Montalvo-Colberg v. del Teatro Caborrojeño
Montalvo-Colberg v. del Teatro Caborrojeño
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
In an action of -mandamus the object of the petition was to make certain named defendants call a general meeting of the directors of the corporation to render an account of the administration and permit the complainant as stockholder to examine the hooks of a certain corporation. As induce-
There was an answer and a hearing. The court, we think properly, held that as the complainant himself alleged that the defendants were never legally elected, the petition did not show that the defendants could be compelled to perform the solicited acts; that to order them to do so would confer a new authority which would be in opposition to the direct -terms of the law of mandamus,
On appeal the complainant says that at the trial it was shown by the statements of various of defendants that they or some of them some six or eight years before had been duly elected officers or directors of the company; that as a. consequence they were “hold-over” directors or officers with power to call the meeting. This was not the trial court theory. The complainant did not amend his petition. Therefore, in the face of an adverse holding by the court a petition should not be considered amended on appeal. The petition is the foundation of petitioner’s cause of action. His record is made on his own petition and unless in the court below he takes some step to change his pleading he is bound by it. If the court had found in his favor under certain conditions, the petition might be considered amended on appeal. People v. Valdés, 31 P.R.R. 213. Likewise, when we are convinced that the complainant has a meritorious case for mandamus, we might in exceptional cases send the case back for further proceedings.
The appellant cites certain authorities to show that holdover directors may perform the acts of the regular directors, but he cites us nothing to show that officers and directors who have completely abandoned any control are such holdover directors and may be compelled to act by mandamus. Such an abandonment is inconsistent, we think, with the condition of hold-over directors.
The appellant does not show ns that the particular defendants had the present power to act under any supposed charter or by-laws of the company. We have no consciousness of what are the rules of the corporation. A former vice-president, a secretary, treasurer and certain directors were found, but under what conditions these directors have a right to act does not appear. The mere 'fact that the treasurer received certain rents and held them does not of itself establish a hold-over directorate.
Furthermore, we agree with the court that the complainant had a more adequte remedy in the form of an application for a receiver. Generally a mandamus will only issue in a clear case.
We see no reason for modifying the judgment as to the matter of costs and the same should be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.