
We think the Superior Court erred in its judgment. Various other reasons were presented in the motion to quash. As these were not passed upon by the trial court we have not considered them. Leave to amend the alternative writ having been granted to the plaintiffs if they should see fit to do so, we suppose all ground for these reasons will be removed.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the cause is remanded to the Superior Court to be proceeded with according to law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred, except Hamersley, J., who dissented.