60 A.D. 11 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
This action was brought in behalf of the plaintiffs and all others interested in the so-called “ Gratutity Fund ” of the New York Produce Exchange in like situation, to have an amendment to by-law 57 of the said New York Produce Exchange declared null and void, and to restrain the exchange and the defendant trustees of the fund from distributing such fund "among the members, as provided in and by the said amended by-law. The action affects the rights and interests of nearly 3,000 members of the exchange, which is a domestic corporation originally incorporated hy chapter 359 of the Laws of 1862, by the name and style of the New York Commercial Association, for the purposes, as declared in the act, of inculcating just and equitable principles in trade, to establish and maintain uniformity in commercial usages, to acquire, preserve and disseminate valuable business information, and to adjust controversies and misunderstandings between persons engaged in business, and with power -to make all proper and needful by-laws, not contrary to the Constitution and laws of the State of New York or Of the United States. By chapter 30 of the Laws of 1867, the name of the corporation was changed to New York Produce Exchange.
The plaintiff Woolsey has been a member of the corporation ever since it became a produce exchange, and the plaintiff Consider Parish since 1872.. The plaintiff Ellen Parish is the wife of Consider Parish, and as to her the complaint was dismissed, on the ground that she had no present interest in the gratuity fund.
The by-laws of the exchange have at all times contained a pro
In April, 1881, a resolution was passed by the board of managers requesting the president to appoint a special committee of seven to consider a system of life insurance. The resolution was adopted and a committee duly appointed, and in January, 1883, it reported a proposed amendment to the charter of the corporation and certain by-laws, providing for what is called a “ system of gratuity.” The report declared that the system will be “ applicable to our present membership and in which it will be entirely optional with them to participate; but contemplates an amendment to our charter, making it an integral part of our exchange to which all becoming members thereafter must necessarily subscribe.” The proposed amendment to the by-laws consisted of a new section and additions to other sections. These proposed amendments were duly adopted by the board of managers, were thereafter adopted by ballot at a meeting called for the purpose, to take effect after the proposed amendments to the charter should be obtained.
In' March, 1882, the proposed amendment to the charter was enacted by the Legislature (Laws of 1882, chap. 36), by which there was added to the enumerated “purposes of corporation” the following: “ and to make provision for the widows and families of deceased members ; ” and immediately after the clause granting the power to enact by-laws, the following provision was made : “ Such present members of said corporation as shall agree thereto, and all persons who shall hereafter join said corporation, may be assessed such sum as shall be provided in the by-laws of said corporation, upon the death of any such member agreeing thereto, or who shall hereafter join said corporation; which sum or such proportion thereof as the by-laws may provide, and such proportion of the surplus income of said corporation as the by-laws may provide, maybe paid to the widow, children, next of kin of, or other persons dependent upon said' deceased member, in such manner as the said by-laws shall prescribe,” etc.
The by-laws so provisionally adopted and put in force after this amendment of the charter were in conformity to these provisions
Between its adoption and January, 1900, this by-law was from time to time amended, if not with the co-operation of the plaintiffs, at least with their acquiescence and ratification. But such amendments have done no more than to regulate the mode of assessments and other details of the management and disposition of the fund and provide for its final application to the purposes for which it was created. In January, 1900, at a meeting duly called and held for such purpose, an amendment to section 57 of the by-laws was adopted by a majority of the members in conformity with the rule prescribed by the by-laws for the adoption of amendments. By this amendment very radical and material changes are made^ and it is provided, among other things, that ■“ the trustees of the Gratuity Fund shall convert the present accumulated fund into cash, and after paying therefrom all expenses, including those caused by this modification of the- Gratuity System, shall distribute the same among the subscribing members as the class may be constituted on February 1st, 1900, in accordance with their just and equitable rights.” It then provides that no portion of the surplus income of the exchange shall thereafter be paid into the gratuity fund, as had theretofore been'done, but permits such portion of the surplus as
It is thus apparent that, in addition to an entire change in the basis of assessments, a reduction in the amount of the gratuity and other important changes, this by-law takes the fund already accumulated, amounting to about $750,000 from the widow, children, next of kin and others dependent upon a deceased member, and distributes it to the subscribing members themselves and contemplates the ultimate discontinuance of the gratuity system.
