after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The single question in this case is whether a power, reserved by the constitution of a State to its legislature, to alter, amend or repeal future acts of .incorporation, authorizes the legislature, in order (as declared in the title of the statute of Michigan now in question) “ to secure the minority of stockholders, in corporations organized under general laws, the power of electing a representative membership in boards of directors,” to permit each stockholder to cumulate his votes upon any one or more candidates for directors.
By the decision in the leading case of
Dartmouth College
v.
Woodward,
Mr. .Justice Story, in his concurring opinion in that case, after declaring that in his judgment it was “ perfectly clear that any act of a legislature which takes away any powers or franchises vested by its charter in a private corporation, or its corporate officers, or which restrains or.controls the legitimate exercise of them, or transfers them to other persons, without its assent, is a violation of the obligations of that charter,” took occasion to add: “ If the legislature mean to claim such an authority, it must be reserved in the grant.”
After that decision, many a State of the'Union, in order to secure to its legislature the exercise of a fuller parliamentary or legislative power over corporations than would otherwise exist, inserted, either in its statutes or in its constitution, a provision that charters thenceforth granted should be subject to alteration, amendment or repeal at the pleasure of the legisla-ture. See
Greenwood
v.
Freight Co.,
*53 As illustrations of the right of the legislature, exercising such a reserved power, to alter for the future the liability of stockholders to creditors of the corporation, or the mode of computing the votes of stockholders for directors, it will be sufficient to state two of the cases just cited.
The case of
Sherman
v. Smith,
The case of
Miller
v.
State,
Remembering that the Dartmouth College case, (which was the cause of the general introduction into the legislation of the several States of a provision reserving the power to alter, amend or repeal acts of incorporation,) concerned the right of a legislature to make a change in the number and mode of appointment of the trustees or managers of a corporation, we cannot assent to the theory that an express reservation of the general power does not secure to the legislature the right to exercise it in this respect.
Judgment affirmed.
