O'Neal v. F. A. Neider Co. , 118 Ky. 62 ( 1904 )


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  • Opinion op the court by

    JUDGE SETTLE

    apfibming.

    The appellant, C. E. O'Neal, sued -the appellee, the F. A. Neider Company, a corporation engaged in the business of •manufacturing carriage supplies and trimmings, to recover salary alleged to be due him as its treasurer from January 29, 1902, to September of that year, at the rate of $1,200 per annum. It was averred in' the petition that appellant was elected to the office in question June- 8, 1901, by appellee’s board of directors, and that his term of office should have continued until the time fixed by the articles of incorporation for the next annual election, which was required to be held in September of the succeeding year, and that he accepted the office at a salary of $1,200 per annum, notwithstanding which the board of directors, without cause, removed him from office on January 29, 1902; that he was willing and offered to continue in and do the work of the *65office until the annual election in September, 1902, but was not permitted to do so, and was thereby thrown out of employment, and unable to get work, though he made a diligent effort to do so. Appellee filed' a demurrer to the petition, which was sustained by the lower court, and the petition dismissed, and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

    It appears that the first meeting of the stockholders after the organization of the appellee company was held June 8, 1901, at which time a board of directors was elected and by-laws adopted. At that meeting appellant, was elected treasurer, and at once entered upon the- discharge of his duties, continuing to serve until January 29, 1902, at which time he was, at a regular meeting, and by formal action of the board of directors, removed from office, and another elected to the vacancy. A by-law of the appellee company provides that “the board of directors at its annual meeting in September in each year shall elect from their own members a president, vice president, secretary and treasurer, which officers shall hold their respective offices until the .next annual election, or. until their successors have been elected and qualified. . . .” No election was held 'by the board of directors in September, 1901, as should have been done; nor does it appear that the minutes of the meeting of June 8, 1901, indicate that the officers then elected were to continue in office until September, 1902. It would seem, therefore, that appellant was elected at that meeting for the time intervening between that date and the date for the succeeding September election, 1901; and, as there was no election held in September of that year, and no contract is alleged, employing him specially for a longer period, it would further seem that his continuance in office was without any fixed ten*66ure after the time at wbicli an election ongbt to have been held in September, 1901. If so, we are of opinion that appellant can not complain on account of being discharged at any time subsequent to September, 1901, unless lie avers that lie bad a special contract with appellee to remain in its employment longer, which he has not done.

    In Cook on Stock & Stockholders, sec. 711, it is said: “Sometimes, however, the charter or statutes authorize and empower the stockholders to remove directors at any time.”

    In Clark & Marshall on Private Corporations, volume 3, sec. 666, it is said: “In some jurisdictions there are statutes expressly giving the stockholders power to remove directors or other officers at any time, or to remove them for cause, and such power may be reserved by a by-law if it is not inconsistent with the charter or general law.” And we may add that such power of removal may be, and often is, conferred in the same way upon the directors, especially where the right to elect or appoint the other officers, such as president, treasurer, etc., is vested in them, instead of being reserved to the stockholders. In second edition Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, vol. 2, p. 316, the author says: “The removal of the officers of private corporations is generally governed by local statutes or corporate by-laws.” The appellee seems to have adopted no by-law on this subject, other than the one already quoted, which provides that the officers elected by the board of directors shall “hold their respective offices until the next annual election, or until their successors have been elected and qualified,” and, as we have already indicated, there was no election of officers held by appellee’s board of directors in September succeeding the organization of the corporation as provided by its charter. We find, however, that it is provided by section 542, Ky. St., 1903, that “when the articles are filed and recorded as provided, and the license tax *67imposed is paid to tbe State, tbe corporation shall be deemed to be organized for tbe purpose of transacting, promoting, or carrying on, tbe business 01* purpose for which it was created; and shall thereupon become a body corporate, and be ■known by its corporate name, and as such may adopt and use a corporate seal; and shall have power to . . . appoint, remove and elect officers,” etc. We are of opinion that this statute gave appellee’s board of directors the right to discharge appellant at any time without cause, and with out rendering itself liable in damages, unless in so doing it, violated a contract under which he had the right to continue longer, which we think was not the case here.

    Wherefore' the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 118 Ky. 62

Judges: Settle

Filed Date: 4/28/1904

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/24/2022