Meadville Theological School v. Hempstead

Argued May 9, 1927. Plaintiff appeals from a declaratory judgment, determing that defendant was not required to take title to and pay for certain real estate, which he had agreed with plaintiff's executive committee to purchase from plaintiff, since the only authority to make the sale was a resolution of its board of trustees, adopted at a meeting attended by but five members, which was less than a majority thereof.

Plaintiff is an eleemosynary corporation, governed by a board of thirty trustees. It was chartered by the special Act of April 7, 1846, P. L. 497, section 7 of which provides that "ten trustees shall constitute a quorum to transact all business relative to the said institution." By section 2 of the amendatory Act of February 24, 1847, P. L. 148, this number was reduced to five. In 1897, acting under section 42 of the Act of April 29, 1874, P. L. 73, 106, plaintiff applied for, and the court of common pleas decreed, an amendment to the charter, which expressly struck therefrom the whole of the Act of 1847, without declaring that anything should be substituted for it. This, of course, included section 2, which provided that five should constitute a quorum of the board of trustees. The petition and decree also struck out certain sections of the Act of 1846, among them the one making ten trustees a quorum of the board, and *Page 224 substituted in lieu thereof, inter alia, a provision making five trustees a quorum. Our question therefore is, had the court power to so provide?

By applying for the amendment after the Constitution of 1873 went into effect, plaintiff acquired a benefit under that instrument, and, by article XVI, section 2 thereof, became subject to its provisions, and liable to regulation by legislation passed pursuant thereto, at least insofar as such regulation did not conflict with any express franchise given by the special incorporating acts, and which remained undisturbed after the amendment was made: Com. ex rel. v. Flannery, 203 Pa. 28. Turning then to the Act of 1874, to which plaintiff thus became subject, we find that, by section 5 thereof (P. L. 77), it is expressly provided that "a majority of the whole number of such directors or trustees shall be necessary to constitute a quorum."

Appellant urges, however, that this section only relates to corporations whose by-laws, and not their charters, fix the number of their directors or trustees, because, in cases where they are fixed by the charter, no change can validly be made except by the court under section 42 of the statute. It is true that, in such cases, the change must be approved by a decree of the court, but this alone is insufficient to limit the scope of section 5. It expressly provides that "The business of every corporation created hereunder [that is, under the Act of 1874], or accepting the same [as we have shown plaintiff did], shall be managed and conducted by a president, a board of directors or trustees, . . . . . . [that] the directors or trustees shall be chosen annually by the stockholders or members, . . . . . . shall not be less than three . . . . . . [but] the members of said corporation may, at a meeting to be called for the purpose, determine, fix or change the number of directors or trustees that shall thereafter govern its affairs; and a majority of the whole number of such directors or trustees shall be necessary to constitute a quorum." Throughout the section *Page 225 the reference is to "every corporation" created under or accepting the provisions of the Act of 1874, which necessarily includes plaintiff. Nowhere is there a reference to corporations created and still governed by special statutes; and, if the provisions quoted do not refer to "every corporation," then all others than those suggested by plaintiff are free of any regulation on the subjects specified in the above quotation. It does not seem possible that the legislature could have so intended, and hence we can only conclude that the section should be construed as being general in its scope throughout; that the provision as to changing the number of directors or trustees applies only to corporate action on the subject, leaving the approval thereof, if needed, to be obtained under section 42; and that a majority must constitute a quorum whenever the corporation is chartered under or has become bound by this provision of the Act of 1874, as appellant has. We decide, therefore, that the amendment making five trustees a quorum is in violation of the express provisions of that act, and defendant was justified in refusing to comply with the terms of a sale not authorized by a majority of the board of trustees.

The declaratory judgment of the court below is affirmed.