Grant v. Elder

170 P. 198, 64 Colo. 104, 1917 Colo. LEXIS 395
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 3, 1917
DocketNo. 8933
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 170 P. 198 (Grant v. Elder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Elder, 170 P. 198, 64 Colo. 104, 1917 Colo. LEXIS 395 (Colo. 1917).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Garrigues

delivered the opinion of the court. Statement.

This suit, brought in equity by injunction, is to try the validity of a corporate election for directors of the Adams Mining Company, a domestic corporation. At the purported annual stockholders’ meeting to elect directors, [105]*105held in Denver, December 18, 1913, the stockholders present divided into hostile camps known as the Elder and Sylvester factions, and each chose or attempted to choose a set of directors. Prior to this meeting Sylvester and his associates were in control for a number of years, and elected the board largely by obtaining and voting proxies at the annual stockholders’ meetings, and they claimed the right at this meeting to vote by proxy some 99,000 shares. The Elder faction claimed more recent proxies for some of the same shares, revoking a sufficient number of Sylvester proxies, which, in connection with their personal holdings, gave them the right to vote 78,136 shares, or a controlling interest sufficient to elect the board; the capital stock being 150,000 shares. This suit is the outgrowth of what occurred at this meeting.

The by-laws provide that the annual stockholders’ meeting to choose directors shall be held each year at the company’s general office in Colorado, on the second Wednesday of December, which in 1913 was December 10. The annual meeting was not. called for or held at that time. Prior to, and on the day fixed by the by-laws, when the meeting •should have been held, the directors were Sylvester, Grant, Broemelsick, Ewing, Lauderman, Waters and Rule. Sylvester was president, and Rule was secretary. The company maintained general offices at suite No. 1030-35 First National Bank Building, Denver. Sylvester, as president, called the annual stockholders’ meeting in 1913, to be held at this Denver office on Thursday, December 18, for the election of directors. When Elder and his following arrived at the pointed hour, and place of meeting fixed by the notice, Sylvester and his adherents were already there, and Sylvester, as president, at once called the meeting to order. The Elder faction claimed the right, on account of their proxies, to organize the meeting, which the opposition disputed. In attempting to organize, each faction nominated a temporary chairman, and the stockholders present voted, or attempted to vote, all the proxies they claimed, for one or the other of the nominees, and each [106]*106side contended that its chairman was elected. The president, acting as the presiding officer, declared the nominee of the Sylvester faction elected, and he took the chair, and presided over the meeting held at this office. As soon as a secretary was chosen, the Elder faction moved that three certain designated persons be chosen as a committee on proxies, which motion the chair declared premature and out of order. After the secretary read the president’s call for the meeting, the Sylvester faction moved that the chair appoint a committee on credentials. The opposition moved a substitute that the three designated persons act as such committee. Both sides voted on this motion as far as they could, all the proxies they had, and the chairman declared the substituted motion lost, the original motion carried, and appointed all the committee from the Sylvester faction. The Elder faction appeared before this committee with the proxies they claimed. The committee found against them, and brought in a report seating the Sylvester proxies, and on motion the chairman declared the report adopted. The Elder faction then ceased trying to organize the meeting at this place, and moved an adjournment to 621 E. & C. Building, Denver, giving as the reason that their proxies were not seated. This motion was made, seconded, put and voted for, 'and declared carried, by the Elder faction, one of their number claiming to act as temporary chairman for that purpose. They immediately retired to 621 E. & G. Building. The stockholders remaining chose the old or 1912 board of directors, who re-elected the old officers. No change being made in the board or in the officers of the company.

The Elder faction organized immediately at the E. & C. building, and chose directors, which elected officers. This meeting adjourned at 3 o’clock p. m., and within thirty minutes this suit was begun by service of summons on Grant, Sylvester and Ewing, the others being non-residents of the state and not present, were not served, though named as defendants. Complaint was filed December 20, 1913. February 24, 1914, plaintiffs confessed a demurrer, [107]*107and filed an amended complaint. June 1, 1914, the amended complaint was stricken from the files on defendants’ motion. June 19, 1914, the second amended complaint was stricken from the files on defendants’ motion. February 3, 1915, permission was granted plaintiffs to refile their original complaint, to which a general demurrer was at first sustained, and then overruled.

The action as originally begun was to obtain injunctions against numerous and various defendants, but when the issues were finally settled and the case tried, all plaintiffs were dismissed except Elder, Allen, Mann and Malbum, as well as all defendants '¡except Grant, Sylvester and Ewing. The cause was tried as an action in equity to determine whether plaintiffs had been chosen directors, and were prevented from exercising the right by the defendants, who claimed to be the directors. No injunction was asked for or granted, and all other issues were dismissed.

All the affairs, effects, business, management, property, books, and every corporate right and function of every kind and description, relating to the franchises, affairs and property of the corporation, remained wholly in the hands, control and possession of the Sylvester board, as theretofore, and it paid all taxes, and made all the annual reports required by law, and were generally recognized as representing the corporation, and as being in control and having the management of its effects and affairs. The Elder board made no attempt to interfere with such management and control, or to exercise any of the functions or franchises of the corporation. The president and secretary chosen by the Sylvester board called the 1914 annual stockholders’ meeting at the company’s office in Denver. The president and secretary chosen by the Elder board called a meeting to be held in Leadville; no meeting was organized there, however, for lack of a quorum. A large majority of the stockholders, either in person or by proxy, attended the meeting held in the company’s general office in Denver and chose a board of directors, who remained in control [108]*108until the annual meeting in 1915. In 1915, practically the same process was repeated; that is, the president and secretary who were elected by the Elder board chosen in 1913 called the 1915 annual meeting at Leadville, but nothing was done for lack of a quorum. The president and secretary elected by the board chosen at Denver in 1914 called the 1915 annual stockholders’ meeting at the company’s office in Denver, at which a large majority of the stockholders were represented, either in person or by proxy, and again chose directors for the ensuing year. Before the trial of the case in January, 1916, annual stockholders’ meetings had. been duly called for 1914 and 1915 by the de facto officers at least, at which a large majority of the stockholders, either in person or by proxy, attended for that purpose, and chose directors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 P. 198, 64 Colo. 104, 1917 Colo. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-elder-colo-1917.