Shannon v. Early F. Co.

145 A. 708, 296 Pa. 141, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 490
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 29, 1929
DocketAppeal, 116
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 145 A. 708 (Shannon v. Early F. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shannon v. Early F. Co., 145 A. 708, 296 Pa. 141, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 490 (Pa. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion bx

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

The four plaintiffs, T. A. Shannon, J. J. O’Connor, Y. J. Early and J. W. Early, minority stockholders of the Early Foundry Company, filed a bill in equity against that corporation and Anna E. Early, “secretary, director and^ stockholder,” (hereinafter designated as “defendant”) and John F. Grier, “president, director and stockholder,” praying for the appointment of a receiver, the winding up of the corporation’s affairs and the dis *144 tribution of its assets; and that, in the meantime, an injunction should issue to restrain the individual defendants and others connected with the company from interfering with its management; general relief also was asked. None of the specific prayers was granted, but, under the prayer for general relief, the court below decreed that defendant should pay back to the corporation certain salaries drawn by her as its secretary; and she has appealed.

The bill averred, inter alia, that the corporation had fourteen stockholders, defendant owning a little more than one-half of the entire capital stock, plaintiff J. W. Early about one-fifth, and the balance being distributed among others named; that the majority of the stock was originally owned by John P. Early, the founder of the company, who was the brother of plaintiff J. W. Early and the husband of defendant, and who, until his death in 1926, controlled the corporation; that John P. Early bequeathed his stock to defendant, and friction as to the company’s management then arose between her and the four plaintiffs, who at that time were directors of the corporation. Plaintiff J. W. Early occupied also an executive position in the management of the corporation, he having been assistant to John P. Early during the latter’s lifetime. Plaintiffs further averred that John P. Early had drawn a salary, as manager, of $150 a week, and that, after his death, “in order to help Mrs. Early,” she was paid $250 a month “as secretary”; that, at a later date, after a new board of directors had been elected, her salary was fixed at $150 a week. The total of this last mentioned salary is the amount in controversy.

After admitting the formal averments of the bill as to the ownership of stock, etc., and denying several of its averments concerning the management of the corporation (issues that dropped out of the case at the time of trial, and which are not mentioned in the chancellor’s adjudication), the answer denies that any salary was *145 ever voted to defendant on a basis other than as compensation for the office of secretary of the corporation. In this connection, she averred that the old board of directors, of which three of the plaintiffs were members, had at first given her $150 a week, and, in November, 1926, they voted her a salary of $90 a week; that, in May, 1927, the new board, of which she was a member, passed a resolution “authorizing the said Anna E. Early to adjust salaries,” in pursuance of which she thereafter received $150 a week. Finally, on -the point of compensation paid to defendant, the answer • contains the following paragraph: “If the court should be of the opinion that the board of directors in voting to her, for acting as secretary, the same salary which the former board ......, of which three of the plaintiffs, Joseph W. Early, Thomas J. Shannon and J. J. O’Connor, were members, is unreasonable, that she is ready and willing to have the court fix her salary at the $90.00 per week which was fixed by the said directors at the meeting in November, 1926, and of which no complaint has been made, and to do such other things as to the court may.seem just and proper so as to best effectuate the carrying out of the charter purposes of the said company, and to make the same a success”; then, at the trial, defendant was asked by her counsel: “If the court should feel,......because of the law or auy other reason, that [your] salary should be reduced and an injunction issued to restrain you from taking that salary and fixing it at any sum which to the court would appear reasonable in view of -the testimony in this case, would you be satisfied with that?” to which she answered, “Yes.”

Both sides, by their pleadings and in their proofs, having made a case which principally revolved around the question of the propriety of the salary paid to defendant, and she having, both by her answer and in her evidence, expressly stated a willingness that the chancellor should fix the compensation to which'she'was justly entitled, appellant is not now in a position to suggest, as *146 she does, that, since the bill contains no specific prayer for such relief, the court could not grant it.

While no relief may be granted in equity which is not “agreeable to the case made by the bill” (Slemmer’s App., 58 Pa. 155, 167; Cumberland V. R. R. Co. v. Gettysburg, etc., R. R. Co., 177 Pa. 519, 544), and “consistent with the relief [specially] prayed for” (Eddy v. Ashley Boro., 281 Pa. 4, 6), yet in a situation like the present, where both bill and answer deal with the particular matter in hand, it may be acted on as within the prayer for general relief if the subject is one over which the court has jurisdiction.

The by-laws of the corporation explicitly provide that the board of directors “shall determine the salary to be paid the president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer.” Mrs. Early and her brother, John P. Grier, who is the second member of the present board and president of the company, had no power to depart from this law of the corporation, and, by resolution authorize her, as they did, to fix her own salary; particularly in the absence of the plaintiff J. W. Early, the third and only other member of the board. Any fixing of salaries had to be done by the board, and not by an individual member of that body, who, as an interested official of the corporation, would personally profit by the readjustment of compensation. This, in itself, is sufficient to warrant setting aside the compensation of $150 per week paid to defendant, following such readjustment of salaries. Here, however, the record shows no request for a surcharge to that extent, and apparently even the plaintiffs agreed that Mrs. Early was entitled to a proper salary.

In Sotter v. Coatesville Boiler Works, 257 Pa. 411, 422, we held: “Where a board of directors votes excessive salaries to certain of its members [as] officers ......of the corporation......, when called in question by a minority stockholder, the action of the board is subject to review by a court in equity, and, if the finding of the latter tribunal is that the salaries in question are *147 exorbitant, [the italics are ours]it may determine the value of the services rendered by ■ the officers or employees in question and restrain the corporation from paying in excess thereof......[but], generally speaking, in cases of this character, a court of equity may deal only with the facts presently before it, and thus determine the reasonable compensation actually earned,” that is, earned in the past, and not “the value of services to be rendered in the future.” See also Lowman v. Pierce Co., 276 Pa. 382, 386; Browne v. Maxwell, 288 Pa. 398, 404. In the case now before- us,' we' do not rely on the general principles above quoted, because, both in defendant’s answer and at trial, she expressly submitted the question of her salary to the chancellor for adjustment.

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Bluebook (online)
145 A. 708, 296 Pa. 141, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannon-v-early-f-co-pa-1929.