Monsseaux v. Urquhart

70 La. Ann. 482
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1867
DocketNo. 1337
StatusPublished

This text of 70 La. Ann. 482 (Monsseaux v. Urquhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monsseaux v. Urquhart, 70 La. Ann. 482 (La. 1867).

Opinion

Ilsley, J.

This is a proceeding by (puo warranto, in which the plaintiffs, alleging themselves to have been duly elected directors of the Carondelet Canal and Navigation Company of New Orleans, contest the legality of the returns of the commissioners, by which the defendants appear to have, been eleeted, and are accordingly acting as directors.

[483]*483The grounds upon which the plaintiffs impeach the validity of the commissioners’ returns are the following, to wit:

1. That Louis Gagnet was allowed to vote for the defendants on forty shares, which he had transferred to and which stood in the name of R. M. Davis, President. :

2. That R. M. Davis, through his agent, P. H. Monsseaux, was, denied the right to vote on these forty shares.

3. That J. Llambias, executor of E. Marquez, was denied in person, and through his agent, P. Saloy, the right of voting on twenty-five shares.

4. That L. Gagnet was admitted to vote on five shares, as agent of L. Surgi.

5. That P. H. Monsseaitx was denied the right of voting on these five shares as agent of L. Surgi.

6. That L. Gagnet was allowed to vote as agent on twenty-five shares of A. Mclntire, and on forty shares of A. Culbert.

I. The plaintiffs’ first objection appears to us well founded. ,

By section 8 of the act incorporating the company (Sess. Acts 1857, pi 146) it is provided that “at all elections of directors, and at all other meetings of stockholders, each share of stock shall be entitled to one vote. ”

“ The votes in all cases may be cast by the stockholders in person, or by proxy.” And section 15 of the same act provides, that “no transfer of stock shall be binding on the company, until made in its stock-book, * * and no stockholder shall be permitted to vote at any meeting of the stockholders unless he became a stockholder on the books of the company at least thirty days previous to said meeting.”

Prom these plain provisions of the act of incorporation, and from an inspection of the record, it is manifest that the votes of Louis Gagnet on the forty shares of stock registered in the stock-book in the name of R. M. Davis, President, should have been rejected. The right of voting, conferred by the charter, is not to be tested by the mere ownership of stock, but the transfer of it must be patent on the stock-book.

It is the registry which is the sine quit non for the right to vote on stock; and as these forty shares were not at the time of the election, duly registered in the name of Louis Gagnet, or in that of his principal, his vote on it cannot therefore be counted.

II. Was R. M. Davis properly denied the right to vote on these forty shares ? It is not pretended that R. M. Davis, individually, was the registered transferree of these shares, nor that at the time of the election he was the president of the.company. But, it is contended that inasmuch as the stock stood in the name of R. M. Davis, President, and had not been transferred by him, Davis only, whether president or not, had the right to vote on it.

This position, if correct, might give to one who had ceased to have any interest whatever in the affairs of the corporation, a controlling vote in its management. We would be loath to assent to the correctness of such a proposition, unless imperatively demanded by the express provisions of the law.

In support of their objection, the plaintiffs rely upon the case of the [484]*484Mohawk' and Hudson 11. 11. Go., 6 Cowen. 135, the facts of which are as follows:

Certain shares of stock stood inscribed on the transfer-books of the company in the name of Samuel Jaudon, cashier.

Samuel Glover, under a proxy from Y. Cowperthwaite, cashier of Philadelphia, appointing him his substitute to vote, etc., and executed thus: “J. Cowperthwaite (L. S.) acccompanied by an affidavit by the said Glover, that' Cowperthwaite was the successor of Samuel Jaudon, as cashier of the United States Bank, attempted to vote on the shares standing in the name of Jaudon, cishier, but his vote was rejected.

The Court, independently of the glaring deficiencies of the instrument alleged to be a proxy of the United States Bank, held, that the adjunct cashier showed no trust in Jaudon, for any certain person—the bank of the United States not being named; that the trust was a matter between Jaudon and the bank, with which the corporation had nothing to do; that the addition of the word cashier was a mere description of the person, and that in view of the provisions of a special statute of the State of New York, the attempt to vote in the name of Cowperthwaite could not be sustained'.

There is evidently a marked difference between the facts of that case and those of the one now under consideration. Jaudon was an officer of a corporation domiciled out of the State of New York, and the inspectors of election could not be expected to take notice ex officio of the fact that he had been cashier of the United States Bank of Philadelphia, and that the addition cashier to his name indicated that he held the1 stock as cashier of that particular bank. But we do not doubt that had Jaudon undertaken to vote on the strength of his nominal title, in opposition to the wishes or without the assent of the proper representatives of the United States Bank, that a Coifrt of equity would readily have interfered, either to enjoin him from so doing or to defeat any legal object he might have sought to attain.

Here, the transfer by Gagnet of this stock on the stock-book, was properly made to its president. The designation of Davis as such on the books could not be treated as a mere descriplio persones.

Neither the shareholders nor the commissioners were at liberty to disregard the official designation of the head officer of the company. Whatever, for instance, might have been said about a transfer to R. M. Davis, treasurer or cashier, he not being at the time treasurer or cashier of the company, could not apply to the present case.

The official designation of its chief officer could not be ignored by the other officers, or by the members of the company.

If 'R. M. Davis had undertaken, without the assent of the directors, to transfer the stock standing in his name as president, could the secretary of the company have honestly complied with a request to enter such a transfer on the books after Davis had ceased to be the president of the corporation ? If not, what right has Davis to act so far as relates to voting, or to any other privilege attached to a title to stock, standing in the name of the president of the company, as if it were entirely under his control, when in truth and in fact, he had no title or claim whatever to it.

And here it may be asked, can stock, standing in the name of and for [485]*485the corporation itself, be voted upon by one of its officers, at his own discretion ? On this point we adopt the opinion expressed in a New York case, in 5 Oowen, p. 434, ex parte Holmes, in which the Court said : “If there could be a vote at all upon such stock one would suppose that it must be by each stockholder of the company, and in proportion to his interest in it.

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70 La. Ann. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monsseaux-v-urquhart-la-1867.