93 P. 729 | Utah | 1908
The plaintiff, as a stockholder, made application to the district court for an order requiring the defendants to permit him to inspect the books of the defendant company. The plaintiff, after alleging the incorporation of the defendant company, in substance, states that he is a bona fide stockholder of record of the defendant corporation; that at various times during business hours of the corporation he had applied to the corporation and its secretary for permission to inspect the corporate books, through an accountant, in his behalf; that the defendant I. A. Clayton is the secretary and treasurer of said corporation, and as such has charge of all of its books; and that said defendants have, at all times, refused, and still refuse, to permit the plaintiffs to inspect the books of said corporation through an accountant as aforesaid.
AH tbe assignments of error may be determined upon tbe one that the court erred in making tbe order permitting an inspection of the books of tbe corporation through an accountant, where, as in this case, tbe right to a personal inspection by tbe stockholder is not denied. At common law tbe inspection of corporate books by tbe stockholder was held to be a matter of privilege, rather than a matter of right. At all events tbe right, if we call it such, was held to be a qualified right, and to some extent at least discretionary. In this, view, it was sometimes held that tbe right of inspection was personal to tbe stockholder, and, unless be made it appear that be was physically unable or otherwise disqualified to make a proper examination of tbe corporate books, that such an examination by an agent or attorney would not be permitted.
It is further contended that the stockholder should be required to give some reason why he desires an inspection of the books. We cannot assent to these contentions. As we view the matter the right to make an inspection and examination of the corporate books, at reasonable times, by a stockholder, is an absolute, and not a qualified, right. The right is given by statute without a qualification, except that it be made at reasonable hours. The fact that the right is sought to be strictly enforced by a penal statute emphasizes the existence of the right, rather than qualifies it. The officers of the corporation, while directly its agents conducting its affairs,
In 10 Cyc. 958, the law upon this subject is stated in the following language: “The stockholder is not confined to a personal inspection by himself, but may exercise the right through an agent, attorney, solicitor, counselor, or expert.” The case of Cincinnati Volksblatt Co. v. Hoffmeister, 62 Ohio St. 189, 56 N. E. 1033, 48 L. R. A. 732, 78 Am. St. Rep. 707, involved this very question. In passing upon it at page 199 of 62 Ohio St., page 1035 of 56 N. E. (48 L. R. A. 732, 78 Am. St. Rep. 707) the court say:
“The contention is that whatever right of examination the statute gives is a personal right, and must he exercised by the stockholder in person. Since when, we would inquire, has it been the law that one who has given him a clear right as to property may not exercise it by any proper agent? The proposition has the quality of novelty, hut it is not sound. It must he apparent, on reflection, that, if so circumscribed a limit were placed on the right, its exercise in many instances would be futile.”
That the right of inspection may be exercised through an agent or an attorney is also held by the following authorities: Foster v. White, 86 Ala. 467, 6 South. 88; Clason v. Nassau Ferry Co., 86 Hun 128, 33 N. Y. Sup. 244; Mitchell v. Rubber Co. (N. J.), 24 Atl. 407; Burke v. Citizens’ Bank, 51 La. Ann. 426, 25 South. 318; 2 Cook on Corporations (5th Ed.), sec. 516. The following authorities hold that the right is an absolute one, and that the motives of the stockholder are not material, except, perhaps, defensively: State v. Sportsman’s Park. Ass’n, 29 Mo. App. 326; People ex rel. McDonald v.
The contention that the court exceeded the provisions of the statute in giving the right of inspection during business hours, instead of “at all reasonable hours,” as stated in the statute, seems to us untenable. The business hours of the corporation, it would seem, are reasonable hours in which to inspect its books. It is during these hours that the officers and agents of the corporation are supposed to be present at the office of the company, and the books accessible. The claim that inspection might unduly interfere with the work of the employees of the corporation is more apparent than real. Undoubtedly, if all the stockholders of the corpora
We are of the opinion that the judgment appealed from should be, and it accordingly is, affirmed; respondent to recover costs.