74 So. 45 | Ala. | 1917
— This is an. appeal from an order granting the writ of mandamus commanding the directors of the Mobile Towing & Wrecking Company to take the necessary steps to hold an annual meeting of the stockholders of said company. The order was made on submission upon the petition for the writ, with the answers of the defendants thereto, and the admission that witnesses present would testify to the truth of the allegations of defendants Pope, Walsh and Dorgan.
The question presented by this appeal is: When the by-laws of the corporation provide that the directors shall be elected at an annual meeting of stockholders to be held on a designated date, and that the officers and directors then and thus elected shall hold office for one year and until their successors are elected,
The Mobile Towing & Wrecking Company, of which petitioners and respondents were the respective stockholders and directors, was organized under the subject to the provisions of article 1, c. 69, of the Code of 1907, p. 397 et seq. The several statutory provisions pertinent to this inquiry are to the effect that: “Every corporation organized under article one of this chapter must have at least three directors who shall be owners of stock of the corporation, and who shall be elected annually, and hold office for one year and until their successors are elected.” — Code, § 3463; Rush v. Aunspaugh, 179 Ala. 542, 60 South. 802; Nathan v. Tompkins, 82 Ala. 437, 2 South. 747.
And that: The “failure to elect directors shall not work a dissolution of the corporation, but the existing board of directors shall continue to manage the affairs of the corporation until their successors are elected.” — Code, § 3464; Curry v. Woodward, 53 Ala. 371, 375.
By section 3478 of the-Code it is provided in part as follows: “Meetings of the stockholders of a corporation shall be held annually, of which meetings, as well as special meetings, notice shall be given as the by-laws prescribe,” etc;
And section 3481 of the Code authorizes a corporation “to make and alter at pleasure all needful- by-laws, rules, and regulations for the transaction of its business, and the control of its property and affairs,” etc. ' . •
In State v. Wright, 10 Nev. 167, 175, the Chief Justice said: “The i^ct that the day provided for in the by-laws for the calling such an eJsction has passed, does not justify the trustees in
In Sylvania & G. R. Co. v. Hoge, 129 Ga. 734, 740, 59 S. E. 806, 809, it is said: “For some reason, presumably because they were not informed that it was in their power to legally elect a board of directors, no action was taken at the January meeting. The term of the old board of directors expired at this time, and it was the duty of the stockholders to have elected their successors. As no election was held, any stockholders could by mandamus compel the calling of a meeting for the purpose of complying with the statutory duty.”
The rule is thus stated in Stabler v. El Dora Oil Co., supra: “That the stockholders may avail themselves of the remedy by mandamus to compel a recalcitrant board of directors to call an annual meeting for the election of directors admits of no controversy. Mr. Thompson in his work on Corporations, § 810, says: ‘Officers have been known to attempt to defeat the will of stockholders by purposely failing to give notice of either regular or special meetings. But where the officers whose duty it is to issue the call or give notice of a stockholders’ meeting either fail or refuse to do so, the stockholders are not without remedy. Whatever may be the rule with reference to the liability, it is now the well settled rule that stockholders may by mandamus compel the officers to issue the call or give the proper notice for meeh ings.’ ”
In People, ex rel. Young v. Trustees of the Town of Fairbury, 51 Ill. 152, it is said: The old board are still in office, and may exercise all the powers and should perform all the duties properly belonging to them in their official capacity; and one of those powers and duties is to give notice for the election of their successors. This notice need not, necessarily, be given within the year for which they were elected; ‘the sounder and better doctrine’ is, as laid down by Chancellor Kent, ‘that where the members of a corporation are directed to be annually elected, the words are only directory, and do not take away the power
The hardship of any other rule is stated in People, ex rel. Miller v. Cummings, 72 N. Y. 436, as follows: “If the trustees could keep themselves in office by not having an annual election, the stockholders would be powerless, and they might perpetuate themselves in power as long as they choose. Such a course would also be in direct opposition to the mandatory provision requiring that trustees to be annually elected shall manage the affairs of the company. The enactment * * * prevents any such arbitrary use of power and protects stockholders of corporations from the misconduct of their officers in this respect. * * * To hold that an election of officers of a corporation must utterly fail because those in power, by accident or design, omit to do their duty, and by neglecting to give the proper notice, or by failing to make proper by-laws for that purpose, would be in contravention of the manifest intention of the law and sanction a construction entirely unwarranted.”
