State ex rel. McWilliams v. Atchafalaya-Teche-Vermilion Co.

99 So. 633, 155 La. 882, 35 A.L.R. 748, 1924 La. LEXIS 1886
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 10, 1924
DocketNo. 24908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 So. 633 (State ex rel. McWilliams v. Atchafalaya-Teche-Vermilion Co.) 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
State ex rel. McWilliams v. Atchafalaya-Teche-Vermilion Co., 99 So. 633, 155 La. 882, 35 A.L.R. 748, 1924 La. LEXIS 1886 (La. 1924).

Opinion

LAND, J.

Defendant company was organized mainly for the purpose of furnishing necessary water to rice planters oh the Bayou Teche and along the Bayou Vermilion for the purpose of irrigating their fields. In order to accomplish this object, said company entered into a contract with relator for dredging in Bayou Courtableu, thence in Bayou Teche, and the dredging of a cut-off or canal between Bayou Teche (at a point below Breaux Bridge) and Bayou Vermilion and further dredging in Bayou Vermilion.

After completing a large portion of the work, and after the ¡failure of defendant company to pay for same, and after its refusal to grant any conference to relator with its prop-¿r officers for the purpose of bringing about an adjustment, the present mandamus proceeding was'resorted to by relator to compel the president of said company to convoke a meeting of the board of directors to enable relator to discuss directly with the company’s officers, or its directors, the matter at issue between the parties, and also to compel them to place at the disposal of relator all of the books, accounts, and records of defendant'corporation, to the end that he might exercise his constitutional right to inspect them.

Defendant company pleaded an exception of no cause of action to the petition of relator. This exception was overruled by the lower court, and on the merits the rule was made absolute and the mandamus issued, ordering defendant company to place at the disposal of plaintiff, or his agent, all the books, accounts, and records of said company. The appeal before us is by defendant company from this judgment.

Plaintiff has waived in his brief the discussion of the right to mandamus the board of directors to meet, stating that this issue is no longer vital. The only issue before us, therefore, is relator’s right to inspect the books, accounts, and records of defendant company.

Relator’s right to examine the books of defendant corporation at its office is predicated upon the following allegation in his petition:

“Petitioner further declares that inasmuch as the payment of the large sum due him is dependent on the collection of the contributions due by all stockholders, or from water rents, as the case might be, he is entitled to exact of the corporation the performance of its duties in the matter of collecting sufficient funds for the purpose of meeting these obligations. Thát in order to ascertain to what extent monies have been collected, from whom collected, and from whom collectable, he is entitled to exercise the constitutional rights of inspecting the books, accounts, and every document belonging to said corporation. That through his agent he has made a demand for an inspection of these books, and the same has been refused nor has any statement been given to him in lieu thereof.”

Relator’s petition discloses the fact that he has -a suit pending in the Eighteenth judicial district court for the parish of Lafayette for the purpose of enforcing the collection of his claims.

Under article 273 of the Constitution of 1913, which was in force when this cause was filed, corporations are required to maintain an office “where transfers of stock shall.be made, and where shall be kept for public inspection books in which shall be recorded the amount of capital stock subscribed, the names of owners of stock, the amounts owned by them\ respectively, the amount of stock paid, and by whom, the transfers of said stock, with the date of transfer, the amount of the assets and liabilities, and the names and places of residence of its officers.”

“By ‘public inspection,’ as used in said article of the Constitution, is meant, not the inspection of the idle, the 'impertinent, or the curious, those without an interest to subserve or protect, but the inspection by those with a laudable object to accomplish, or a real and actual interest upon which is predicated the request for information disclosed by the books.” Bourdette v. New Orleans Gaslight Co., 49 La. Ann. 1556, 22 South. 815; Bourdette v. Sieward, 107 La. 265, 31 South. 630.

[886]*886Relator does not pretend in the case that there is any document or other evidence in the possession of defendant company which it is necessary for him to have on the trial of his case in order to establish his claim. If such were the case, a remedy is amply provided by resorting to a subpoena duces tecum directed to defendant company and ordering the production of such books, papers, or other documents which may be in its possession and material to the cause, on its trial. C. P. art. 140.

But relator’s contention here is that, as a creditor with a claim, wholly unliquidated, and not yet merged into a judgment, he'has the constitutional right to demand an inspection of the books and papers of defendant company, in advance of obtaining a judgment, ,and for the sole purpose of ascertaining if he can obtain sufficient funds from contributions from the stockholders, and from those who may owe water rents to defendant company, to satisfy his judgment, if he should succeed in the prosecution of his suit.

Obviously, relator’s claim of right to inspect the books and papers of defendant company is based upon a mere contingency, which may never happen, and not upon actual interest already fixed and determined.

“But the right to inspect the books [of a corporation] is not so absolute that mandamus will issue without regard to facts and circumstances. * * Though the right to inspect is the rule, and it is very seldom proper for the officers of a company to refuse to allow the examination, the refusal is justifiable when curiosity is the motive or when' the 'object is manifestly in opposition of the interest of the colnpany.” Legendre Co. v. Brewing Ass’n, 45 La. Ann. 671, 12 South. 837, 40 Am. St. Rep. 243; Scott v. President, 46 La. Ann. 280, 14 South. 521; Marsh v. Sanders, 110 La. 7312, 34 South. 752.

The purpose of the framers of the Constitution of 1913 in writing article 273 into that instrument was to safeguard, primarily, the interests of stockholders in corporations, and also of investors invited to trade in the stock or shares of such corporations, by securing to them the information, by right of public inspection, which might be disclosed by the books of such corporations. State ex rel. Bourdette v Gaslight Co., 49 La. Ann. 1559, 22 South. 815.

The right of a stockholder to examine the books of a corporation in which he owns stock is based upon his actual pecuniary interest. His right to participate in the dividends, and to investigate the management of the corporate affairs, in order to determine the present value of his holdings and his future action in reference to the stock of the company, naturally flows from and is based upon such interest, and upon his status as a stockholder. Such right of public inspection arising from actual and fixed interest, already acquired, and undisputed, and from the relationship of the stockholder to the corporation, of which he is a member, is essentially different from that of a mere outside creditor with an unliquidated claim. The stockholder’s interest is necessarily linked with the success of the corporate enterprise, and with keeping intact its assets, while that of a creditor is opposed to the welfare of the corporation, in that he seeks to subject its assets to the payment of. his claims, even if the result be to put an end to its operation as a going concern.

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Bluebook (online)
99 So. 633, 155 La. 882, 35 A.L.R. 748, 1924 La. LEXIS 1886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mcwilliams-v-atchafalaya-teche-vermilion-co-la-1924.