Stewart v. Lady

465 S.E.2d 782, 251 Va. 106, 1996 Va. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 12, 1996
DocketRecord 950850
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 465 S.E.2d 782 (Stewart v. Lady) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Lady, 465 S.E.2d 782, 251 Va. 106, 1996 Va. LEXIS 10 (Va. 1996).

Opinion

JUSTICE HASSELL

delivered the opinion of the Court.

I.

In this appeal, we must decide who are the lawful members of the board of directors of The Seniors Coalition, Inc. (TSC), a Virginia nonstock, nonprofit corporation which has no members.

II.

Warren D. Stewart, James G. Carien, and Kim R. Pearson filed their bill of complaint against Karl W. Lady, James G. Aldige, III, and George P. McDonnell. TSC was named as a complainant in the bill of complaint. Subsequently, the chancellor entered an order realigning TSC as a respondent. Paul E. Bramell, chief executive officer of TSC, was permitted to intervene as a respondent.

The complainants sought a declaration that they are the lawful directors of TSC and that respondents Lady, Aldige, and McDonnell are unlawfully acting as TSC’s directors and officers. The complainants also sought an injunction restraining respondents Lady, Aldige, and McDonnell from acting as directors or transacting any business on behalf of TSC.

The respondents asserted that Lady, Aldige, and McDonnell are the lawful directors of TSC. The chancellor conducted an ore terns hearing and held, inter alia, that Lady, Aldige, and McDonnell are the lawful directors of TSC and entered a decree in their favor. We awarded the complainants an appeal.

III.

The chancellor made the following findings of fact relevant to this appeal. In 1979, Daniel G. Alexander created a tax-exempt corporation named the Taxpayers Education Lobby, Inc. Among other things, this corporation became an advocate for issues of concern to senior citizens. Eventually, the Taxpayers Education Lobby created an internal division known as The Seniors Coalition. This division published a newsletter and engaged in fund raising and lobbying activities.

*109 In 1990, Alexander caused TSC to be incorporated as a separate legal entity. Jake A. Hansen, an employee of Alexander, was the incorporator and sole director. Hansen elected Stewart and Carien to TSC’s board of directors.

Alexander informed Stewart and Carien that TSC would not commence operations immediately and that Alexander would advise them when they could begin to exercise their duties as directors. Alexander continued to operate TSC as though it was a division of the Taxpayers Education Lobby. Stewart, Carien, and Hansen did not exercise their duties as directors, and the chancellor specifically found that this board “never acted.”

Subsequently, Lady, Aldige, and McDonnell, who were members of the board of directors of the Taxpayers Education Lobby, convinced Alexander that they should serve as the directors of TSC. Alexander agreed and purportedly elected them as directors of TSC. Alexander also purportedly removed Stewart and Carien from the TSC board and elected them to the board of the Taxpayers Education Lobby. Hansen resigned, by letter, from the board of TSC. The chancellor found that neither Stewart nor Carien had resigned from the board of TSC and “indeed, Stewart and Carien had no knowledge of the proposed changes.”

In 1992, respondents Lady, Aldige, and McDonnell, acting as the board of directors of TSC, “began to operate ... in earnest.” These respondents “squeezed Alexander out of control” of TSC’s operations and “built it into a corporation with significant assets and many activities.”

Commenting upon Alexander’s role in the Taxpayers Education Lobby and TSC, the chancellor found that even though

Alexander had no formal position with either [Taxpayers Education Lobby] or TSC .... he ran the companies unimpeded until [the respondents] edged him out of control. There was no need for formal meetings or other corporate formalities; what Alexander said was the law. Alexander ran the corporations autocratically, rather than following established corporate procedures. After [the respondents] took control, [they were] treated in all respects, by Alexander and others, as if [they were] the lawfully constituted Board of Directors of TSC.

*110 The chancellor also found that the complainants knew that TSC was operational and published a newsletter which complainants Stewart and Carien had seen. Complainant Carien had placed an advertisement in the August/September 1992 edition of TSC’s newsletter. In May 1994, Stewart and Carien elected Pearson to TSC’s board of directors.

IV.

A.

TSC was incorporated pursuant to the provisions of the Virginia Nonstock Corporation Act, Code §§ 13.1-801 through -980. The complainants contend that the Virginia Nonstock Corporation Act vests sole power to elect successor directors with the board of directors. Thus, the complainants say that an agent does not have the authority to elect successor directors. The respondents assert and the chancellor held that Alexander, acting as agent of complainants Stewart and Carien, had broad express and implied authority to elect respondents Lady, Aldige, and McDonnell as directors of TSC. We disagree with respondents.

Code § 13.1-803 defines the term “board of directors” of a nonstock corporation such as TSC as “the group of persons vested with the management of the business of the corporation irrespective of the name by which such group is designated,” and “director” is defined as “a member of the board of directors.” Code § 13.1-855(D) states in part, “[directors shall be elected or appointed in the manner provided in the articles of incorporation.” Code § 13.1-857(B), which governs terms of directors generally, states:

The directors constituting the initial board of directors shall hold office until the first annual election of directors or for such other period as may be specified in the articles of incorporation. Thereafter, directors shall be elected or appointed in the manner and for the terms provided in the articles of incorporation.

(Emphasis added).

As previously mentioned, TSC’s initial board of directors filed articles of incorporation. The relevant provision in TSC’s articles of incorporation, which governs the election of directors, states:

*111 The Directors of the Corporation shall hold office for a term of one (1) year, and until their respective successors have been elected and qualified, and shall, with the exception of the initial Director, be elected by a majority vote of the Directors in office immediately preceding the expiration of each term. Any vacancy in the Board of Directors that shall occur prior to the expiration of a term shall be filled by such person as shall be elected thereto by an affirmative vote of a majority of the then remaining members of the Board of Directors and the person so elected shall hold office until the expiration of the term to which he or she succeeded.

Code § 13.1-855(D) mandates that TSC’s directors be elected in the manner provided in the articles of incorporation. As referenced above, TSC’s articles of incorporation specify that the directors shall hold office for a term of one year and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
465 S.E.2d 782, 251 Va. 106, 1996 Va. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-lady-va-1996.