120 Misc. 405 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1923
On the reargument of this application I believe that I was mistaken in basing my prior decision upon the ground that the subscribers to the stock of the corporation did not become stockholders until certificates were issued to them. The cases cited hold that the subscriber is estopped from avoiding his liability to third persons as a stockholder, but it is intimated that by a subscription the party acquires the rights of a stockholder (in addition to the right to have the certificate issued to him) in consideration of the assumption of liability. A party who has merely subscribed for stock and paid no subscription and received no certificate does not seem to constitute a stockholder of record, but it may be that he is entitled to enjoy all the privileges of a stockholder until his rights are forfeited under section 54 of the Stock Corporation Law. This requires a more careful consideration of the other features of this application. The petitioner Fullerton was constituted a director for the first year by the certificate of incorporation. The petitioner Luce was elected to be the successor of another director named in the certificate as a director for the first year. There is no provision in the certificate for the removal of directors, nor was there in the by-laws as originally adopted. Subsequently a majority of the subscribers to the stock, who may be regarded as a majority of the stockholders, adopted an amendment to the by-laws providing for the removal of a director by a vote of the stockholders at a special meeting.' A special meeting of the stockholders removed the petitioners as directors and elected others in their places who thereupon removed the officers and elected others. I do not question that the stockholders of a corporation may adopt by-laws providing for the removal of directors, although the proposition is questioned as inconsistent with the policy of the law of vesting untrammeled authority in the directors.. A director accepting ‘an election with such a by-law in existence assumes his office subject to the limitation. But where the certificate of incorporation appoints a director to serve for the first year his office cannot be limited by a subsequent resolution or vote of the stockholders. This would amount, as it seems to me, to an amendment of the certificate of incorporation without com