Burton v. Lithic Mfg. Co.

144 P. 1149, 73 Or. 605, 1914 Ore. LEXIS 144
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 144 P. 1149 (Burton v. Lithic Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burton v. Lithic Mfg. Co., 144 P. 1149, 73 Or. 605, 1914 Ore. LEXIS 144 (Or. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bean

delivered the opinion of the court.

It appears from the pleadings and record that the plaintiff was elected president of the company about January 31, 1911, and served until March 3,1913; that until August 28, 1911, he was paid a salary of $25 per month. On this date a meeting of the directors of the corporation was held at the office of the company at which the following resolution was passed:

“On motion of Mr. Schiffer it was seconded and carried that the salary of the president be raised from $25.00 to $50.00 per month.”

It appears from Article II, Section 1, of the by-laws of the corporation, which were introduced in evidence, that the board of directors shall consist of five stockholders and be elected annually. Article II of Section 5 provides as follows:

“The majority of the directors shall constitute a quorum at all meetings of the board. * * ”

Section 9 of the same article reads thus:

“A majority of the directors is a sufficient number to form a board for the transaction of business and [608]*608every decision of a majority of directors forming such board, made when duly assembled, is valid as a corporate act. ’ ’

This is in conformity with Section 6693, L. O. L. Three directors were therefore necessary to constitute a quorum to transact business for the corporation in order to comply with the by-laws. Prior to the meeting of the board, August 28, 1911, two of the directors of the corporation had resigned and their offices were vacant. I. W. Schiffer, C. L. Burton and Walter Melesky remained. They were present at the meeting of the board at which the resolution quoted above was passed. At the close of the plaintiff’s case defendant moved for a nonsuit, which was denied, filed exceptions to the findings of the court, and requested additional findings to be made.

1. Five errors are assigned upon this appeal. The points made by said assignments are practically to the same effect, namely, that there was no quorum present at said meeting of the board of directors, and that the corporation had not ratified the action of the board at any .subsequent meeting. The answer pleaded that the resolution adopted was invalid for the reason that the plaintiff, C. L. Burton, was present at the meeting mentioned in order to form a quorum or majority of the board of directors which would have authority under the by-laws of the defendant corporation to make any resolution affecting the plaintiff or president of the company or any contract with him. The plaintiff, by his reply, pleaded that the action of the three directors was ratified by the corporation, and that the defendant is estopped from alleging that their action was illegal, for the reason that thereafter they paid the president the sum of $50 per month for five months, with the knowledge of the board of directors of the de[609]*609fendant corporation and its stockholders. The findings of the trial court having the force and effect of a verdict, the only question for determination is: Was there any competent evidence to support the findings as to the validity of the resolution adopted by the three directors ?

2, 3. The general proposition is laid down in 10 Cyc., page 778, as follows:

“It seems that, if there be unfilled vacancies in the board, the quorum is a majority of the entire board, as it would be constituted if all the vacancies were filled, and not a majority of the board as it remains with the vacancies unfilled.”

On page 777 of the same work, it is stated:

“If one director, whose presence is necessary to constitute the quorum, or whose vote is necessary to constitute a majority of the quorum upon a given resolution, is disqualified by reason of his personal interest therein, then the act done is invalid. ’ ’

.In the case of Marsters v. Umpqua Oil Go., 49 Or. 374, 377 (90 Pac. 151, 153, 12 L. E. A. (N. S.) 825), Mr. Chief Justice Bean states the following:

“The rule of law which disqualifies a director from binding the corporation by a transaction in which he has an adverse interest is for the protection of the corporation and its stockholders, and the same is true of the provisions of law and the by-laws of the company relative to the meeting of directors, quorums, etc. A director is an agent of the corporation. He cannot, therefore, at the same time act for himself and his principal without full knowledge and free assent of the principal, and, if he assumes to do so, his acts may be avoided by the corporation or its stockholders. Such transactions, however, are not absolutely void; they are only voidable at the instance of the corporation or a stockholder.”

[610]*610In Bassett v. Consolidated etc. Co., 132 Cal. 637 (64 Pac. 1082, 52 L. R. A. 611), it was held that at a meeting of the directors of a corporation, a legal quorum cannot be formed by the presence of an interested director so as to authorize or ratify any action taken in his favor as a general manager. In Curtin v. Salmon River etc. Co., 130 Cal. 345 (62 Pac. 552, 80 Am. St. Rep. 132, it was held that the provision of the California code that a majority of the directors of a corporation is a sufficient number to form a board for the transaction of business, and that, unless a quorum is present and acting, no business performed is valid as against the corporation, is limited by the principle that a director shall not participate in any act in which his personal interest is antagonistic to that of the corporation. In Jones v. Morrison, 31 Minn. 140 (16 N. W. 854), it was held that a director of a corporation ‘ ‘cannot properly act on or form part of a quorum to act” on a proposition to increase his compensation. In Van Hook v. Summerville Mfg. Co., 5 N. J. Eq. 137, 169, the chancellor said that a member of a corporation contracting with it is regarded as to that contract as a stranger, and held that, as the corporation was managed by five directors, one director could not with two others constitute a board to vote a mortgage from the company to himself. In Copeland v. Johnson Mfg. Co., 47 Hun (N. Y.), 235, where the corporation was governed by a board of five trustees, it was held that an agreement made by it in favor of its president under the authority of a vote of himself and two other trustees was invalid. Under a similar state of facts in Butts v. Wood, 37 N. Y. 317, the court held that the board as thus constituted had no authority to entertain a bill in favor of one of its members, or to do anything in relation to it; that the claimant [611]*611was disqualified from acting because be could not deal with himself “and without him there was no quorum of the directors and they had no authority to transact business.” In United States Ice Co. v. Reed, 2 How. Pr. (N. Y.), N. S., 253, the court said:

“A trustee whose attendance is necessary to make a quorum cannot act upon a claim in his own favor to bind the corporation, and by his presence he thus acted. ’ ’

In New York it has been held that, where an interested director takes part in the passage of a resolution, the corporate act is vitiated whether his vote was essential to its adoption or not: Anderton v. Aronson,

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144 P. 1149, 73 Or. 605, 1914 Ore. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-v-lithic-mfg-co-or-1914.