Silverman v. Gibert

185 So. 2d 373
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 7, 1966
Docket2147
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 So. 2d 373 (Silverman v. Gibert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silverman v. Gibert, 185 So. 2d 373 (La. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

185 So.2d 373 (1966)

Daniel N. SILVERMAN, Jr., et al.
v.
Eugene J. GIBERT, Jr., et al.

No. 2147.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

April 4, 1966.
Rehearing Denied May 2, 1966.
Writ Refused June 7, 1966.

*374 Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, John W. Haygood, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Christovich & Kearney, W. K. Christovich, New Orleans, for defendants-appellants.

Before REGAN, YARRUT and JANVIER, JJ.

REGAN, Judge.

The plaintiffs,[1] Daniel N. Silverman, Jr., Richard Buck, Linda S. Verbois, Paul H. Maloney, Jr., Patrick Hardie, H. Waller Fowler and A. J. Fortier, Jr., filed this suit against the defendants, Eugene J. Gilbert, Jr., John B. Clements, David E. Speeg, Solomon Winokur, Richard J. Batt, Jr., Jules D. Brown and Edward J. Prendergast endeavoring to obtain a writ of quo warranto in order to remove the defendants from the board of directors of the Plantation Nursing Homes of New Orleans, Inc. and to have themselves declared to be the legally constituted board of directors for the reason that they had been properly elected at the annual meeting of the shareholders.

The defendants answered and asserted therein that they were the legally constituted board of directors of the corporation, since the plaintiffs' election occurred at a meeting which had been postponed for a legal cause.

The lower court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, declaring that the defendants had usurped the position of directors and officers of the corporation, forbidding them to engage in the further performance of the duties of said offices, and ordering them to surrender to the plaintiffs the books, papers, records, and assets of the corporation.

The record reveals that the Plantation Nursing Homes of New Orleans, Inc., is a private domestic corporation domiciled in this city. The defendants were elected as directors thereof at the annual shareholders meeting which occurred on June 30, 1964, and some of them were elected as officers at the initial meeting of the board of directors which, of course, followed the shareholders' meeting. It is conceded by the plaintiffs that the defendants lawfully continued to serve in their respective capacities until the election of the plaintiffs as their successors.

The articles of incorporation, unfortunately, do not specify a date for the annual shareholders' meeting to elect directors. Instead, the date thereof was to be fixed by the board of directors in the corporate bylaws, which the charter entreats the directors to formulate. However, no bylaws were ever enacted by the board, with the result that a particular day for the annual shareholders' meeting was never formally established.

On or about July 15, 1965, the defendant board issued a written notice to the stockholders setting the annual meeting for August 17, 1965 at 7:30 P.M. in the Southern Pine Room of the Roosevelt Hotel in New Orleans.

A short time thereafter, the defendants were informed by Silverman, one of the plaintiffs herein, that he and other stockholders possessed proxies for more than two-thirds of the voting power of the corporation, *375 and that they intended to elect a new board of directors at the annual shareholders' meeting.

On or about August 12, 1965, the defendants called a special directors' meeting at which they adopted a resolution postponing the shareholders' meeting originally called for August 17th in order to complete an audit of the corporation's books so as to check on certain discrepancies which they assert they found in the corporation's payroll account. A notice of the postponement, dated August 13, 1965, was mailed to the stockholders informing them that the annual meeting called for August 17th had been postponed pending a complete independent audit of the corporation's books. The notice did not postpone the meeting until a definite date, but instead stated that due notice would be given of the date on which a future meeting would occur.

In response to this notice, the plaintiffs informed the defendants through the medium of a telegram that it was their opinion that the defendants possessed no authority to postpone the annual meeting and that, as representatives of more than two-thirds of the voting power of the corporation, they intended to disregard the notice of postponement and to attend the meeting as originally scheduled.

Subsequently, on August 17, 1965, a meeting occurred in conformity with the notice dated July 15, 1965. When it was called to order more than two-thirds of the voting power of the corporation was present in person or by proxy and a new board of seven directors, the plaintiffs herein, were elected. Immediately thereafter a special meeting of the newly elected board occurred and Paul J. Maloney, Jr., was elected president, Patrick C. Hardie secretary, H. Waller Fowler vice-president, and A. J. Fortier, Jr. treasurer.

The plaintiffs thereafter informed the defendants of their election and demanded delivery of the offices and property of the corporation. The defendants refused to accede to this request, and the plaintiffs then instituted this quo warranto proceeding.

The foregoing illucidation reveals that the only significant question posed for this court's consideration is whether the board of directors of a corporation which has not formally established a date for the annual stockholders' meeting may validly postpone such a meeting indefinitely once they have issued a notice designating the date, time and place thereof, barring of course, the occurrence of a calamity or some unforeseen disaster.

It is clear that under Louisiana law it is the ministerial duty of the person charged therewith to call the annual shareholders' meeting.[2] Moreover, it is quite well settled that where the date of a regular meeting of the stockholders of a corporation is fixed by its charter or bylaws, the directors possess no power to change the time of the meeting unless the stockholders acquiesce, particularly where the effect of the change is to postpone an election of directors. This is true even when the directors of a corporation are authorized by the charter to make, alter, or rescind the bylaws without stockholder consent.[3] The rationale upon which this rule is predicated is simply the principle that the power to fix the time and place of the annual stockholders' meeting cannot be construed as a power of the incumbents to extend their term of office indefinitely.

This case differs from the cited authorities only to the extent that no definite date had ever been set by the adoption of bylaws to that effect, despite the mandate contained in the charter directing the board of directors to establish a time and place *376 for the annual stockholders' meeting. However, we are convinced that the same rationale is applicable to the facts hereof. Once the board of directors has acted to call an annual shareholders' meeting, its resolution authorizing the date, time and place thereof, has the force and effect of a bylaw. Therefore, in conformity with the foregoing rationale, the board of directors possessed no authority to perpetuate themselves in office by an indefinite postponement of the meeting without the consent of the shareholders.

The defendants insist that they had just cause for voting to postpone the meeting. They offered the testimony of Eugene Gibert who related that shortly before the regularly scheduled meeting he discovered certain irregularities in the payroll account of the corporation.

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Related

Silverman v. Gilbert
186 So. 2d 630 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
185 So. 2d 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silverman-v-gibert-lactapp-1966.