State Ex. Rel. Syphers v. McCune

101 S.E.2d 834, 143 W. Va. 315, 1958 W. Va. LEXIS 7
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1958
Docket10928
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 S.E.2d 834 (State Ex. Rel. Syphers v. McCune) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Syphers v. McCune, 101 S.E.2d 834, 143 W. Va. 315, 1958 W. Va. LEXIS 7 (W. Va. 1958).

Opinion

Ducker, Judge:

This is an original proceeding in mandamus in which Jack E. Syphers, Franklin P. MeMillen, W. Frank Keefer and Joseph R. Curl, (the said W. Frank Keef er and Joseph R. Curl subsequently moving for leave to withdraw), as petitioners, filed their petition praying that they be awarded a writ directed to the respondents, Harry B. McCune as Chairman of the board of directors and Ross T. Carnes as president and as a member of the Board of Directors of Co-Operative Transit Company, a West Virginia corporation, Edward Wright, O. L. Myers and John H. Moore as members of the board of directors of said corporation, to take proper steps to reconvene a meeting of the stockholders of said corporation which was held on February 20, 1957, or to call a special meeting of the stockholders of said corporation to receive and act upon the various matters alleged in their petition and hereinafter shown. The respondents filed a demurrer and an answer to the petition, and petitioners demurred to respondents’ answer. The parties stipulated that the facts alleged in the petition were true except where denied in the answer.

The uncontradicted and undenied principal facts as shown by the petition are: that the petitioners, Jack E. Syphers and Franklin P. MeMillen, are the owners and holders of one and five shares respectively of the common stock of said Co-Operative Transit Company and that said Syphers and MeMillen, with W. Frank Keefer and Joseph *317 ft. Curl, the latter two being attorneys at law, hold proxies and powers of attorney from a number of other stockholders of said Transit Company, aggregating 834 shares of common stock and 475 shares of preferred stock, which proxies are votable by all or any one or more of the petitioners, and that the petitioners are instituting this proceeding in behalf of themselves and those stockholders whose proxies petitioners hold; that the individual respondents herein are, as indicated, the officers of the corporate respondent herein and that at the stockholders’ annual meeting of the Co-Operative Transit Company, held on February 20, 1957, at its principal office in the City of Wheeling, West Virginia, pursuant to notice, Keefer and Curl were excluded from the meeting and denied the right to act as proxies for any stockholders at said meeting on any matter coming before said meeting and particularly in the matter of the election of directors; that in accordance with the by-laws of the company only two instead of five directors were to be elected and that the respondents allowed only the petitioners, Syphers and McMillen, to be present at the meeting and then only to vote the common stock which they owned or for which they held proxies, and only to cast their votes by voting one vote for each share for each of two candidates or to cumulate shares which they owned or for which they held proxies by casting two votes for each share for one candidate, and that consequently petitioners could not elect a single director although they could have done so if five directors had been elected and if the petitioners could have cumulated their votes and cast five votes for each of the shares for which they owned or held proxies; that the charter of the corporate respondent provides for the issuance of both common and preferred stock with voting rights only in the common stock; that the by-laws of the corporate respondent provide for five directors, two of whom shall be elected in one year, two in two years thereafter and one in four years thereafter, each to serve for six years except that the respondents H. B. McCune and R. T. Carnes shall, without election, be directors respectively, one for ten years and *318 the other for fifteen years after June 27, 1950, by virtue of contracts made between said individual respondents and the corporate respondent; that the respondents in their action in said meeting relied upon a provision of the bylaws of the corporate respondent which permitted only stockholders to- hold and exercise proxies for other stockholders and then only after filing their certificates of stock with a proxy committee; that at said meeting on February 20, 1957, petitioner Syphers moved and submitted in written form resolutions containing, where necessary, amendments to the by-laws of the corporate respondent to the effect (1) that the terms of all directors be declared at an end and that a whole new board of directors consisting of five directors be elected to hold office until the next annual meeting, or until their successors are elected and qualify; (2) that every stockholder, both common and preferred, present in person or by proxy, be allowed to vote for directors by use of the cumulative method of voting as authorized in the constitution and statutes of the State of West Virginia; (3) that the corporate respondent provide for the holding of annual instead of biennial election of directors; (4) that five directors be elected annually; (5) that there be repealed the by-law provision requiring that only a stockholder can be the proxy of another stockholder; and (6) that several other by-law and charter provisions of the corporate respondent incidental to petitioners’ claims be amended so as to give eligibility to stockholders for election to membership on the board of directors and limitations upon the ownership of stock participation in the corporate meetings, there being at present a requirement that stockholders may be only those who are employees or officers of the corporation, or persons formerly so classified; but said McCune as the presiding officer at said meeting refused to entertain said motions, except to say he was acting in accordance with the bylaws and would later submit the proposals to' counsel for the company for advice.

The respondents by their demurrer and in their answer admit the principal allegations of fact contained in the *319 petition, but in the answer deny the conclusions of law asserted by petitioners as well as the allegations that the various charter and by-law provisions of the corporate respondent and the actions of the officers at the said stockholders’ meeting were conceived or done with any plan or scheme to deprive any stockholder of his legal rights, but that the same were for the protection of the rights of the stockholders and for the best interests of the corporation, and that all the charter and by-law provisions of the company were as between the corporation and the stockholders contractual in their nature and accordingly legal.

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Related

State v. Kirtley
252 S.E.2d 374 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1978)
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122 S.E.2d 436 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1961)
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122 S.E.2d 436 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.E.2d 834, 143 W. Va. 315, 1958 W. Va. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-syphers-v-mccune-wva-1958.