State ex rel. Pittman v. Adams

44 Mo. 570
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 44 Mo. 570 (State ex rel. Pittman v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Pittman v. Adams, 44 Mo. 570 (Mo. 1869).

Opinion

Bliss, Judge,

delivered the 'opinion of the court.

The circuit attorney of the 19th judicial circuit filed in the St. Charles Circuit Court an information, in the nature of a quo toarranto, on the relation of David K. Pittman, Andrew Monroe, Trusten Polk, Asa N. Overall, Daniel A. Griffith, Samuel Overall, Norman Lackland, Lloyd Dorsay, Wrenshall D. Fielding, John A. Talley, James S. M. Gray, Thos. W. Cunningham, James Campbell, Robert B. Frazier, Richard E. Bland, Dennis McDonald, John W. Robinson, John Atkinson, Joseph Boyle, Enoch'M. Marvin, Edward A. Lewis, and David K. McAnally, against John Adams, George A. Buckner, Peter Hansen, Robert Bailey, Sr., Theodore Bruere, Nathaniel Reid, Henry Borgman, Benjamin Emmons, Jr., W. B. Adams, James H. Robinson, Henry A. Clover, Charles D. Drake, Dr. M. L. Linton, Dr. John Conzelman, and Frederick Muench, charging them with usurping the office of curators of the St. Charles College, and alleging that the relators are rightfully entitled to the office.

The relation sets forth, in full, the charter of the college, granted February 3, 1837, which recites that the institution was founded and has been supported at the private expense of George Collier; that, for the purpose of giving.it permanence, elevation, and extensive usefulness, he desires, with the aid of others, to [574]*574endow it and place it under the direction of a board of curators, who shall conduct it on the principle of its foundation, namely: as an institution purely literary, affording instruction in ancient and modern languages, the sciences and the liberal arts, and not including or supporting by its funds any department for instruction in systematic or polemic theology, nor instituting any regulations which should render a place in its classes offensive to reasonable, liberal-minded persons, whatever may be their religious opinions ; and enacts that Greorge Collier and twenty-eight other persons (naming them), including said Trusten Polk, David K. Pittman, and Andrew Monroe, and their successors, become a body corporate under the name of the “Board of Curators of St. Charles College.” The charter provides for the organization of the board, twelve constituting a quorum, for filling vacancies by the board, expelling members for cause, and gives other necessary and usual powers for the ends of the organization.

The relators set forth an amendment to the charter, approved February 6,1847, changing, somewhat, the character of the institution, by placing it under ecclesiastical influence or control, which amendment provides that the concurrence of the Missouri Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South shall be requisite in filling all vacancies in the board, upon the Conference affording to the board satisfactory assurances for the maintenance and endowment of the college; and they proceed to state the regular organization of the board; that it met and transacted business regularly under the original act of incorporation and its amendment until their ouster; and particularly that on the 21st of December, 1850, the amendment was regularly accepted by the hoard.

They also state that, except the said Pittman, Monroe, and Polk, who were named in the original charter, all the other relators were duly elected members of the board to fill vacancies as they occurred, specially setting out the time of each election, and that all the elections after February 6, 1847, were with the concurrence of the Missouri Conference of the M. E. Church South; that they all took upon themselves the duties of their office, continued to hold and enjoy the same until the wrongful [575]*575usurpation of defendants, and are still entitled to the same. The relation charges that the defendants, on the first of January, 1864, usurped and intruded into the office of members of the board of curators, and. have ever since unlawfully held the same under color of authority granted by the act of the General Assembly, approved December 11, 1863, amendatory of the original act of incorporation; avers that the board never accepted said amendment to the charter; that it is in conflict with the original act and its former amendment, and with the constitution of the United States, and is null and void. The preamble to the last-mentioned act recites that a large majority of the members of the hoard of curators of St. Charles College have failed to take and subscribe the oath required by an act of the General Assembly, entitled “An act relative to railroad directors and other officers or trustees of any incorporated company or institution,” approved March 23, 1863, and that “ by the terms of the last recited act, llie offices of said curators so failing to take and subscribe said oath have been and are vacated ;” and that “ in consequence of the vacancies in said hoard of curators the number of qualified curators has been diminished so that a quorum for the transaction of business can not be had;” and the act appoints the defendants, together with Arnold Krekel, John Orrick, and Edward A. Lewis, qualified curators of the old board, as the curators of the college, and makes some other amendments not important to consider. The defendants demur to the information, and judgment was rendered in their favor in the Circuit' Court, which was affirmed in the District Court.

The defendants combat the claim of relators upon the fundamental ground that most of them were never entitled to their positions, not having been elected according to the provisions of the original charter, hut under an amendment, itself a violation of that charter, and also upon the ground that they were properly ejected by the act of December, 1863, for not having taken the oath required by the act of March previous. The relators, on the other hand, contend that this amendment was lawful; that the acts of March and December, 1863, were unconstitutional, and that their removal was illegal.

[576]*576The relators may have, first, an absolute right to their places— a right that would be sustained without reference to the question of possession, and even under lawful judicial proceedings against them; or, second, a right to continue in possession until removed by such proceedings. Our views upon the second question might relieve us from the expression of any opinion upon the matters embraced in the first; but the labor of counsel and the attention of the courts below have been chiefly directed to them, and their decision will become necessary to a final settlement of the controversy. The interests of the college and of the community require an early adjustment of all matters in dispute, without the necessity of again coming before this court.

Both parties seem to rely upon the same general principles governing corporations, and the power of the State over them and the relators especially press upon our consideration the authority of the case of The Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518.

The limitations upon the power of the Legislature over a corporation like the St. Charles College, as elucidated in the able and elaborate opinions in the great Dartmouth College case, leave little to be said except in their application.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Mo. 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pittman-v-adams-mo-1869.