McKemie v. Eady-Baker Grocery Co.

92 S.E. 282, 146 Ga. 753, 1917 Ga. LEXIS 487
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 1, 1917
DocketNo. 102
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 92 S.E. 282 (McKemie v. Eady-Baker Grocery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKemie v. Eady-Baker Grocery Co., 92 S.E. 282, 146 Ga. 753, 1917 Ga. LEXIS 487 (Ga. 1917).

Opinion

Hill, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) The constitution of this State (art. 3, sec. 7, par. 18) declares that the General Assembly shall have no power to grant corporate powers and privileges to private companies, but that it shall prescribe by law the manner in which such powers shall be exercised by the courts. The General Assembly has enacted that the superior courts of this State shall have power to create private corporations in the following manner: The persons desiring a charter shall file, in the office of the clerk of the superior court of the county in which they desire to transact business, a petition or declaration specifying the object of their association, the particular business they propose to carry on, together with the corporate name, and the amount of capital to be employed by them actually paid in, and their place of doing business, and the time, not exceeding twenty years, for which they desire to be incorporated. This petition is required to be published once a week for four weeks; and upon the hearing of the petition, if the court shall be satisfied that the application is legitimately within the purview and intention of the act, it shall pass an order declaring the application granted, and the “petitioners and their successors incorporated for and during a term not [755]*755exceeding twenty years, with the privilege of renewal at the expiration of that time, according to the provisions above set forth.” Civil Code of 1910, § 2823. Corporations granted nnder this general statute are expressly given the power to apply for a renewal of the charter on the expiration of twenty years; and the question presented by this record is whether the authority to extend the charter by renewal for a like term of twenty years must have the unanimous consent of the stockholders, or may such renewal be granted on the application of the corporation by virtue of a resolution concurred in by stockholders who own a majority of the stock, without the consent of a minority stockholder. In the present case the original application for charter prayed for the right of renewal, and the order granting the charter expressly gave this right to the corporation. It will be noted that the application in the present case for an extension of the corporate existence of the corporation for the additional period of twenty years does not undertake in any way to enlarge, abridge, or otherwise modify the corporate powers as contained in the charter. It was a part of this charter that the corporation might be extended for a like period of twenty years. The general statute for the incorporation of companies by the superior court indicated a legislative policy that the corporate existence of private corporations should not be indefinitely extended. At' the same time it was recognized and declared to be the policy that corporations chartered for.twenty years might obtain extension of corporate existence for an additional period upon compliance with the statute. Stockholders who acquired stock in a corporation so chartered contracted with the view of the possibility of the extension of the charter by the will of the majority, and impliedly assented to it in advance. Such became a part of their contract; and when the corporation so authorized by a resolution adopted by stockholders who held a majority of the stock, the corporation was acting under the powers granted by the charter. In the case of Nugent v. Supervisors, 86 U. S. 241 (22 L. ed. 83), it was said, “It must be conceded, as a general rule, that a subscriber to the stock of a railroad company is released from obligation to pay his subscription by a fundamental alteration of the charter.. . . But while this is true as a general rule, it has no applicability to a case like the present. The consolidation of the Kankakee and Illinois River Railroad Company with another com[756]*756pany was no departure from its original design. The general statute of the State, approved February 28th, 1854, authorized all railroad companies then organized, or thereafter to be organized, to consolidate their property and stock with each other, and with companies out of the State, whenever their lines connect with the lines of such companies out of the State. The act further declared that the consolidated company should have all the powers, franchises, and immunities which the consolidating companies respectively had before their consolidation. Nor is this all. The special charter of the Kankakee and Illinois River Railroad Company contained, in its eleventh section, an express grant to the company of authority to unite or consolidate its railroad with any other railroad 'or railroads then constructed or that might thereafter be constructed within the State, or any other. State, which might cross or intersect the same, or be built along the line thereof, upon such terms as might be mutually agreed upon between said company and any other company.. It was therefore contemplated by the legislature, as it must have been by all the subscribers, to the stock of the company, that precisely what has occurred might the State, and to have contracted in view of it.” Paraphrasing occur. Subscribers must be presumed to have known the law of the argument of the Supreme Court of the United States, we might say that it was contemplated by the legislature, as it must have been by all the subscribers to the stock of the company, that the corporation at the expiration of its charter might apply for and obtain a renewal of the corporate term, and that precisely that has occurred which might occur.

In 1897, a few months after the grant of the charter, the legislature passed an act specifying the manner in which such charters may be renewed. The course prescribed is that “a petition signed with the corporate name of the company whose charter is sought to be renewed, stating the name of the corporation, when incorporated, the date and manner of its original incorporation, and all amendments thereto, that it desires a renewal of its charter as set out in the original act of incorporation and the amendments thereto, together with any further amendments which may be desired in the renewal of said charter; and it shall file along with the petition a certified abstract of the minutes of the corporation, showing that the application for renewal and amendment has been authorized [757]*757by proper corporate action, and shall in all other respects comply with the requirements of this section, so far as the same applies to the grant of incorporation for the company or association whose charter is sought to be renewed.” This section is incorporated in the Civil Code (1910), § 2823, par. 7. So far as this section concerns an application for the renewal of charters, it was simply declaratory of the existing law, which already provided for an extension of the term of a corporation chartered by the superior court. We are not concerned with the questions of amendments to the corporate powers, — whether such amendments which enlarge or fundamentally change the corporate powers shall be first authorized by the unanimous consent of the stockholders. It will be observed that the act does not authorize the adoption of any particular amendment; so that if the corporate powers should be vitally and fundamentally changed, the ordinary rules with respect to changes in such particulars would apply. Alexander v. Atlanta & West Point R. Co., 108 Ga. 151 (33 S. E. 866). With respect to renewals for an additional term of twenty years, the original act expressly authorized the same; and the charter of this company, as granted by the superior court, contained an express provision to that effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 S.E. 282, 146 Ga. 753, 1917 Ga. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckemie-v-eady-baker-grocery-co-ga-1917.