Defendant is a corporation, organized under the general laws of this state. Its general purpose is to accumulate funds to be loaned to its members to enable them to purchase real estate and build houses thereon. Commencing on August 2, 1869, it is to continue to exist for not more than 15 years. Its capital stock is divided into shares, for which transferable certificates of stock are issued— any shareholder being permitted to withdraw upon terms prescribed in by-laws. The stockholders are empowered, at general or special meetings, to pass by-laws concerning, among other things, “the general regulation of the business of the corporation,” and such as are “needful in carrying out and effecting” its objects. By the eighth article of incorporation, “upon the termination of said corporation the funds and assets of the same, after paying all debts and expenses, shall be divided among the stockholders in such proportion as each may be justly entitled to, in accordance with the number of shares held by each, after deducting all assessments, fines, dues, or other charges then due by such stockholders.”
The foregoing matters are all found in the defendant’s articles of incorporation. These articles are its charter, and, subject to the constitution and general laws of the state, its fundamental and organic law. Morawetz on Private Corp. §§ 149, 367. Among other things they fix the rights of stockholders. They are in the nature of á fundamental contract, in form between the corporators, and in practical effect between the association and its stockholders — a contract which, as in other cases, neither party is at liberty to violate. This can no more be done through the form of by-laws and resolutions of the stockholders adopted and acted upon, than it can in any other way. The authority to pass by-laws is, as a matter of course, *279authority to pass such as are consistent with the articles of incorporation, and not a power to subvert the law of corporate existence. Morawetz on Private Corp. §§ 367, 368; Kent v. Quicksilver Mining Co., 78 N. Y. 159. The by-laws of a corporation are only rules and regulations as to the manner in which the corporate powers shall be exercised. Any attempt on the part of defendant, by by-laws or otherwise, to deprive an unconsenting stockholder of a right secured to him by the corporate articles, is in excess of defendant’s authority, or, in legal parlance, ultra vires.
The application of these views is this: The plaintiff was and is a stockholder in the defendant association. He is therefore entitled to the full benefits of the eighth and other articles of incorporation, and he has by consequence the right to hold his stock, and enjoy all the profits and advantages secured to a stockholder by such articles. That is to say, he is entitled, among other things, to retain his stock and his place as a stockholder until the termination of the corporation, and to a right to his share of the net funds and assets, as in the eighth article provided. He may voluntarily withdraw from the association as respects the whole or a part of his stock, in accordance with the charter and pursuant by-laws. But, save by his consent, so long as he performs his duty as a stockholder, he cannot be forced out of the association, as respects the whole or any part of his stock, by any action of the association through its board of directors, or by the combined action of the other stockholders. It follows that the association has no authority to retire or cancel any part of his stock against his will, and without any default on his part, and that any such retiring or cancelling is, under the articles of incorporation, ultra vires. That, through some defect in the plan of its organization,— some unforeseen difficulties, — the association willnot work as well as was expected, and will fail of completely accomplishing the purposes of its projectors, is wholly unimportant. That is a matter which should have been thought of when the articles of incorporation were framed, and before the defendant took the stockholders’ money. If, through the common fallibility of human judgment, it was not foreseen, the disappointment is not to be remedied at a stockholder’s expense, any further than he may be necessarily called upon under the *280charter to share the consequences of the common .error with his fellow shareholders.
In the case at bar, the plaintiff being in no default, the defendant has, without his consent, attempted to retire and cancel, and in fact has in form retired and cancelled, 15 shares of its stock held and owned by plaintiff, and it threatens to take the same course with other shares of which he is the owner and holder. It follows, from what we have before said, as held by the trial court, that these acts done and threatened are, under the articles of incorporation, ultra, vires and void as to the plaintiff.
But it is contended that though the cancellation of the plaintiff’s shares of stock'is not authorized under the articles of incorporation, the plaintiff has estopped himself from objecting to it. It seems that hé acquired two shares of his stock, issued in September, 1878, on December 19, 1876; 35 shares, issued, in September, 1874, between August, 1876, and November, 1877. In December, 1874, the association, by an amendment to its by-laws, authorized the board of directors to set aside certain moneys for the cancellation of certain shares of stock. In August and November, 1876, by mufual agreement between the plaintiff and the association, 20 shares of stock of wdiich he was owner were surrendered and cancelled, the association paying and plaintiff receiving an agreed sum of money therefor. At that time no stock of any stockholder had been forcibly retired. Any surrenders of stock theretofore made were made, as in the case of plaintiff, by the consent and agreement of the stockholders. No argument would appear to be needed to show that there is nothing about plaintiff’s voluntary surrender of the 20 shares mentioned which could in these circumstances, by any proper application of the law of estop-pel, bar him from objecting to an attempt on the part of the association to force him to surrender other shares of stock. He has not acquiesced, or given the association to understand that he proposes to acquiesce, in any attempt of that kind; and it is further to be observed that the language of the by-law amendment referred to is not such as to show that any forced cancellation of stock was necessarily contemplated by it. The trial court properly found no estoppel.
*281In reference to tlie resolution adopted by the association on March ■3, 1877, and the by-law amendment adopted March 2, 1878, under which, together with the by-law amendment of December, 1874, before mentioned, the board of directors, on January 3, 1880, undertook to accomplish the forced cancellation of which plaintiff complains, we ■discover nothing, either in the findings of the court or the evidence, showing that plaintiff in any way assented to the application of the resolution and by-law amendments to himself or to any other stockholder, or estopped himself in any way from objecting to such application to his own stock whenever attempted. If other stockholders saw fit voluntarily to submit to the cancellation of their stock, even under the influence, to a greator or less extent, of the resolution and amendments, there was no reason why he should object or refrain from sharing in the benefits (if any) accruing to the association. By failing to object for them, he in no way forfeited his rights to object for himself when the occasion should require. In addition to these considerations, it is to be observed that plaintiff’s shares of stock involved in this action were all issued before either of the bylaw amendments mentioned, or the resolution of March 3, 1877, was adopted, and that they were all acquired by plaintiff before the adoption of the by-law amendment of March, 1878, which appears to be the only one expressly authorizing a forced cancellation of stock. Hence it cannot be claimed (even if the claim could possess any importance,) that the plaintiff’s stock was issued or taken by him upon any understanding that he could be forced to surrender it.
Lest it should be thought that the matter had escaped our notice, we call attention to the fact that it appears to be understood by the court and parties that, unless the cancellation of plaintiff’s stock is sustained, the association will have the right to retire the same when it reaches what is called maturity, or a value of $200 per share. This is one among a number of things in this case which we do not altogether understand, but which we have not felt called upon to investigate, as the parties appear to take no objection in reference to it.
This disposes of all the matters which we deem it necessary to discuss in this opinion, and the result is that the judgment is affirmed.