Dentel v. Fidelity Savings and Loan Association

539 P.2d 649, 273 Or. 31, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 299
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 539 P.2d 649 (Dentel v. Fidelity Savings and Loan Association) 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
Dentel v. Fidelity Savings and Loan Association, 539 P.2d 649, 273 Or. 31, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 299 (Or. 1975).

Opinion

DENECKE, J.

The issue is whether the directors of a state authorized savings and loan association can eliminate the voting rights of depositors and borrowers, granted by the association’s- bylaws, by amending the bylaws.

ORS 722.310(2) provides that members of savings and loan associations shall be stockholders “and such others as the bylaws may prescribe. Memberships may be issued to borrowers of and investors in the association with such rights and liabilities as may be allowed by the bylaws.”

The bylaws of the defendant association provided that savings account holders and borrowers would be members. The bylaws further provided that each stockholder would have one vote per share, each savings account holder would have one vote per $100 deposited and each borrower would have one vote.

ORS 722.070(2) provides that members may vote on amending the articles of incorporation or the bylaws. The bylaws provide the members, shall elect the Board of Directors. ORS 772.070(2) also provides the bylaws can be amended, after securing the approval of the corporate commissioner, by a vote of a *33 majority of the members or three-fourths of the directors.

At a duly constituted directors meeting, three-fourths of the directors voted to amend the bylaws, eliminating borrowers and savings deposit holders as members. The board had previously secured the approval of the corporation commissioner to the amendment.

The plaintiffs’ argument is that their voting rights are “contractural and vested rights” and cannot be eliminated by a change in the bylaws.

The bylaws of the corporation have been termed a contract between the members of the corporation, and between the corporation and its members. Barendse v. Knappa Water Assn., 260 Or 356, 359, 490 P2d 990 (1971). The articles of incorporation constitute “a contract between the corporation and the state, between the corporation and its owners, and between the owners themselves.” Lattin, Corporations, 570, § 156 (1971).

The problem of whether bylaws can be amended and thereby change the rights of members of the corporation is the same as the problem of whether the articles can be amended. Metzger v. George Washington Memorial Park, 380 Pa 350, 110 A2d 425, 429 (1955). Most of the cases and writings concern changes in the articles.

Whether a corporation can amend its articles or its bylaws and thereby change the rights of its members has been the subject of numerous judicial opinions and writings. For many years state statutes have provided that a corporation is authorized to amend its articles. Also for many years, statutes, articles, or bylaws have provided that the corporation could amend its bylaws. Despite this universal authorization, the courts have held that certain rights granted *34 members or stockholders by the articles or the bylaws cannot be eliminated through the amendment of articles or bylaws.

Some years ago when a court held that a right granted by the articles or bylaws could not be taken away by an amendment, the court stated that the right could not be taken because it was a “vested right,” a “property right,” or a “contract right.” This court used that terminology. McConnell v. Owyhee Ditch Co., 132 Or 128, 136, 283 P 755 (1930).

The “vested rights” terminology has been attacked as being confusing and meaningless. For example, see Davison v. Parke, Austin & Lipscomb, Inc., 285 NY 500, 35 NE2d 618, 622 (1941). A corporation scholar has stated: “‘Vestedness’ is the legal conclusion rather than the reason.” Latty, Fairness The Focal Point in Preferred Stock Arrearage Elimination, 29 Va L Eev 1, 4 (1942). Section 58 of the Model Business Corporation Act has, in essence, swept away the “vested rights” doctrine. That section was adopted as OES 57.355 of the Oregon Business Corporation Act. The Oregon Business Corporation Act is applicable to savings and loan associations. OES 722.020.

The Model Act swept away the vested rights doctrine by providing in detail what amendments a corporation can make to its articles. For example, OES 57.355 (f) provides that a corporation can amend its articles, “To exchange, classify, reclassify or cancel all or any part of its shares, whether issued or *35 unissued.” Subsection (g) provides “* * * [T]o change the preferences, limitations and the relative rights in respect of all or any part of its shares, whether issued or unissued.” Subsection (j) provides: “To create new classes of shares having rights and preferences either prior and superior or subordinate and inferior to the shares of any class then authorized, whether issued or unissued.”

However, even with the decline of the “vested rights” approach, the courts have not held that a member of a corporation can be deprived, by amendment, of all rights created in the articles or bylaws. No definitive terminology has been developed. The courts and the writers have turned to the more indefinite tests of “fairness,” “good faith,” “reasonableness,” and lack of “constructive fraud.” Henn, Corporations (2d ed), 712, § 345. Lattin, Corporations (2d ed), 586, § 160; Latty, supra (29 Va L Bev 1), Halloran, Equitable Limitations on the Power to Amend Articles of Incorporation, 4 Pac L J 47 (1973); Note, 37 Cornell L Q 768, 774 (1951-52).

For example, in Clarke v. Gold Dust Corporation, 106 F2d 598 (3d Cir 1939), plaintiff was a 7 per cent noncumulative preferred stockholder of American Linseed. American Linseed merged into Gold Dust Corp. As one of the mechanics of effecting the merger, American Linseed amended its articles to eliminate the 7 per cent noncumulative preferred and offered alternatives. The plaintiff claimed the amendment and merger were void. The court held to the contrary: “That amendment was binding upon the appellant [plaintiff] unless it appears that the amendment was unfair and inequitable and worked injustice to the appellant.” 106 F2d at 601.

We have adopted the term of “fairness” in other fields when we have not been able to find a more precise standard. For example, see State ex rel *36 White Lbr. v. Sulmonetti, 252 Or 121, 448 P2d 571 (1968), interpreting the long-arm statute; Hartford Accident v. Pyle, 271 Or 97, 530 P2d 843 (1975), when judgments can be set off.

Courts have held that an elimination or dilution of a stockholder’s voting rights, under the circumstances, was “fair” and, therefore, valid. •> Cases collected in Note, 37 Cornell L Q 768 (1951-52).

For example, in Topkis, Ex’r. v. Delaware Hardware Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
539 P.2d 649, 273 Or. 31, 1975 Ore. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dentel-v-fidelity-savings-and-loan-association-or-1975.