
    Alexander P. W. Kinnan, Appellant, v. Sullivan County Club and Others, Respondents.
    
      Corporation—power to make by-laws limiting the right to rote upon or to transfer its stock until dues are paid.
    
    The right of a stockholder in a corporation to vote upon and to transfer his stock can be limited, if at all, only by an express statutory provision, or by a provision in the articles of association; a by-law by which a stockholder is prevented from voting upon or transferring his stock until all dues thereon have been paid is invalid,- even as against a stockholder who agreed to take his stock subject to “the by-laws * ® *■ as to dues and transfers.”
    Section 11 of the General Corporation Law (Laws of 1890, chap. 563), empowering a corporation to make by-laws regulating the transfer of its stock, Only authorizes the corporation to prescribe' the officer by whom the stock shall be transferred and the rncde of its transfer; it does not authorize an imposition upon the stock of a penalty limiting the unconditional right of transferring it.
    Appeal by the plaintiff, Alexander P. W. Kinnan, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the defendants, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 15th day of October, 1891, upon the decision.of the court rendered after a trial at the New York Special Term dismissing the complaint upon the merits, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 12th day of October, 1897, upon which said judgment was entered. .
    The action was brought by the plaintiff, a stockholder in the defendant corporation, to have certain by-laws of said corporation adjudged to be void, and to enjoin the defendants from preventing the plaintiff and all other stockholders similarly situated from voL ing on their stock at the annual meeting of the corporation.
    
      Charles Henry Butler, for the appellant.
    
      Isaac L. Miller, for the respondents.
   Rumsey, J.:

No case and exceptions was made by the appellant, but the only papers he presents upon this appeal are the judgment roll, which contains the decision of the court, and a stipulation that the facts found in the decision are the facts in the case. There are presented, therefore, only questions of law, and in order that the appellant should succeed in his appeal it is incumbent upon him to show that the trial court could not, upon any view of the facts' found, order, the judgment which it did. (Agri. Ins. Co. v. Bernard, 96 N. Y. 525.)

The facts are that.the Sullivan County Club is a corporation .organized under the Business Corporation Law of this State (Laws of 1890, chap. 567) in the month of December, 1892,. with a capital of. $100,000 divided into shares of $100 each. On the 4th of January, 1893, the corporation issued 500 shares of its stock to two persons in payment for a tract of land situate in Sullivan county, and afterwards from time, tó time the corporation sold 200 shares more, but the remainder of the stock is not yet issued. Shortly after the organization of the corporation and before the stock was sold a circular was issued announcing the objects for which it was organized.' Among. other things it was stated that every stockholder would have, not only a general interest in the entire tract of land and all improvements, but a membership in-the club and the use of the club house, which would be run as a family hotel, on payment of an' annual subscription limited to five dollars for individuals and ten dollars for' families.

Certificates of stock were not issued' at the time it was sold, nor until the month of May, 1893. In that month, and before any cer- ■ tificates of stock were issued, the directors of the corporation adopted by-laws, one of which was as follows: “ The board of directors shall have power to establish such rules, regulations and restrictions for the government of the club and the use of its property and dues, not to exceed ten dollars per share, and may provide such penalty for any violation thereof, not inconsistent with the laws of this State, as it may deem expedient.” It does not appear that at this time the stockholders, acting as such, had adopted any by-laws for the corporation. After the directors’ by-law above quoted had been adopted, certificates of shares were issued which contained the statement that the shares were “ Full paid and non-assessable beyond ten dollars per annum.” These certificates were bound into a' book, and the following statement was printed on the stub to which each certificate was attached: Received the above certificate, which I accept and agree to hold pursuant to the by-laws of the Sullivan County Club, as to dues and transfers.” Some of the stockholders, to whom certificates of stock had been issued, signed this receipt and contract upon the stub, and others did not. The plaintiff was not one of the original incorporators, but he became a stockholder by the purchase of a share of stock in the year 1894. At the time the certificate of stock was issued to him he signed the receipt and contract, which was printed upon the stub, and the defendants claim' that he thereby agreed to be bound by the by-laws which then, authorized an annual charge of ten dollars on each share of stock. The' plaintiff, however, denies that this by-law is a valid one or that he has become liable to pay the charge upon his stock, which it is claimed to create. If this position is well taken, he has a perfect defense at law to any action which shall be brought for that purpose, and, that being so, there was no reason why he should bring this suit to restrain the corporation from beginning an action at law to recover that sum of money. (Thomas v. The M. M. P. Union, 121 N. Y. 451) Whether or not the by-law is valid, so far as it. levies such a charge on the stock, need not be decided upon this appeal.

It appears, however, that the corporation threatens to refuse to transfer the plaintiff’s stock upon the books of the company, or to . permit the plaintiff to vote thereon until all unpaid dues upon the stock shall have been paid. The corporation intends to take this ■action upon the authority of a by-law adopted by the stockholders at a meeting in January, 1895, and after the plaintiff had become the •owner of this stock. The right of the corporation, as such, to make by-laws is given by section 11 ¡of the General Corporation Law •(Laws of 1890, chap. 563), by which, among other things, it is said that it may make by-laws for the regulation of its affairs and the ■transfer of its stock, if it has any.

It has no other power .to make a by-law regulating the transfer of its stock except such as is given by this law, and a fair construction •of that law Will not authorize the corporation to do any more than to prescribe the officer by whom the stock shall be transferred and the mode of its transfer, but it is not sufficient to authorize an impo¡sition upon the stock of any penalties by way of limiting the unconditional right of transferring it. This provision of the statute •does not, by implication, give to the corporation any power to •disqualify its members, except such as it had before. But a •corporation never had, in this State, the right,- by means of a by-law,' to limit or • take away the- power of a stockholder to transfer liis stock. If such transfer could be limited at all, it •could be only by a provision in the articles of association. (Bank of Attica v. M. & T. Bank, 20 N. Y. 501; Driscoll v. W. B. & C. M. Co., 59 id. 96.) The articles of association of this •company contain no such power, and, therefore, they have no right by a by-law to prevent the transfer of the plaintiff’s stock, whether •such by-law be made by the directors or by the stockholders'at a Tegular meeting.

The corporation has no more power by its by-laws to refuse to .permit a delinquent stockholder to vote upon his stock than it has to refuse him the privilege of making a transfer of the stock. The right to vote upon stock of a corporation is essential ■ for the protection of its owner. It is one of those inherent rights 'which go witli the purchase of the stock, and, unless it. is limited by the articles of association authorizing the corporation to exclude from the right of voting a person who is in arrears upon his stock, the right does not exist. It cannot be arrogated by the corporation'to itself after the stock hag been issued. It makes no difference in this regard whether the stockholder agrees to take the stock subject to the by-laws of the corporation or not. No by-law can be made which takes away from a stockholder a right which is vested in him at the time of the purchase of* his stock. The power to take away the franchise of a stockholder stands upon the same footing precisely as the power to prevent the transfer of stock. Neither of them can be exercised upon the authority of a by-law, but each depends for its existence either upon express provision of the statute, or, at least, upon the articles of association of the corporation. For these reasons the plaintiff was entitled, at least, to •an injunction restraining the corporation from refusing to transfer the stock until the dues should have been paid and from refusing to allow him to vote upon his stock at the annual meeting, and the •court erred in denying him that relief.

The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.

Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Patterson and O’Brien, JJ., •concurred.

Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide ■event.  