256 Pa. 543 | Pa. | 1917
Opinion by
On June 17, 1914, the defendant was chartered as a Pennsylvania manufacturing corporation; shortly thereafter, the plaintiff became president of the company, by election of its board of directors; August 16, 1916, the board, by resolution duly passed, dischárged him from his office; thereupon, he applied to the court below for a writ of mandamus to compel the corporation, its directors and officers, to recognize him as president; an alternative writ issued, but on September 25, 1916, this was quashed and the proceedings dismissed; plaintiff has appealed.
The petition for the mandamus averred, inter alia, the incorporation of the company; that the plaintiff was chosen by the stockholders as a director, and was subsequently elected by the board of directors as president of the corporation; that the officers and directors named by him as defendants were all duly elected to their several places; that the by-laws of the company, in relation to the powers and duties of the board of directors, provide for their election by the stockholders, and that “stated meetings of the board shall be held on the fourth Monday of January, April, July and October each year”; further, that “the board of directors shall have the right to establish such rules and regulations for the conduct of the business......as to them may seem proper,” and “shall hold meetings at such time and place as may to them seem necessary or advisable”; that, pursuant to the authority thus conferred, the board of directors, at a meeting held December 16,1915, resolved “to hold monthly meetings on Wednesday nearest the 15th”; that the bylaws provide, “Officers of the company shall be elected by the board of directors and shall consist of a president,
At the threshold of this case we are met with the question of jurisdiction; but this seems to be ruled in favor of the remedy by mandamus in Com. ex rel. O’Brien v. Gibbons, 196 Pa. 97, 101, where, speaking by Mr. Justice Mitchell, we said: “It is very earnestly argued by appellants that mandamus will not lie, and that the 'only remedy is by quo Avarránto against the person elected to fill the supposed vacancy. It would be sufficient ansiver to cite the precedent of Zulich et al. v. Bowman, supra [42 Pa. 83], but the remedy is clear‘on principle. There is no contest as to the relator’s original title to his seat under a valid election, but only as to the legality of his ouster. If this was not valid, he never has been ousted at all, and mandamus is the proper remedy to prevent his further unlawful exclusion.”
Next, the question arises as to the practice pursued in quashing the writ; but this is sustained in Reese v. Board of Mine Examiners, 248 Pa. 617, 620-1, Avhere, on mandamus, we said: “The motion to quash called attention tt> ‘defects in substance,’ and Avas, in effect, an application to reconsider the conclusion that the ‘substance of a case’ had been shown. Of course, the court had power to entertain such an appeal, and from this aspect the proceedings were regular.”
When the case is considered on its merits, we see no virtue in any of the contentions of the appellant. In Brindley v. Walker, 221 Pa. 287, 293, speaking by Mr. Justice Steavakt, Ave said: “Ministerial officers who are not elected by the corporation at large, for stated terms, but who are appointed by the board of directors,...... have .no franchise in their office, and hence, are removable at the pleasure of the directors, .without the assignment of any cause, Avithout the giving of any notice, and Avithout any trial or investigation into the grounds of the removal.” There, in a mandamus proceeding, one who had been removed from the office of secretary and treasurer of a corporation, by its board of directors,
We agree with what is so well said in the opinion of the learned court below: “It cannot be seriously contended that the meeting of August 16th was special; it fell on the regularly recurring date appointed by longstanding rule of procedure adopted by the directors in the due exercise of their quasi statutory authority; having regard to the provisions of the by-laws on the subject of meetings, it cannot be supposed that those only were regular which had to be held quarterly. True, the action complained of was summary; but the obvious answer to any criticism on that score is that it was had according to law enacted by the parties themselves for their own government — law that had been made at the outset and subject to which plaintiff must be deemed to have taken title. He took nothing in the nature of a vested right either of person or property, but merely title to office in a private corporation, defeasible at the will of his constituents. One cannot see how he can object that such by-law is unreasonable, unless its enforcement would be to the prejudice of some right either legal or equitable which he acquired by virtue of his acceptance of the office; and no such thing appears. It has to do only with the internal management of the corporate body; it was ordained for that purpose by the corpora-tors themselves, and operates equally on all concerned. If the stockholders are not satisfied with its operation, the remedy is in their own hands; but it is a matter with which the courts do not interfere. On the face of his pleadings.......plaintiff’s removal was neither unlawful nor irregular. It follows that the substance of a case for specific relief by mandamus is Avanting, and objection on that ground may be taken by motion to quash.”
The assignments of error are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.