Carter v. Louisville Railway Company

36 S.W.2d 836, 238 Ky. 42, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 179
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 17, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 36 S.W.2d 836 (Carter v. Louisville Railway Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Louisville Railway Company, 36 S.W.2d 836, 238 Ky. 42, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 179 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner—

Affirming.

This suit was instituted by tbe appellant, Allen R. Carter, for bimself and other stockholders of the Louisville Railway Company, against the company, James P. Barnes, Churchill Humphrey, and Charles W. Milner, to recover of the three individual defendants for the use and benefit of the company certain fees which they had received for attendance upon meetings of its executive committee. It was charged that Barnes had been wrongfully paid an aggregate of $7,575, Humphrey $2,500, and Milner $825 in the period from September 27, 1922, to October 1,1929. During all of that time Mr. Barnes was president of the company. Mr. Humphrey was general counsel from February 19, 1926, to December 12, 1928, on which date Mr. Milner succeeded him.

*44 '1 -The further substance of the-petition- as. amended is that the plaintiff is the holder of common-and preferred stock in,:the company’; That The':'individual' defendants were; salaried /óJfícers’' of the cbmp’any and were also directpi^jaii'd members bT''it^/éxecutiV'e'c'ómmíttee; that the liberal) salaries paid them were for the .performance of all the duties appertaining-.to their..'respective offices; that .during the times stated “the company was in a hazardous .financial position, with decreasing earnings and increasipg'Axpenditures;” and'that; it was'the duty of the defendants' to prudently. and economically administer its affairs and conserve its .assets... It.wps asserted that, in violation of those trusts and duties, and in fraud upon the rights of the company and its stockholders, the defendant, Barnes, on September 27, 1922, caused and procured the adoption of the following as an amended by-law by the company’s board of directors:

“With the exception of salaried officers, every director shall receive an attendance fee of ten dollars for every meeting attended, and every member of the Executive Committee shall receive an attendance fee of twenty-five dollars for each meeting of the Committee attended.”

As a construction of the by-law, it was claimed that salaried officers of the company are expressly excluded from' those who should be paid the fees.

The petition further averred that the by-law is void and fraudulent because passed and adopted by the votes of the persons benefited thereby, without the knowledge or assent of the stockholders of the company, and that payments made thereunder are illegal and fraudulent, since they constitute a breach of trust. 'The plaintiff stated that, when he learned of the existence of the by-law, he immediately notified the officers and directors of the company that the payments were unauthorized and a fraud on the company, and requested them to take action to recover the sums paid, but the board of directors refused to do so or to rescind the by-law.

The joint answer of the. defendants denied the adverse charges of the petition. They admitted having been paid fees for attending meetings of the executive committee which they affirmatively pleaded were legal and proper. It was further averred that the charter of *45 the Louisville Bailway Company granted by the General Assembly of Kentucky in ld67 provided that its attains shoulu tie conducted bx a board of directors. Section 5 of that charter is as follows: .

“The said Board-of Directors may make such' rules, regulations and by-laws for the management of the anairs of the said corporation as they may deem proper, not inconsistent with the laws of this State, or of the United States.”

A full set of by-laws was adopted by the board of directors on August 18,1920, included in which was paragraph 3, section 5, article 2, as follows:

“With the exception of salaried officers, every director shali receive an atendance fee of Five Dollars for every Board meeting attended, provided-that at every meeting there be divided among the non-salaried Directors in attendance not less. than the sum of Thirty-five Dollars and with the same exception every member of the Executive Committee shall receive an attendance fee of Ten Dollars for every Committee meeting attended.”

Thereafter, on May 19, 1921, nine of the fifteen directors being present, only one of whom was a salaried officer, this resolution was adopted:

“That the by-laws be so amended as to allow salaried officers to participate in fees for attendance on Executive meetings.”

On September 27, 1922, the above paragraph of section 5, article 2, was amended to read as follows:

“With the exception of salaried officers, every director shall receive an attendance fee of Ten Dollars for every meeting attended; and every member of the Executive Committee shall receive an attendance fee of Twenty-five Dollars for each meeting of the Committee attended.”

The defendants asserted that the action of the directors in establishing an executive committee for the performance of certain duties and providing for fees as compensation to those in attendance was within the discretionary powers of the board. It was stipulated that *46 ibis committee consisted of six members of whom the defendants, Barnes and Milner, were salaried officers.

A demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer, containing the affirmative plea, was carried back to the petition and sustained. The plaintiff, electing to stand on his petition, suffered its dismissal.

We direct our attention, first, to the construction to be given the by-law in effect during the period involved, that is, the one adopted in September, 1922, last quoted. It consists of two simple sentences, forming by the conjunction a compound sentence. Each of these clauses has its own subject and predicate. We do not think that the phrase “with the exception of salaried officers” applies to the second clause. Such construction is fortified by the history and development of the by-law. That of August 18, 1920, clearly excluded salaried officers from participating in fees paid for attendance upon directors and executive committee meetings. It was changed in May, 1921, by resolution so as to specifically authorize payment of those fees to members of the committee. There is nothing to indicate any change in the policy then established when it came to enacting the new set of by-laws in 1922.

But, as indicated, the validity of this by-law as it pertains to salaried officers is brought in question. It is to be observed that the special charter of the Louisville Railway Company empowers its board of directors to adopt by-laws. That authority is now given corporations organized under the Statutes, section 542 provid: ing that the corporation shall have power “to prescribe by its board of directors by-laws for the government of the corporation not inconsistent with law.” We cannot sustain the argument that the grant of .power to directors is restricted to the adoption of rules and regulations for the management of the ordinary affairs of the company. The only restriction is that the by-laws so adopted shall not be contrary to the law.

The same inhibition or restriction was recognized as the law at the time the special charter of the Louisville Railway Company was granted, for it was declared in Sayre v.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W.2d 836, 238 Ky. 42, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-louisville-railway-company-kyctapphigh-1931.