53 Vt. 519 | Vt. | 1881
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff is a stockholder in the Iron & Steel Works at St. Albans. The defendant is the treasurer and recording officer of said corporation ; and this action is brought to recover the penalty, for withholding the inspection of the books and records of the corporation, imposed by the 8th section of chapter 86 of the Gen. Sts. The plaintiff demanded of the defendant inspection of the books and records, at his office on the 18th of July, 1876, at a proper hour. The defendant replied to the demand, either that he would not, or could not, exhibit the papers, or comply with the demand; and declined any explanation.
It appeared in evidence that the defendant, prior to the 24th of April, 1876, had complained to the directors, as to the trouble he had had, in regard to the plaintiff’s demand of the books and records of the company, and requested said directors to relieve him
The evidence tended to show that, as early as the 11th of August, 1876, said books were returned to the defendant’s office, and were in his custody. The plaintiff had no notice from the defendant that he was ready or willing to comply with plaintiff’s demand, until the 10th of January, 1877, when the counsel of said corporation informed plaintiff’s counsel, on meeting, that the plaintiff was “ at liberty, at any proper time, • . . .to examine the by-laws, books and records of the St. Albans Iron and Steel Works, at the treasurer’s office, in St. Albans, to your (his) satisfaction.” The plaintiff offered in evidence a book, called a ledger, in which appeared, among other things, a debit of assessments, and a credit of payments on said assessments against the stockholders, in connection with testimony tending to show that said ledger was, actually, at the office of the corporation, in the custody of defendant, July 18th, 1876, when the demand was made ; and with testimony tending to show that defendant made and kept entries of assessments, and payments thereon, of the stockholders ; and in connection with testimony tending to show that plaintiff had notified the defendant that he should want to see whether certain assessments (naming the parties) had been paid ; and with testimony tending to show, that the plaintiff had afterwards ascertained that, in fact, the assessments that he had asked to see had not been paid, but the shares had been surrendered to, and accepted by, the corporation ; and particularly referred to page 450 of said ledger to the end of the book. This testimony was excluded by the court; and a verdict directed for the defendant. The shareholders in a corporation hold the franchise, and are the owners of the corporate property ; and as such owners they have the right, at common law, to examine and inspect all the books and records of the corporation, at all season
The defendant was the recording officer of the corporation, and had the custody and use of the ledger, stock-ledger, and transfer book. The statute imposes upon such officer the duty of exhibiting to the stockholders such books, on proper and seasonable request. The right of the stockholder and the duty of the treasurer are correlative. What is the right of the one to have it is the duty of the other to yield. The duty being cast upon the defendant by law, it is an incident of his office, and he cannot be relieved from that duty by a by-law of the corporation, while he continues the recording officer, and has the legal custody of the books and records. It is to be noted that the resolution of the directors does not assume to deprive the defendant of the custody and control of the records and books; but the matter of exhibiting said papers to the stockholders is committed to an executive committee. The defendant was not relieved from the duty which the law imposed. But if the custody of the papers and records were taken from the defendant by the act of the directors, the defendant would not incur a penalty for not doing what was, physically, impossible for him to do. Whether there would be redress against the directors who should wilfully prevent a subordinate from the performance of a legal duty to the stockholders, the present phase of the case does not require us to discuss. There was testimony tending to show that the defendant was resolved not to show the records to the plaintiff; and that he informed the plaintiff’s counsel that he would not do it even if so directed by the directors of the company. If the books and records were placed in the keeping of the committee for the sinister and illegal purpose of preventing the plaintiff from having access to them, and the defendant conspired with the committee to that end, and aided, advised, and assisted in such wrongful act
The exclusion of the testimony tending to show “ that a short time previous to July 18, 1876, the defendant said that he would not show the books even if the directors should order him to do so ; also that after that date the defendant repeatedly informed plaintiff’s attorney that when he got ready to show the books he would let him know, we think was error. It had a bearing upon the chief inquiry in the case, whether the books were withheld from the plaintiff by the voluntary agency of the defendant.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded.