78 Mo. 188 | Mo. | 1883
This is a proceeding in the nature of a quo warranto to determine whether Greer was duly elected a director of the German Savings Institution on the 3rd day of February, 1879, at a regular election for nine directors
On the 30th day of November, 1875, the present constitution went into effect, and the 6th section of article 12, provided as follows: “ In all elections for directors or managers of any incorporated company, each shareholder shall have the right to cast as many votes in the aggregate as aba.11 equal the number of shares so held by him or her in said company, multiplied by the number of directors or managers to be elected at such election; and each shareholder may cast the whole number of votes, either in person or by proxy, for one candidate, or distribute such votes
At the election in question, the relator, who owned 166 shares of the stock, offered to vote on the cumulative plan, under the constitution, by multiplying the number of his shares of stock by nine, the number of directors to be elected, and casting one-half of those votes (747) for himself as director. Three other stockholders, owning in the aggregate 380 shares of the stock, offered to vote their stock for relator in the same manner, which, added to relator’s own votes, would have given him a total vote of 4,261, sufficient to elect him, while under the plan of voting one vote for each share he would have received but 540 votes, if all of .his own stock and that of the other three stockholders had been cast for him. Greer received 3,327 votes cast in the manner provided by the charter of the institution, and the canvassers rejecting the votes cast for relator, declared Greer duly elected, and he was admitted as a director.
The following questions are involved: 1st, Was section 6, article 12 of the constitution intended to have a retrospective operation as to the charter of the German Savings Institution and other similar charters ? 2nd, If so, had the convention which framed that constitution power under the constitution of the United States, to substitute the cumulative plan of voting the stock in the election of directors of that institution for the plan described by its charter?
The language of the constitutional provision under consideration is broad enough to embrace all corporations, but there is no such clear expression of an intent that it should operate upon such corporations as had been previously incorporated with an express exemption from the operation of the general law by which the legislature was authorized to repeal, alter or suspend the charter of every corporation, as makes it necessary to give it that construction.
It was held in the Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518, that the charter of a private corporation constitutes a contract between the corporation and the state within the meaning of that clause of the constitution of the United States which declares that no state “ shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts,” and that doctrine has been adopted by this and the courts of most if not all the states of the union. Sloan v. R. R. Co., 61 Mo. 30; Scotland Co. v. R. R. Co., 65 Mo. 135. In the latter case it was contended that section 16 of article 11 of the constitution of 1865 operated to repeal a provision of defendant’s charter exempting its property from taxation. That section of the constitution of 1865 reads as follows : “.No property, real or personal, shall be exempt from taxation except such as shall be used exclusively for public schools, and such as may belong to the United States, this State, the counties or to municipal corporations in the State.” The language of that section was broad enough to embrace the property of the defendant corpiwation as a subject of taxation, but -the court, Judge Napcon delivering the opinion, observed: “ It is not now maintained by any judicial tribunal that a change in the political form of civil society has the magical effect of dissolving its moral
The framers of our present constitution were aware of the doctrine announced by the Supreme Court of the United States in the Dartmouth College case, and that it had been adopted by the Supreme Court of this State in repeated adjudications, and in the language of Judge Napton, “it would be an unjust imputation on the convention which framed our present constitution, to infer that they designed that section to operate upon existing rights.” The section under consideration does not more clearly in its terms embrace the German Savings Institution than did the language of section 16, article 2 of the constitution of 1865 embrace the property of all railroad corporations in the State; and there were other corporations in existence when the constitution of 1875 was adopted to which the 6th section of article 12 could apply, in addition to those which might thereafter be incorporated, so that full effect can be given to it without giving it a construction which would include charters of other corporations expressly exempt from alteration, suspension or repeal by the general assembly.
Speaking of the alleged change made by the constitu
The right which one has to control and manage his own property has a value beyond the mere “ gratification of exercising control.” A man might well hesitate to invest his means in an enterprise of which he had no voice in the management, when he would be willing to risk his capital in it if he had an equal control with others in the management of the business. If a constitutional provision had deprived the stockholders of all right to participate in the election of directors and authorized the governor or other official to appoint them, the argument of the court of appeals would have applied with equal force. In such a case it would make no difference in the right of the stockholders if by the change their interests were infinitely better secured. Their right to participate in the election of directors in the- mode prescribed by the charter, cannot be interfered with, either by a constitution or legislative enactment on any such plea as that their interests will be better secured or promoted by the change. The right to manage and dispose of property is a property right, and a property right of substantial value.
In Hays v. Com., 82 Pa. St. 523, speaking of the cumulative mode of voting stock as a substitute for the ordinary mode of voting it, the court said: “Now, whilst it cannot be said that this would not be an alteration in the terms of the charter, it is nevertheless urged that it is a mere regulation of the right of suffrage in corporations but affects the vested right of no one. But if it be not a vested right
The respondent had a judgment in the circuit court, which, on appeal to the St. Louis court of appeals, was reversed and remanded, and our judgment is, that that of the court of appeals he reversed.