Appellants insist that where no election of directors is had on the date fixed by the by-laws, the remedy is to call a special meeting of the stockholders, to amend its by-laws, fixing a new date for. the annual election, and then call an annual meeting in conformity with the by-laws as thus amended; that until this procedure is adopted no annual election can be held, though the annual election in the instant case was prevented by the unprecedented storm that devastated Mobile on the day on which the annual election was to be held according to the by-laws of the corporation. The cases of Weatherly v. Med. & Surg. Soc., 76 Ala. 567, 572, and Nathan v. Tompkins, supra, are cited as authorities. In the latter case this court said: ‘The statutes fix the term of office of the directors, contemplating only annual elections. The term of office of those first elected continues until the time fixed for the annual election, which was the third Tuesday in April, 1888. Nó power is conferred by the charter, or by statute, and there is no inherent power to remove directors, who are elected for a definite period fixed by statute, before the expiration of that period. * * * They really constitute the governing body; and the charter of incorporation, the statutes and the by-laws, are a contract between the shareholders, as to their election and the duration of their term of office. A majority of the board of
The court pointed out that it could not be determined from the record in the Nathan Case what four of the new directors, if any specifically, were elected to fill the vacancies on the board; that the sale and transfer of the stock of the four directors did not operate ipso facto to remove said four directors from office (though it may have afforded sufficient cause for removal) ; and that it certainly did not remove the remaining directors, who had not parted with their stock, nor constitute a cause therefor. It was further pointed out that: “Without proceedings looking to removal, or even declaring vacancies, the majority of the stockholders elected an entire new board, thus indirectly superseding all the directors first elected.”
Thus the Nathan Case specifically points out that a majority of the board of directors cannot extend their term of office by merely changing the time of the annual meeting of the stockholders ; nor extend their term of office by negligently or designedly refusing to call the annual stockholders’ meeting at which officers are required to be elected; nor amend the by-laws to prevent the call for a stockholders’ meeting for the election of officers.
If appellants have the correct view of this question, any board' of directors failing or refusing, by inadvertence or design, to call the annual meeting of stockholders, can continue themselves for an additional period beyond the statutory term, in the office to which they were elected, and thus affect or jeopardize the serious business interests of the corporation and of its stockholders. As illustrated in brief of appellant’s counsel, by their own neglect or design, the directors in the instant case would remain in office from July 11, 1916, to November 21, 1916, beyond the year for which they were elected by the stockholders.
The Weatherly Case is not in conflict with the view we have expressed. There there was an application by a licensed physician for a writ of mandamus to a medical and surgical society, a private corporation, to compel the restoration of relator to membership and office in the society. By the provisions of the .so
It has been held that provisions in statutes and by-laws requiring the election of directors to be had on a specified day are to be regarded as directory, that if the given election is not held on the specified day, it may be held at a later date within a reasonable time thereafter, and that the directors .then chosen will be directors de jure. — Hughes v. Parker, 20 N. H. 58; N. F. Ins. Co. v. Moore, 55 N. H. 48 (in regard to a by-law) ; Beardsley v. Johnson, 121 N. Y. 224, 24 N. E. 380; Scanlan v. Snow, 2 App.D. C. 137; Vandeburgh v. Broadway Co., 29 Hun (N. Y.) 348; 1 Thompson on Corp. § 812; 10 Cyc. 321, 322.
Applying the foregoing well-established rules for the protection and management of the affairs of corporations, to the admitted facts in this case, we are of opinion that the writ of mandamus awarded by the judge of the law and equity court of
The time having passed for compliance with the writ heretofore granted by the lower court, said lower court will fix another day for compliance with said former writ of mandamus granted in said cause.