Citation Numbers: 39 Mo. App. 453, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 505
Judges: Ellison
Filed Date: 12/2/1889
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
This action is instituted to recover of defendant, a milling corporation, a salary alleged to be due plaintiff as president of the corporation. The answer admits he was president of the corporation but denies that a salary was even legally voted to him by the directory. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case the court sustained an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. Thereupon plaintiff took a non-suit, and failing to have it set aside, has brought the case here.
It appears from the testimony on behalf of plaintiff that the owners of the entire stock of the corporation were plaintiff, his brother Fred Hax, W. D. Bennett and R. T. Davis. The first three appear to have been acting together, while Davis seems not to have been in accord with them. In fact • this litigation results from a contention or misunderstanding between Davis, a principal stockholder, and the others. Each of these were directors of the corporation and together composed the full directory. W. D. Bennett was secretary, and up to October 26, 1886, Davis was president, but on that day plaintiff was elected president and Bennett re-elected secretary. The board adjourned to October 28, at which meeting the question of salaries “was held over until next meeting.” This meeting took place February 7, 1887, all the directors being present, when salaries were adjusted as per the following record : “On motion of W. D. Bennett that the president receive a salary of three thousand dollars per year from February 7, 1887, to October 1, 1887 ; motion seconded by Fred Hax, and carried. Yotes were as follows : Yeas, Fred Hax, director; W. D. Bennett, director; noes,
At the next meeting of the board held' August 10, 1887, plaintiff, Fred Hax and Bennett, each having sold his stock to Davis, resigned their directorship, and Davis having transferred one share of stock each to John Calhoun, William Smalley and James M. Wilson, they were elected as codirectors with Davis. It thus appears that plaintiff’s salary was fixed on the vote of three of the four directors, plaintiff himself not voting, but Fred Hax and Bennett voting for the salary and Davis against it. The contention urged in defendant’s brief, in support of its demurrer to the testimony, is that as it was admitted that the charter provided for only three directors, that the vote of Bennett, whom the defendant calls the fourth director was illegal and of no effect, thus leaving the proposition of a salary lost instead of carried, as entered on the minutes. One principal difficulty with this contention is that we can discover no warrant, so far as is disclosed by the record before us, for the assertion that Bennett was any more the fourth director than either of the others. There appears to have been four directors elected without protest from any one, and at the meeting at which Davis was restored to control three were again elected, vice those retiring, with which Davis, as president, constituted the board. The fact that John P. and Fred
The question then resolves itself to tbis: Are the acts of a directory invalid, on the ground merely that the body is composed of a greater number than allowed by the charter? We think that they are not. If the stockholders do not complain, but acquiesce, the acts of the directory, otherwise regularly bad, will bind the corporation. Tbis is especially so as regards its relations with strangers. And is likewise so in its relations with its officers, at least if there is acquiescence on the part of all the shareholders. In the present case four directors have been elected without protest or objection, at a meeting composed of all the stockholders. Indeed the four directors elected held all the stock, and four directors were still retained when the corporation was reorganized under the control of R. T. Davis.
II. Conceding that the directory, though composed of four members, could act for the corporation, did they act on the question of salary ? The record shows that all four were present at each of the meetings at which the salary question was up. At the meeting when plaintiff’s salary was fixed, the vote on that question stood, for the salary two, and against it one; plaintiff not voting. There is no question as to plaintiff’s disqualification to vote on his own salary. Ward v. Davidson, 89 Mo. 454; Bennett v. Roofing Co., 19 Mo. App. 349. It appears then that a majority of all the directors voted on the question and that a majority of those voting voted for the resolution, and, in our opinion, legally adopted it. In the absence of anything to the contrary in the charter or by-laws, a majority will constitute a quorum and a majority of that quorum can do the business of the board. Morawetz Corporations, secs.
Suggestion is made that without the authority of a by-law a salary could not be voted, and in the absence of such law plaintiff will be presumed to have accepted the office without salary.
But in this case, conceding there was no by-law strictly speaking, there was a resolution or motion adopted, as has been pointed out, and such will be deemed sufficient. Ellis v. Ward, 20 N. E. Rep. 671 (Illinois, 3889). In that case, it is held that the by-law or resolution should be adopted before the services are rendered, and in this connection we will observe, that the resolution here only authorized a salary, on and after its adoption. The question of fraudulent combination on the part of plaintiff, his brother and Bennett, is of course not considered. Our opinion is that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the testimony and the judgment will therefore be reversed and the cause remanded.