The plaintiffs Consider Parish and Woolsey voted against this amendment, and neither has ratified or acquiesced therein, but both refuse to be bound thereby and bring this action, alleging that the said amendment will deprive the plaintiffs of their vested rights and interests in and to the gratuity fund, and in and to the plan for providing for the families of deceased members ; that such attempted amendment is null and void, and that the defendant Hew York Produce Exchange and the majority members thereof are without power to adopt the same. It appears that the plaintiff Parish has paid all the assessments made upon his membership and performed all the conditions on his part; that the assessments so paid by him exceed the sum of $2,500, and that the amount payable to his beneficiaries upon his death is the sum of $9,823.34.
It is contended by the plaintiffs that the rights of the subscribing members in this fund exist by force of a contract made by each with the other members ; that such contract is inviolable and-cannot be altered or changed in any material respect, except by and with the consent of all the contracting parties ; that such contract is not subject to alterations or changes in its terms by vote of a majority of the members of the corporation, and that the amendment to the by-laws attempted to be thus made in January, 1900, violates the contract obligations as originally created. The learned referee before whom the case was tried has adopted this view of the case and rendered judgment accordingly.
The position of the defendants, as we understand it, is that the
After careful consideration of all the questions presented by the briefs and argument of counsel, and an examination of the authorities cited and relied upon, we have reached the conclusion that this case should he decided and the judgment affirmed upon a theory of the law differing from that adopted by the learned referee. Although concurring in the conclusion reached by him, we prefer not to rest our affirmance of the judgment upon the grounds on which he bases his decision; nor shall we discuss the theory that the rights and liabilities of the subscribers to the gratuity system rest in contract, for all that could be said in support of that theory has been well stated by the learned referee. In the view which we take of the question, if it be conceded that the gratuity system exists solely in the charter and by-laws of the corporation, and that the right to alter and amend the by-laws relating to the system and the fund created under it is reserved to the corporation acting through a majority of the members, it results, both on principle and authority, that this particular amendment of the by-laws is beyond the scope of the corporate power, and is, therefore, illegal and void.
It is implied in the charter of every private corporation that the majority shall have power to make reasonable rules and regulations or by-laws for the government of the company; and the validity of such by-laws depends upon the implied, agreement of all the shareholders inxforming the corporation; and therefore, any by-law properly enacted by the majority is as binding upon the members of the company as a provision contained in the charter itself. (Morawetz Priv. Corp. [2d ed.] § 491.) It follows that, without the express grant of power to this corporation to alter and amend the by-laws, such power would be implied; and, assuming that the gratuity system is an integral part of the exchange, as declared by the report of the committee, and within its control acting through
An examination of the case before us in the light of these authorities shows clearly that there was no power in the corporate body, nor in a majority of the members, to enact the by-law in question, for it not only effects a direct change in the charter, but is inconsistent with the purpose for which the gratuity fund was created, and disturbs the vested rights of the members subscribing to the system, and is, therefore, unreasonable and violates the principle upon which the power must' rest. The purpose declared by the amendment of the charter of the defendant company and thé power granted is special, in nó sense embraced in the original purposes of the company at its organization,- and as set forth in the statute, is “to make provision for the widows and families of' deceased members.” For this purpose the power was given it to provide a fund by assessment upon such of the then members of the corporation as should agree thereto, and all persons who should thereafter join the corporation, as hereinbefore set forth, for a special and definite purpose, viz., to be paid the widow, children, next of kin of or other persons dependent upon deceased members, in such manner as the by-laws should prescribe. No other or different purpose is mentioned, and no power is granted the corporation to make -other disposition of the sums so raised, nor is such power to be implied.' We may concede that the corporation had power, by a majority of its members, to enact by-laws regulating the details of the gratuity system authorized by the statute, and in harmony with the statute, which is its charter; but it had no power by such means to alter its constitution and devote the fund raised under it to a purpose foreign to and inconsistent with the purpose declared by its fundamental law and "beyond the scope of the powers conferred, nor to abandon the franchise so granted. If the lawful purposes of a cor
■ The 'original by-laws enacted by the exchange relative to this fund contained provisions in entire harmony with the charter, as did all the amendments prior to the one in question; but the latter is an attempt to divert the gratuity fund from the legitimate purposes prescribed by law and convert it to the use of the members subscribing to it. It not only takes the fund from the beneficiaries designated by law, viz., the widows, children, next of kin of or others dependent upon the deceased members, and abandons the purpose to make provision for the widows and families of deceased members-—the only lawful purpose to which it can be devoted under the charter — but it disturbs the vested rights of the members by unreasonably and inequitably changing the basis for the assessments and the amounts payable to the beneficiaries, and provides a method by which it is evidently expected that eventually the whole system will be done away with and abandoned. This, we have seen, may not be done under .the power to enact and alter by-laws either express or implied.
The considerations stated lead to the conclusion that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.