170 P. 820 | Cal. | 1918
An original application for a writ of mandate was made to the district court of appeal of the second appellate district, and after a hearing a peremptory writ was granted in accordance with the prayer of the petition. Afterward the matter was transferred to this court.
In the opinion of the learned district court of appeal the essential facts and one of the principal questions are set forth as follows:
"In this proceeding the petitioners seek to compel the delivery to them by the respondents of the papers and records of petitioner corporation. The controversy is between rival sets of persons asserting, respectively, that they are the officers and directors of the corporation. The petitioners other than the corporation claim to have been elected directors at a meeting of the stockholders held June 10, 1917. At the time of the meeting the outstanding capital stock of the corporation was one million shares, and the presence of the holders of a majority of the shares, either in person or by proxy, was necessary to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. At the meeting there were present 97,381 shares by their owners and 480,408 shares by proxy, or a total of 577,789 shares. At the time all the proxies were issued, the holders of which were at the meeting, the by-laws of the corporation provided that 'stockholders may vote at all meetings either in person or by proxy appointed by instrument in writing subscribed by the stockholder or his duly authorized attorney, and granted not more than thirty days before the *343 meeting, which shall be named therein.' Proxy-holders at the meeting held proxies then more than thirty days old representing 286,652 shares. If these proxies had expired, the number of shares present at the meeting was 291,137, instead of 577,789; the meeting was not a legal one, for lack of a quorum; and the petitioners have no standing in this proceeding.
"The petitioner corporation is a creature of the laws of Arizona and the constitution of that state guarantees to stockholders the right to be represented by proxy at corporate meetings. The petitioners concede that an Arizona corporation may by its by-laws regulate the exercise of the right to vote by proxy but contend that a by-law limiting the life of proxies to a period of thirty days is not a regulation but, in effect, a destruction of the right."
Upon this question the court agreed with the contention of the petitioners, basing that conclusion upon the authority ofPeople's Bank v. Superior Court,
Without giving our assent to this conclusion, but for the purposes of this opinion conceding its correctness, nevertheless we feel compelled to disagree with our brethren of the district court of appeal in the conclusion reached by them regarding the regularity of this meeting. *344
The principal facts relating to the meetings are well stated in the opinion of the district court of appeal as follows:
"The meeting at which the petitioner directors claim to have been elected was held on Sunday, June 10, 1917. The by-laws of the petitioner corporation contain the following provisions: 'The annual meeting of the stockholders, after the year 1903, shall be held on the 10th day of June in each year at 10 o'clock A. M., and the secretary shall give notice thereof without being specially requested so to do. . . . Special meetings of the stockholders shall be called by the secretary at the written request of the president, or two directors, or of stockholders of record owning a third of the stock issued and outstanding. All stockholders' meetings, whether annual or special, shall be called by the secretary by mailing a printed or written notice thereof, stating the day, hour and place of the meeting; and, in case of special meetings, the general nature of the business to be transacted, to each stockholder of record at his last known post-office address, postage prepaid, at least five days, exclusive of the day of mailing, before the date of the meeting. . . . A failure to give the notice for the regular annual meeting shall not invalidate the proceedings of the meeting.' . . .
"The respondents claim to be directors and officers of petitioner corporation by virtue of an election had at a meeting of the stockholders held Monday, June 11, 1917, at the same place at which the meeting of Sunday, June 10, convened. There is no law of Arizona which prohibits the holding of stockholders' meetings on Sundays, but section
The by-laws, although providing that the failure of the secretary to call a regular meeting shall not prevent the holding of such a meeting, also provide that "All stockholders' meetings, whether annual or special, shall be called by the secretary." Learning that the regular date of the annual meeting would fall on a Sunday, the secretary conferred with four of the directors and was by them advised to make the call for Monday instead of Sunday. One of his advisers was Mr. Penn, now one of the petitioners in this proceeding, who, after so assenting to the call of a regular meeting on Monday instead of Sunday, afterward met on June 10th with three other stockholders, without notice to the secretary, and under circumstances indicating a wish that their actions should not become known to other stockholders not in sympathy with their ambitions. It is shown that these men stood by and without protest permitted the secretary to send out notices as prescribed by the by-laws calling the regular meeting for the 11th instead of the 10th. It is shown by the affidavit of the secretary that petitioner Penn not only advised the calling of the meeting on Monday, but approved a copy of the call for that meeting which was submitted to him by the secretary. It is a principle of corporation law that participation by an officer in issuing the call is a waiver by him of informalities in such call. (Cook on Corporations, sec. 599.) Therefore, as to Mr. Penn, in any view of the matter it may be said that he is not in a position to complain of the actions of the secretary nor the action of the stockholders at the called meeting. It is also a rule that only a stockholder whose rights have been infringed, and who is equitably entitled to complain, may question an election. (Cook on Corporations, sec. 620.) Generally speaking, the annual stockholders' meeting for the election of officers need not be held on the day named in the by-laws but may be held on a later day. (Cook on Corporations, sec. 595; People ex rel. Miller v. Cummings,
All of the stockholders now petitioning took part in the meeting on the 11th of June and in the election there held. Some of them took part in the organization of that meeting. The minutes show the following proceedings at the very opening of the meeting of Monday:
"By Mr. Smith: I move that Mr. Penn act as Chairman of the annual meeting of The Saline Valley Salt Company in *346 the absence of the President, and Mr. White Smith as temporary secretary.
"The motion being seconded by J.A. Foote, was put and declared to be unanimously carried."
All of the acts of the petitioners in the premises were inconsistent with good faith and fair dealing toward their associates, and we are convinced that this court should not contribute to the success of their purported election unless convinced that they were acting within their clear rights under the law. Petitioners insist that they were so acting, and rely principally upon the authority of Cheney v. Canfield,
The writ is denied.