State Ex Rel. Heikkenen v. Kylmanen

231 N.W. 197, 180 Minn. 486, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1269
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 29, 1930
DocketNo. 27,958.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 231 N.W. 197 (State Ex Rel. Heikkenen v. Kylmanen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Heikkenen v. Kylmanen, 231 N.W. 197, 180 Minn. 486, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1269 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Olsen, C.

Action by quo warranto to test the right of the respondents in the writ to hold office as the directors and officers of the Finnish *487 Supply Company, a co-operative association incorporated und’er the laws of this state. Seven of the relators claim to be the duly elected directors and officers of the corporation and claim -that the respondents have no right or title to the offices of directors in the corporation. For brevity these seven relators will be referred to as plaintiffs and the respondents as defendants.

The question presented is as to which of the two groups were elected directors of the corporation at the annual stockholders’ meeting in January, 1929. The board of directors consists of seven members, elected annually. Five directors constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. The articles of incorporation provide that no one shall become a shareholder in the corporation except by the consent of, and acceptance by, the board of directors. Each shareholder is entitled to one vote at stockholders’ meetings. The corporation is engaged in the business of operating a store on a cooperative plan.

In 1928 dissension arose among the directors and stockholders. The members divided into two factions, which may be referred to as plaintiffs’ faction and defendants’ faction. A special meeting of the stockholders was held in May, 1928, at which an attempt was made to remove five members of the board of directors and elect five new members in their place. Action was brought by the five directors so attempted to be removed and resulted in a decision holding the action of the May, 1928, meeting illegal and of no effect. The case came to this court and is reported in State ex rel. Koski v. Kyl-manen, 178 Minn. 164, 226 N. W. 401, 709, where the facts are more fully stated. By that decision, affirmed here, the five new directors attempted to be elected at the May meeting were declared not to have any right or title to the office of directors or to hold such office. Three of the five directors attempted to be removed were held to be legal directors of the corporation and were reinstated as such. Two of them were held to be ineligible to hold the office of directors because they were part owners in a competing business in violation of a by-law of the corporation, and were not reinstated. By reason of the appeal and stay of proceedings judgment in that *488 action was not entered until in September, 1929. In the meantime there were two boards oí directors attempting to act. The two directors not removed by the May meeting, one of whom was the president of the corporation, acting with the five attempted to be elected at that meeting and with the business manager of the store, took and held possession of the store and held meetings arid transacted business. They gave no notice of their meetings to the three legal directors attempted to be removed by the May meeting and refused to permit them to meet at or take any part in the operation of the store. This board represented defendants’ faction. The five directors attempted to be removed at the May meeting held meetings, of which notice was given to the two legal directors of the other faction. These five claimed to represent the corporation as directors and transacted some business as such. One of their members was the legal treasurer of the corporation and one the secretary. This board represented plaintiffs’ faction. Each faction sought new members for the corporation. Defendants’ faction obtained 24 applications. The applicants paid to the store manager the price of shares .applied for. The money was not paid over to the legal treasurer of the corporation. The board of directors representing defendants’ faction, constituted as stated, purported to accept these applications. Plaintiffs’ faction obtained 23 applications for membership. The price of the shares applied for was paid to the legal treasurer of the corporation. The board of directors representing plaintiffs’ faction, constituted as stated, at a meeting July 20, 1928, notice of which had been given to the two other legal directors, accepted the 23 applications for membership. Matters stood in this situation up to the annual stockholders’ meeting .in January, 1929, at which meeting a new board of directors was to be elected. The votes of the 24 applicants for membership secured by defendants’ faction and the votes of 22 applicants secured by plaintiffs’ faction were received under proper protest at that meeting. If both of these groups of voters were entitled to vote, or if neither group was entitled to vote, then in either such case defendants were elected as directors.

*489 The trial court held that the 24 applications for membership secured by defendants’ faction had not been accepted by the directors of the corporation; that the meetings of the directors representing defendants’ faction, at which these applications purported to be accepted, were not legal meetings because no notice thereof had been given to three legal directors then in office, and that the action of such meetings was invalid and of no effect. It therefore rejected the 24 votes. The court further held that the votes of the 22 applicants secured by plaintiffs’ faction were valid votes; that these applicants had been properly accepted as shareholders in the corporation by the directors. This resulted in a finding that plaintiffs were duly elected as directors of the corporation at the annual meeting in January, 1929.

It is the general rule that it is essential to the legality of a directors’ meeting, and the validity of any action taken at such meeting, either that all of the directors have-notice of the meeting or that all be present. 14a C. J. p. 87, § 1846. The rule is recognized in this state. 2 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. (2 ed.) § 2109. The finding of the trial court that these 24 applicants for membership had not been accepted by the directors of the corporation is sustained by this rule.

The question whether the court was justified in finding that the 22 applicants for membership secured by plaintiffs’ faction had been properly accepted by the board of directors of the corporation and were entitled to vote presents some difficulty. The court held, as indicated in its memorandum, that the two disqualified directors, acting with the three legal directors of plaintiffs’ faction, were at the time de facto directors of the corporation. These two directors, though disqualified to hold the office, had been regularly elected as directors and, at least from January, 1928, up to the May, 1928, meeting, had acted as directors without question as to their qualifications. These two directors did not surrender their offices or step out or acquiesce in the action of the May meeting purporting to discharge them from office. They joined with the three legal directors of their faction in promptly bringing suit to have the action of the *490 May meeting set aside and to oust the five new directors purported to have been elected at that meeting. They joined with the three legal directors in holding directors’ meetings during the summer of 1928, at which meetings some matters of corporate business were transacted and of which meetings notice was given to the two legal directors belonging to the other faction. They claimed to be and acted as directors, with their three associates, up to about the time judgment was entered in September, 1929, holding them ineligible.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Benson v. Kylmanen
232 N.W. 262 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 N.W. 197, 180 Minn. 486, 1930 Minn. LEXIS 1269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-heikkenen-v-kylmanen-minn-1930.