Quo warranto to oust Holekamp Lumber Company (hereinafter called Holekamp) and individual respondents, majority stockholders, from carrying on the functions of a corporation of this state. Motions to dismiss were sustained and relators have appealed.
The motions to dismiss raised questions of proper parties and as to whether the information stated facts upon which relief could be granted. Because of the view we take we consider only the latter. The decisive question on this issue is whether the duration of a corporation, incoxporated in 1908, could be extended by a majority vote only (authorized by our present Corporation Code, Chapter 351, RSMo, V.A.M.S.) or whether action by three-fourths vote to accept subsequent laws (as provided in Sec. 972, RS 1899) was required. [Because of the general importance of this question we transferred this cause from the St. Louis Court of Appeals. For further details of pleadings, reference is made to the opinion of the Court of Appeals, State ex inf. Dalton v. Holekamp Lumber Co., Mo.App.,
*680
The challenged extension of the period of duration of Holekamp was made by amendment.of its articles under authority of Sec. 351.085 (statutory references are to RSMo and V.A.M.S. unless otherwise stated) for which Sec. 351.090 required only la majority vote. These sections are part óf “The General and Business Corporation Law of Missouri,” Chapter 351, adopted in 1943 (Laws 1943, p. 410), which is made applicable by Sec. 351.690(4) “to all other corporations, existing under prior general laws of this
state”
excepting certain kinds specifically mentioned in preceding subsections, not material here. Relators’ basic contention is that extension of Holekamp’s duration could only be made under the procedure provided by Sec. 972, RS 1899, which was in jrorce when Holekamp was incorporated and which they claim required a three-fourths vote for this purpose. They contend the statutes enacted in 1943 could not apply because they claim the Constitution of Missouri in force at that time (Constitution of 1875) reserved no general power to amend any corporate charter, nor was there any such statutory reservation, relying on Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward,
Prior to our 1865 Constitution, corporations were usually created by special act of the Legislature, although there were prior general laws authorizing certain kinds of corporations to be incorporated by signing, acknowledging and filing articles. RS 1855, Chapters 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39. Our 1865 Constitution, Art. 8, Sec. 4, provided: “Corporations may be formed under general ‘.laws, but shall not be created by special acts, except for municipal purposes. All general laws and special acts passed pursuant to this section may be altered, amended, or repealed.” Pursuant to that constitutional provision, a comprehensive general corporation act was passed by the Legislature in 1866 (Laws 1865-66, pp. 20-70). This act consisted of one chapter on general powers and liabilities and eight other chapters, each dealing with different kinds of corporations, and many of its provisions remained in effect until the adoption of our 1943 Corporation Act.
It should be noted that the 1865 Constitution did not prohibit the amendment, by special act, of special charters! previously granted to corporations. State ex rel. Circuit Attorney of the Tenth Judicial Circuit v. Cape Girardeau and S.L.R. Co.,
This construction appears more clearly when we consider Art. 4 of the 1875 Constitution. Sec. 1 of Art. 4 provided: “The legislative power, subject to the limitations herein contained, shall be vested in a Senate and House of Representatives, to be styled ‘The General Assembly of the State of Missouri.’ ” It is a well-settled principle of constitutional law that our state constitution “is not a grant but a restriction or limitation on the legislative powers; therefore the General Assembly has all legislative powers not denied it by the constitution.” State ex rel. Jones v. Atterbury, Mo.Sup.,
Nevertheless, even with such a reservation of nowenthe authority of the Legislature to amend corporate charters or to authorize stockholders to do sn is not ah-solute. Determination of the extent of this authority “requires consideration three constitutional doctrines: police power, due process and obligation of contracts.”. Extent of the Legislature’s Reserve Power to Change Common Law Attributes of Corporations, Hayes, 13 Vanderbilt Law Review 261. It is said: “The charter of a corporation having a capital stock is a contract between three parties, and forms the basis of three distinct contracts. [The; charter is a contract between the state and? the corporation; second, it is a contract'between the corporation and the stock-! holders; third, it is a contract between the¡ stockholders and the stated Cook on Corporations, Sec. 492. The third is also described as a contract of the stockholders inter sese. It is pointed out (13 Vanderbilt Law Review 275) that three principal approaches have been made by the courts in deciding what changes may be made with legislative sanction. f*“One is that under its reserved power the legislature may not make or authorize a majority to make anvi changes that will affect the contract between the shareholders themselves (unless perhaps as 'to~matters~wKere public interest overrides) but may change or authorize changes only in the contract between the sta.te..a.nd. th.e_corpj3rati.on— * * *<2‘A second approach is that the legislature may make or permit a majority of the stockholders to make any changes .except those which will deprive a stockholder of some vested right. * * *5 The third approach is that the reserved power of the legislature is part of the tripartite contract between state, corporation and shareholders, and therefore the state or a majority of the-shareholders when authorized by the state! may make any change as to corporate at-j tributes without impairing any obligation! of any aspect of that contract.” See also. Constitutional Limitations Upon Legislative Power to Alter Incidents of the Shareholder’s Status in Private Corporations,. Schmidt, 21 St. Louis Law Review 12. Sec. *682 351,695 of our Corporation Code enacts the vested rights principle and of course the purpose of this is to satisfy the requirements of due process. See Ballentine on Corporations, Chapter 18; see also Dissenting Stockholders and Amendments to Corporate Charters, Dodd, 75 Univ. of Penn. Law Review 723. The right to exercise the police power of the State was declared by Sec. 5, Art. 12 of the 1875 Constitution.
Relators point out that Hole-kamp’s articles stated: “Article Sixth: The corporation shall continue for a period of fifty years.” They say this was an '¡agreement that the corporate life would cease March 10, 1958, and gave them a vested right to have their equity in the cor¡poration distributed to them at that time, ¡subject only to action by three-fourths of the stockholders under Sec. 972, RS 1899. ■Relators would have a better argument, if as suggested in Smith v. Eastwood Wire Mfg. Co., 58 N.J.Eq. 331,
Sec. 972, RS 1899, on which relators rely, had a double purpose. One purpose was to bring existing corporations, organized under special acts, under the general, laws concerning corporations, by their voluntary action, including their surrender of all special privileges, immunities, franchises and exemptions, which perhaps was the reason for requiring a three-fourths vote. The other purpose was to collect fees for the privilege of extending corporate existence and this was undoubtedly the reason corporations organized under general laws were included in its terms. This section was the result of an amendment in 1885 (Laws 1885, p. 80) to the previous section vesting all corporations with certain powers enumerated in a preceding section, both of which sections originally were enacted when all corporations were created by special act of the Legislature. See Chapt. 34, Art. 1, Secs. 1 and 2, RS 1845. In 1881 (Laws 1881, p. 72) a new statute was enacted, which became Sec. 958, RS 1899, authorizing amendments to articles of corporations organized under the laws of this state with the limitation that such authority “shall not be so construed as to give any corporation whose articles are amended as in this article contemplated, any greater rights than though the subject of the amendments had been incorporated into the original articles of association.” In State ex rel. Kinloch Telephone Co. v. Roach,
Sec. 972 (then Sec. 5031, RS 1939) was repealed by the 1943 Corporation Act (Laws 1943, p. 410, Sec. A) and as hereinabove stated the 1943 Corporation Act made all existing corporations organized under general law subject to its provisions. Hicks v. Forsyth Electric & Water Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.
