Medical & Surgical Society of Montgomery County v. Weatherly

75 Ala. 248
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 75 Ala. 248 (Medical & Surgical Society of Montgomery County v. Weatherly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Medical & Surgical Society of Montgomery County v. Weatherly, 75 Ala. 248 (Ala. 1883).

Opinion

SOMERY1LLE, J.

This is an application for the writ of mandamus by the relator, Dr. J. S. Weatherly, a licensed and practicing physician, seeking to vacate certain proceedings of the Medical and Surgical Society of Montgomery County, a voluntary association incorporated under the laws of this State by whose corporate action he claims to have been irreguarly, and illegally deprived of his membership in said society, and excluded from its privileges.

We can entertain no doubt of the jurisdiction of the courts of this State to interfere, in all proper cases, by mandamus, as an appropriate remedy for the wrongful disfranchisement or amotion of a corporator, and to restore him to the enjoyment of a franchise of which lie lias been illegally deprived. This right of supervision over bodies corporate is one of great antiquity [253]*253in our law, and is regarded as derived from the visitatorial power, always impliedly reserved by the Sovereign or the State in granting corporate charters, and which is exercised through the courts of common law jurisdiction. — High on Extr. Bern.. §§ 291, 293. The modern and better view is, that this right of judicial visitation is not confined to public corporations, but extends as well 'to those of a purely private nature. Nor is it limited to such as áre organized strictly for business purposes, or pecuniary profit, but is made applicable also to corporations formed for eleemosynary, religious, scientific, or other like purposes.—Angell & Ames’ Corp. § 704; State v. Milwaukee Cham. Commerce, 47 Wis. 670. The King, under our ancient law, was the legally constituted visitor of all corporations, whose franchises may have been granted to subjects by his grace and authority, a jurisdiction, which was exercised through the medium of the courts, and the chief function of which was “to-render their charters, or constitutions, ordinances and by-laws of perfect obligation, and generally to maintain their peace and good government.”—Angell & Ames’ Corp. (11th Ed.) § 684; 2 Kent, Com. 300. The just reason is that a corporate franchise is property, incorporeal, it is true, but' deemed none the less valuable in the eye of the law. Each individual member, as remarked by Sir William Blackstone, is said in such cases to be the owner of the franchise, and his privilege of membership, we may add on high authority, is, therefore, properly subject to the protection of the courts as valuable, although it may have no actual market value.—2 Black. Com. 37 ; State v. The Georgia Medical Society, 38 Ga. 608; Moses on Mandamus, p. 184; Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518.

The purposes for which this jurisdiction is commonly exercised is left in no doubt by the authorities. In High, on Extraordinary Bemedies, $ 294, it is said to be now a well established rule, that mandamus will lie to restore to his corporate rights a member of a corporation who has been improperly disfranchised or irregularly removed from his. connection with the corporation. And while the court will not inquire into-the merits of the decision of corporate authorities in expelling or removing a corporator in the regular course of proceedings, yet, if the amotion has been conducted without due authority, the courts will interfere by mandamus to compel the restoration of the member to his corporate franchise.” The same rule is declared, in substance, in Angelí & Ames on Corporations (11th Ed.), § 695, where it is said that this jurisdiction will be exercised for compelling corporations generally “to observe the ordinances of their constitution, and to respect the rights of those entitled to participate in their privileges.” “If a cor-[254]*254porator has been unjustly or irregularly amoved or suspended from his office, or disfranchised, the court,” it is added, “will grant mandamus to’restore him.” — lb. § 704. By a more recent writer, of respectable authority, the doctrine is stated as follows : “ A mandamus will issue in all cases to compel a corporation, or any particular officer, to perform any plain duty required by law in favor of a member or other interested party, whether such duty is imposed either by statute, charter, custom or contract.” — Woods’ Field on Corp. § 462. In the light of these authorities, and the numberless adjudged cases upon which they are predicated, and by winch they are fully sustained, we think the rule may be regarded as firmly established, that, in every case of the disfranchisement of a corpora-tor, the courts will entertain jurisdiction to restore him by mandamus, where the cause or ground of disfranchisement is legally insufficient, or where the proceedings by which it has been attempted are irregular, according to, or as tested by the charter or by-laws of the corporation. But no inquiry will be made into the merits of what has been regularly done by due course of proceeding.—Com. v. The German Society, 15 Penn. St. 251. The aim of the courts, as said by Mr. Justice Sergeant, in Commonwealth v. The Pike Beneficial Society, 8 Watts & Serg. 247, is to preserve corporate tribunals “in the line of order, and to correct abuses.”—High on Extr. Rem. §§“294, 297-304 ; Woods’ Field Corp. § 462; Angell & Ames’ Corp. (11th Ed.) § 704. The earnestness with which this particular subject of contention has been urged at the bar, on argument, has induced us to discuss it with greater elaboration than we might otherwise have indulged.

We need scarcely add that the jurisdiction under discussion is one which should never be rashly asserted, but always with due caution, and with a just regard for the rights of a majority of the corporators of any organized body or society, which may have expressed its will as to any matter jmder consideration, within the lawful scope of its charter, constitution, or bylaws.

The points of contention raised by the pleadings in this cause may be reduced to two simple inquiries :

(1) Whether the relator has, under the constitution of the medical and surgical society, of which he claims to be a member, forfeited his membership, ipso facto, by a failure to promptly pay his annual dues to the treasurer, without regard to corporate action by the society, or notice of such action to the relator.

(2) Whether the action of the society in declaring such forfeiture, or disfranchisement, is regular, as being in substan[255]*255tial compliance with the constitution or organic laws adopted for the government of its proceedings.

The several articles of the society’s constitution, which are pertinent to these inquiries are the following:

Sec. it, art. 8. Every member shall pay into the treasury an annual contribution of six dollars, which shall be due and payable on the first of January of each year; and if it be not paid by the first meeting in April of each year, the defaulter shall forfeit his membership, and Iris name shall be stricken from the roll of members; and of this he shall be duly notified by the secretary.”

Article 35 imposes upon the treasurer the duty of serving, on or about the beginning of March of each year, a written notice upon every member whose annual dues remain unpaid, calling his attention to the requirements of the foregoing article as to delinquents.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ala. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/medical-surgical-society-of-montgomery-county-v-weatherly-ala-1883.