State ex rel. Rankin v. Leete

16 Nev. 242
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1881
DocketNo. 1,065
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 16 Nev. 242 (State ex rel. Rankin v. Leete) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Rankin v. Leete, 16 Nev. 242 (Neb. 1881).

Opinions

By the Court,

Leonard, C. J.:

The Orr Water Bitch company is a corporation, duly incorporated under the laws of this state, for the purpose of [244]*244constructing, keeping in repair, maintaining, and operating a ditch for the conducting of water from the Truckee river, in Washoe county, to farming lands therein, for irrigating and domestic purposes. On and prior to January 8, 1881, respondent was a stockholder in said corporation, and the duly elected trustee and secretary thereof. On the date just mentioned an election was held by the stockholders of the corporation, for the purpose of electing five trustees for the period of one year from February 1, 1881. There were two hundred and forty-eight votes in the corporation, and at that election two hundred and thirty-four votes were cast, of which, respondent, Frazer, and Manning received one hundred and nine votes each,.and Charles Gulling, James Galt, and A. J. Smith one hundred and twenty-five each, one hundred and seven of which respondent admits were legal, but denies the legality of eight votes cast by Smith for himself, Galt, and Gulling, and ten votes cast for the same persons by Haydon, proxy for Lee, executor of the estate of Larcombe, deceased. Plaintiff admits that the one hundred and nine votes cast for respondent were legal. If the eight votes cast by Smith, or the ten votes by Haydon were legal, it follows that respondent was not elected, and that Smith, Galt, and Gulling were elected. The five persons declared elected directors were Haydon, Powell, Galt, Smith, and Gulling. As to the first two, there is no contention. After the election the five persons just named met as trustees, and Gulling was elected secretary of the board. He demanded of respondent the books, papers, and property belonging to the secretary’s office, but compliance was refused, and this proceeding by information in the nature of a quo warranto was instituted in this court. Plaintiff demands judgment to the effect that respondent, is not entitled to the offices of trustee and secretary of said corporation; that he be ousted therefrom, and that Gulling be put in possession thereof, and of all books, papers, and property of the corporation appertaining to said offices of trustee and secretary, together with his costs. After the filing of respondent’s answer, and upon an agreed statement of special issues of fact, the case [245]*245was sent to the second judicial district court in and for Washoe county, to be tried by a jury. The jury found for plaintiff, and thereupon judgment was entered in this court, according to the prayer of the complaint. Respondent asks for a new irial on the ground of several alleged errors in the court below.

It is claimed that, in the sense of the statute, Gulling was not a stockholder, and, consequently, was not eligible to the office of trustee. The statute provides that, “the corporate powers of the corporation shall be exercised by a board of not less than three trustees, who shall be stockholders in the company.” If Gulling was not a stockholder, he was ineligible, and has no right to the office, or the books, papers, and property appertaining thereto, and respondent is entitled to retain the same until his successor, a stockholder in the corporation, is elected in his place.

The first question for our consideration, then, is this: Upon the facts admitted, is Gulling a stockholder in the corporation ? We have carefully examined the statutes and decisions of the different states upon this question, and have come to the conclusion that the answer depends entirely upon a proper construction of our statute, for the reason that the incorporation law, under which this corporation was formed, provides that, “said incorporation, and the members thereof, shall be subject to all the conditions and liabilities herein imposed and tó none others:” and the statutes of other states, which have been construed by the courts, differ so materially from ours, that the decisions thereon furnish but little light for our guidance.

The point of contention under consideration arises upon an exception taken by the respondent to the action of the court below in striking out all of Gulling’s testimony except, that which showed that eight shares of the stock of the corporation stood in his name upon the books of the company at the.time of the election. We shall concede that the testimony struck out tended to show that Gulling’s father owned sixteen shares of the stock; that he handed the certificate to his son, Charles Gulling, and requested the latter to have eight shares- put in a new certificate in his name [246]*246and transferred to him upon the books of the company for the purpose of making him a stockholder and eligible to the office of trustee, and that he never paid anything for the stock.

Did such an ownership or holding of stock make Charles Gulling a stockholder according to the legislative intent? Counsel for respondent claim that the testimony struck out tended to show that his ownership was only colorable, while under the statute he must be a stockholder holding and owning the stock in his own right, in order to be eligible to the office of trustee; and that respondent had the right to go behind the book title to ascertain if he was a stockholder in the sense above stated. The court below took a different view, and held that Gulling, who undoubtedly had all the muniments of a perfect legal title to the eight shares, and who acted according to his father’s wishes, was a stockholder under the statute. "We think the court was right. The word ‘ ‘ stockholder” is not defined by the statute, nor is it required, in terms, at least, that a person to be eligible to the office of director shall be a bona fide stockholder, or that he shall own stock absolutely in his own right. He must, however, be “a stockholder in the company.” ■

Counsel for respondent say: “If the mere fact that the stock stands on the books in the name of one, makes him eligible to the office of trustee, irrespective of the question whether or not he has any interest in it, the object of the statute is so readily evaded that it becomes a dead letter.” It is a part of the history of corporations in this state, that under the statute of 1862, in force at the time our general incorporation law was passed (March 10,1865), a person was considered and.treated as a stockholder by corporations, if he appeared as such upon the books of the company. Except as to the liabilities of stockholders for their proportion of the debts of the corporation, the present statute is similar to the former one; and as to the qualifications of directors, no change was made. If the legislature intended that a director should own stock absolutely in his own right, it ought, at least under such circumstances, to [247]*247have so declared in unmistakable language. But other legislation of the session of 1865 tends to show that the construction contended for by counsel for respondent was not intended. In the statute providing for the incorporation of railroad companies, etc., approved March 22, 1865, only twelve days after the approval of the general incorporation law (Oomp. L. 3425), it is»enacted, in section 3429, that “ no person shall be a director, unless he shall be a stockholder owning stock absolutely in his own right, and qualified to vote for directors at the election at which he may be chosen;” and to vote he must own stock ten days before election.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Nev. 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rankin-v-leete-nev-1881.