192 A. 914 | Pa. | 1937
Argued May 24, 1937. Defendant company was incorporated in Pennsylvania in 1920 for the manufacture and sale of paper, paper board and kindred products. Its plant is in Springettsbury Township, York County, which was the location set forth in the charter of incorporation as the place where its business was to be transacted. In 1927 the company established an office in the City of New York, and since then has there conducted most of its purchases and sales, administered its business affairs, and kept the books of account covering its financial and commercial operations.1
Plaintiffs, stockholders of the company, desiring to investigate some of its transactions and policies, petitioned the court below for a writ of mandamus for the production of the books and records of the corporation. Defendant filed an answer in which it admitted plaintiffs' right to an inspection, and averred its willingness to permit an examination of the books at the New York office, but alleged that their removal to York would seriously interfere with the conduct of its business, and asserted that its principal place of business was in New York and that the maintenance of the books there was authorized by law. The court below ordered that a writ *584 of peremptory mandamus issue to the company and its officers, commanding them to give to plaintiffs, their agents or counsel, "full and free access at all reasonable times to the books, records and correspondence of the respondent corporation at its office in the City of New York." Plaintiffs appeal from that order, and the only question in the case is whether they are entitled to have the books produced in York.
The Corporation Act of 1874, P. L. 73, section 3, provided that the charter of an intended corporation should set forth, inter alia, "the place or places where its business is to be transacted." It was held in Hempstead v. MeadvilleTheological School,
It is obvious that the new act uses the term "registered office" as identical with the term "place where its business is to be transacted" as employed in the Act of 1874, while the term "principal place of business" in the new act refers to the place where the commercial activities of the corporation are conducted, as distinguished from the "registered office" where the meetings of the shareholders are held and the corporate books and records, but not necessarily its books of account, are to be kept.
In the present case the court below found as a fact that "the principal place of business" of defendant is its office in New York City, and it follows that defendant is authorized by the Business Corporation Law to keep its commercial records and books of account there. It may be added that the new act applies not only to corporations formed under it, but also, by Article I, section 3, to all corporations of the second class organized under the Act of 1874.
It thus being established that it is not illegal nor improper for defendant to keep its books of account in New York, the question remains whether plaintiffs may nevertheless insist that the books be brought to York for examination. That a stockholder has a right to inspect the books, for a proper purpose, is undoubted. But he has no right to insist upon any particular time or place for conducting such inspection. The law contents itself *586
with the statement that the examination should be made at a "reasonable" or "proper" time and place: Kuhbach v. IrvingCut Glass Co.,
The decree is affirmed.