McCay v. Luzerne & Carbon County Motor Transit Co.

189 A. 772, 125 Pa. Super. 217, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 35
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 9, 1936
DocketAppeals, 353-356
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 189 A. 772 (McCay v. Luzerne & Carbon County Motor Transit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCay v. Luzerne & Carbon County Motor Transit Co., 189 A. 772, 125 Pa. Super. 217, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 35 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldrige, J.,

This appeal is from an order of the court of common pleas of Carbon County discharging the rule to open judgment entered on a warrant of attorney contained in a note, one of a series of four, executed by the defendant company. Judgment was confessed separately on the several notes, and petitions to open were presented thereafter. It was stipulated by the parties in the court below that the same question as is raised in this appeal is involved in each of the applications to open judgment and that the decision of this court will apply to all four of the pending cases.

Prior to September 6, 1932, the plaintiff was associated with Wasil, Michael and John Baran in certain business enterprises, which included the Luzerne and Carbon County Motor Transit Company, the defendant. This corporation had 1170 shares outstanding, of which 956% were owned by the Barans, who were the principal executive officers, 132% by the plaintiff, and 81 by three other stockholders. The plaintiff, desiring to withdraw from his joint activities with the Barans, addressed identical letters to them on August 29, 1932, wherein he stated his desire to dispose of his various interests, including his stock in the defendant company. The parties came to terms and their agreement, reduced to writing, provided as follows:

irWasil Baran, Michael Baran and John Baran, 3rd ......agree that the Corporation shall purchase from William D. McCay the latter’s stock in this Corporation amounting to 132% shares for the sum of $13,250.00. $4,000.00 of this sum shall be paid to William D. McCay on September 6, 1932. They also agree that the Corporation shall execute and deliver unto William D. McCay four judgment notes for $2312.50 each...... These notes shall be endorsed by each of the Barans. It is agreed that William D. McCay shall retain title to his stock until full payment has been made.

*220 “It is also agreed that William D. McCay shall receive the Baran’s votes as a member of the Board of Directors until such time as the entire amount of $13,250.00 be paid. For his services as member of the Board of Directors, William D. McCay shall receive the sum of $100.00 per month. William D. McCay in return for said sum of $100.00 per month, agrees to waive all and any interest on the notes above mentioned and agrees to give such help and advice to the Corporation as he reasonably can.”

McCay, as secretary, orally called a meeting of the directors of the defendant company to be held September 6, 1932, to take appropriate corporate action to effectuate the sale. Four of the five directors responded to the call. The fifth director, John Kotch, admitted notice, and testified that he had deliberately absented himself because he did not want to vote either way on the proposition. At this meeting, the Barans, individually, signed the agreement referred to, and Wasil Baran, as president, and Michael Baran, as treasurer, executed the corporate judgment notes and the three Barans, on the back thereof, guaranteed payment. In lieu of paying McCay the $4,000 cash prescribed by the agreement, the defendant company, with the consent of McCay, assumed $4,000 of his obligations to the American Bank & Trust Company, giving in exchange therefor its own note.'

McCay transferred his business interests to the Bar-ans and his stock to the company upon the terms set forth in the agreement. On February 14, 1933, the annual stockholders’ meeting of the defendant company was held, and John Baran offered a resolution, which was adopted, declaring the agreement and notes and acts of the Barans purporting to bind the company invalid, by reason of the fact that the notes were not authorized by the vote of the board of directors, as required by section 9, Article 4, of the by-laws, which pro *221 vided that no officer or agent conld contract any liability or issue any bill, note, check or negotiable instrument unless specifically authorized by the vote of the board of directors and duly recorded in the minutes. We note, in passing, that the appellant failed to quote another part of this section, which reads as follows: “All bills, notes or other negotiable instruments of the Company, shall be made in the name of the Company, signed by the Treasurer or his assistant and countersigned by the President, or in his absence by the Vice-President.” The notes were signed, therefore, in accordance with that provision and also with section 2 of the Act of 1925, May 12, P. L. 615 (15 PS §61).

On the same day, the Barans and Kotch met as the board of directors, removed McCay as secretary, and specifically repudiated the agreement. No notice of the action of either the stockholders or the board was ever given to McCay, and the bank had no knowledge that the company would no longer recognize its note of $4,000 until over a year thereafter, to wit, March 17, 1934. The corporation, with full knowledge of its officers, stockholders and directors of the agreement, paid McCay four months’ salary, at the rate of $100 per month as provided by the agreement, and the interest and part of the principal of the note to the bank. The payments to the bank were made after it had filed a petition, on February 28, 1934, to open the judgment confessed by McCay, November 3, 1932.

McCay testified that it was the custom of the company to give verbal notice only of the monthly and special meetings of the board; that notwithstanding the minute book did not contain the resolution approving the agreement and authorizing the execution of the notes, it had been passed, that he, as secretary, had written it in the minutes, and it appeared therein when he surrendered the minute book. He contended that the corporation, by its conduct, had subsequently rati *222 fied its action. The appellant denied McCay’s testimony and controverted the argument of ratification, but the learned trial judge held that the depositions, covering over 500 pages of record taken in pursuance of the petitioner’s rule, supported McCay’s version of what had transpired, and adopted his argument as to ratification.

Any action taken at a meeting called by an oral notice was not necessarily invalid. “The rules with reference to special meetings, the validity of the business transacted, and the necessity of notice like many other rules respecting the mode of corporate action may be overcome by proof of contrary custom or usage of acting on the part of the directors”: 2 Thompson on Corp. §1244. In re Redstone Twp. School Dist., 284 Pa. 325, 131 A. 226, involving the validity of a special meeting of school directors, passing upon certain resignations, the court discussed fully the rules to be applied in determining whether a meeting has been properly called. It was held that actual notice of a special meeting of a corporation must be given to everyone in interest and that the purpose of the meeting must be disclosed, either by writing or orally. If the directors attend, there is a surrender of the right to object to defects in the manner of service or the substance of the notice.

Nor is the absence from the minutes of the resolution authorizing the execution of the note in suit necessarily fatal to its validity if corporate action was, in' fact, taken. The rights of McCay, whether the absence of the proper record was by design or neglect, cannot be thereby prejudiced: 5 Fletcher Cyc. of Corp. §2190 p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 A. 772, 125 Pa. Super. 217, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccay-v-luzerne-carbon-county-motor-transit-co-pasuperct-1936.