Cheney v. Canfield

111 P. 92, 158 Cal. 342, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 375
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1910
DocketL.A. No. 2270.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 111 P. 92 (Cheney v. Canfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cheney v. Canfield, 111 P. 92, 158 Cal. 342, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 375 (Cal. 1910).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This action was brought by plaintiff to have a sale by the defendant corporation of forty-one thousand six hundred and sixty-six shares of defendant’s corporate stock of which he claimed to be the owner declared void. The sale was made for a delinquent assessment and defendant Canfield is the purchaser and holder of the stock.

The defendants had judgment and plaintiff appeals therefrom and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

One of the main points presented for consideration here is the validity of the assessment upon which the sale of the stock was based. All the proceedings eventuating in the sale of the stock in question are based upon an assessment levied by defendant’s board of directors on September 6, 1904.

It is insisted by appellant that the levy of this assessment was void for several reasons, but principally on the ground that the board of directors, he asserts, had no authority to levy it because the meeting at which they did so was neither a regular meeting of the board nor a special meeting regularly called.

It is the settled law that an assessment can be legally levied upon the capital stock of a corporation by the board of directors only at a regular meeting of the board or at a special meeting thereof regularly called. (Hardimg v. Vanderwater, 40 Cal. 78; Thompson v. Williams, 76 Cal. 155, [9 Am. St. Rep. 187, 18 Pac. 153].)

*346 As all proceedings whereby an assessment is levied upon the stock of a corporation, and under which a forfeiture of the stock of the stockholders may be had are in invitum, it is elementary law that they must be strictly followed. The levy of such an assessment can only be accomplished legally by a strict compliance with the statutory provisions relative thereto, or with the provisions of the charter of the corporation upon the subject. (Herbert Kraft Co. Bank v. Orland, 133 Cal. 64, [65 Pac. 143]; Ruck v. Caledonia Silver Miming Co., 6 Cal. App. 356, [92 Pac. 194].)

The by-laws of the defendant corporation provide that regular meetings of its board of directors shall be held on the first Monday of each month.and special meetings may be called at any time, notice thereof to be given the directors personally or by mail. It was averred in the complaint that the meeting of the board of directors of September 6, 1904, at which the assessment was levied was held at a time and on a day other than the time provided by the by-laws of the corporation and without previous or any notice to the members of the board; in effect that the meeting at which the levy was made was neither a regular meeting of the board nor a special meeting regularly convened. This was denied in the answer and the court found that the board of directors of the corporation consisted of nine members and that “the meeting of the board of directors on September 6, 1904, was held without any specific notice to the other two members of the said board, there being at said meeting but seven present, but it is provided by the by-laws of the Mexican Petroleum Company that regular monthly-meetings of the said directors . . . shall be held on the first Monday of each month and that no notice of said meeting is required, and the first Monday of September of the year 1904 was the 5th day of September and was under the laws of the state of California a legal holiday. And when the board met on the said first Monday of September, 1904, no business was transacted because of its being a holiday and the board met on the following day and said assessment was levied and other business transacted. Prior to the said 6th day of September, 1904, said board of directors at a meeting adjourned from the regular monthly meeting in August met and there being no quorum present adjourned said meeting to the 6th day of September, 1904.” On this finding the trial court based its *347 conclusion that the meeting of the board of directors on September 6, 1904, was a valid one and the assessment legally levied, being of the opinion, first, that although the by-laws of, the corporation provided for a regular meeting of the board on September 5, 1904, which was the first Monday of the month, yet as that date fell on a legal holiday the board might meet on the following day with equal regularity and legal effect under section 11 of the Civil Code; secondly, that whether it could or not, still the meeting on September 6, 1904, was a regular and valid meeting of the board because it was then held on the date to which the regular monthly meeting of the board in the August previous had been adjourned.

We do not think either of these conclusions correct. The fact that the first Monday of the month, fixed by the by-laws for the regular monthly meeting of the board of directors, fell on a holiday did not warrant the board in meeting on the following Tuesday on the theory that under the section of the code it could then hold the regular monthly meeting. The by-laws did not so provide and section 11 of the Civil Code which is invoked to uphold the validity of the meeting on that day has no application. That section provides that “whenever an act of a secular nature ... is appointed by law or contract to be performed on a particular day, which falls upon a holiday, it may be performed upon the next business day with the same effect as if it had been performed upon the day appointed.”

It will be observed that there is nothing mandatory about the provision. Even as applied to an act appointed by “law or contract” to be performed upon a given day, it is merely permissive. It may or may not be done on the appointed day as the party to perform it chooses or an.opportunity presents. The section, however, even in its permissibility only applies to an act appointed by “law or contract” to be performed. While the by-laws of the corporation under discussion fix the first Monday of each month for holding the regular meetings of the board of directors, still a by-law is not a “law or contract” within the meaning of the code section.

In speaking of an act provided by “law; or contract” to be performed the section, in as far as it refers to “law” means such an act as is required to be performed within a given time by authority of some statutory provision or rule of law. A *348 provision similar to the one in the Civil Code is found in both the Code of Civil Procedure (sec. 13) and the Political Code (sec. 13).

When the section of the code relied on speaks of an act to be performed by “contract” it means contracts such as are defined by sections 1549 and 1550 of the Civil Code itself. Actual contracts entered into between all the parties; contracts which are definitely such and by the terms of which conditions or provisions are to be complied with by the parties within a specified time with a possible forfeiture of rights thereunder for non-compliance. The term “by-law” has a well-known but limited and peculiar meaning. It is used to designate those regulations which as one of its legal incidents, a corporation is empowered to make affecting the management of its business, the control of its officers and agents, and the rights and duties of the members of the corporation between themselves and between the corporation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 P. 92, 158 Cal. 342, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheney-v-canfield-cal-1910.