delivered the opinion of the court.
This cause was tried upon an agreed statement of facts. From a judgment in favor of defendant, plaintiff has appealed.
Omitting all unnecessary details, it appears that the defendant is a domestic private corporation, organized in 1905; that its capital stock was made nonassessable; that plaintiff became a stockholder; that thereafter, on January 24, 1911, an order was entered upon the records of the corporation reciting that on that day the stock of the corporation had been ordered changed from nonassessable to assessable stock, and proper certificates setting forth that fact were filed; that there were then 301 individuals owning stock in the corporation; that only 96 of such stockholders -consented to the change, but that these 96 owned more than three-fourths of all the capital stock. This action was brought by a nonconsenting stockholder to enjoin the sale of his stock for delinquent assessments, and the single question presented for determination is: Does it require the consent of at least three-fourths of the whole number of stockholders, regardless of the number of shares owned by them, to change the stock from non-assessable to assessable stock, or is the consent of the owners of three-fourths of the shares of stock sufficient, even though these owners constitute less than three-fourths of the whole number of individuals holding stock in the corporation?
The share of stock as the unit of voting power in the election of trustees or directors of industrial corporations was recognized
It will thus be seen that our legislature has never adopted a
From the review of the history of the legislation upon the subject above, the conclusion seems inevitable that in employing the term “stockholders,” in section 3887, the legislature referred to
So far as the provisions of section 3887 are concerned, they are plain and unambiguous, and the province of this court in determining the meaning of the statute is manifest. The rule of statutory construction under these circumstances was announced in Smith v. Williams, 2 Mont. 195, as follows: ‘ ‘ Statutes should be their own interpreter. Courts must look at the language used, and the whole of it, and derive therefrom the intention of the legislature. Where this intention is obvious, there is no room
Reversed and remanded.
Rehearing denied September 10, 1912.