On Mаrch 15, 1940, a dividend was declared upon defendant’s common stock at a special meeting of defendant’s board of directors attеnded by only four of its seven directors. No notice of the meeting was given to the directors as required by section 307a of the Civil Code, nor did the аbsent directors sign a waiver of notice or a consent to the meeting or an approval of its minutes as required by section 307b of the Civil Code. Plaintiff who was then vice-president of the corporation as well as one of its directors was present at the meeting. The dividend wаs paid in cash to all holders of common stock, but the seven directors who were also holders of such stock, immediately returned their dividends to the corporation and received in exchange promissory notes in amounts equal to their respective dividends. Only one of the seven notes has been paid. The present action was brought on April 14, 1944, to recover upon the one given plaintiff. The trial court found “that any irregularity in the declaration of the dividend of March 15, 1940, has been ratified and confirmed by [defendant] corporation” and eptered judgment for plaintiff. Defendant appeals. h
Defendant contends that since the authority to declare a dividend is vested in the board оf directors (Civ. Code, §§ 305, 363) and since the directors can pass a valid resolution only if the board is duly assembled for the purpose of transaсting corporate business (Civ. Code, § 307;
Pauly
v.
Pauly,
Defendant applied for the admission of additional evidence under section 956a of the Code of Civil Procedure that since the issuance of the note in 1940, defendant defaulted on the payment on dividends on its preferred stock, that the last dividend on that stock was paid in January, 1942, and that therefore the corporation by paying the note
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would violate its articles of incorporаtion, which provide that the dividends on the preferred stock are cumulative and payable before any dividends on the common stoсk are paid. It is immaterial, however, whether the corporation became delinquent on its preferred stock years after the dividend on the common stock was declared. Each holder of common stock acquired a vested right to the payment of the dividend, which cannot be defeated by later revocation of the dividend without his consent.
(Smith
v.
Taecker,
Defendant also contends that the dividend was not declared out of surplus or net profits as required by section 346 of the Civil Code. Defеndant’s answer to the complaint did not raise this issue, and at the trial defendant limited its defense to the issue that the dividend was declared at a meeting of the .board of directors that was not properly held. When the trial judge stated at the trial: “I have looked over the answer. The only defense seems to be that it was a dividend that was not properly declared,” counsel for defendant declared, “Our defense is that thеre was no legal meeting at which the dividend was declared. ’ ’ The issue whether defendant had sufficient surplus or net profits to declare a dividеnd is entirely different from the issue whether the board of directors had properly authorized the dividend, and cannot first be raised on appеal. Even in a complaint of a shareholder seeking the payment of a dividend declared by the corporation the plaintiff neеd not allege that the corporation had the necessary surplus or profits. Any issue as to the availability of the surplus or profit required fоr the declaration of a dividend must be raised by the corporation. (See 11 Fletcher, Corporations, § 5365;
The judgment is affirmed.
Gibson, 0. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a rehearing was denied November 25, 1946.
