The charter of a private corporation may be forfeited or
annulled for the misuse of it corporate privilege and franchise,
and its forfeiture or annulment, by appropriate judicial
proceeding, for such a reason would not impair the obligation of
the contract, if any, arising between the state and the corporation
out of the mere granting of the charter. The charter granted to a
club,
held, in this case, not to amount to such a
contract
Page 208 U. S. 379
that the club could disregard the valid laws subsequently
enacted by the state regulating the sale of liquor.
The judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction of Virginia,
made after a hearing, that a corporation of that state had violated
the liquor laws of the state and that, in pursuance of statutory
provisions, the charter rights and franchises of the club ceased
without further proceedings
held in this case not to have
violated any right belonging to the club under the contract or due
process clauses of the Constitution of the United States.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 208 U. S. 381
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Complaint having been made in due form that the Cosmopolitan
Club, a corporation of Virginia, formed to promote social
intercourse, athletic and physical culture, and to encourage manly
sports, had violated and evaded the laws of that commonwealth
regulating the licensing and sale of liquors, the Corporation Court
of the City of Norfolk, where the club had its domicil, gave notice
that it would, on a named day, inquire into the truth of the
charge.
The proceeding was based on a statute of Virginia passed March
12, 1904,
* amendatory of a
previous statute and providing that,
"upon complaint of any person that any such corporation so
chartered as a social club is being conducted, or has been
conducted, for the purpose of violating or evading the laws of this
state regulating the licensing and sale of liquors, and after
service of such complaint on such corporation at least ten days
before the hearing of said complaint, the circuit court of the
county or the corporation court of the city wherein is located its
place of business or meeting, or the judge thereof in vacation
shall inquire into the truth of said complaint,
Page 208 U. S. 382
and if the court, or judge in vacation, shall adjudge that the
said corporation is being conducted, or has been conducted, for the
purpose of violating or evading the laws of the state regulating
the licensing and sale of liquors, the chartered rights and
franchises of said corporation shall cease and be void without any
further proceedings, and the said corporation and all persons
concerned in the violation or evasion of said law shall be subject
to the penalties prescribed herein."
At the hearing of the case, the club, by its counsel, moved to
dismiss the complaint on the ground that, under the Constitutions
of Virginia and of the United States, the court had no power to
entertain it, and that the act under which it was filed was
contrary to those Constitutions. The motion to dismiss was
overruled, and the parties introduced their evidence. The result
was a judgment by the corporation court that the club had been
conducted for the purpose of violating and evading the laws of
Virginia regulating the licensing and sale of liquors. The
defendant then applied to the Supreme Court of appeals of Virginia
for a writ of error and supersedeas. The latter court, upon
inspection of the record, refused the application upon the ground
that the judgment was plainly right. The president of that court
allowed a writ of error for the review of its judgment by this
Court.
It is contended by the plaintiff in error that the judgment
against it was inconsistent with the contract clause of the
Constitution of the United States. The charter of the club, it is
insisted, was a contract between it and Virginia, which could not
be amended or annulled unless, at the time it was granted, the
state, by constitutional provision or by legislative act, had
retained or reserved the right of repealing, forfeiting, or
modifying it. Neither the state constitution nor any statute, it
was alleged -- and we assume such to be the fact -- contained any
such reservation at the time the club's charter was granted.
Assuming that the charter of the club constituted a contract
between it and the state, it would not follow that the statute
Page 208 U. S. 383
of Virginia, enacted in 1904, after the granting of such
charter, was inconsistent with the clause of the Constitution
forbidding a state from passing any law impairing the obligation of
a contract. The principle is well established that the charter of a
private corporation may be forfeited or annulled for the misuse of
its corporate privileges and franchises, and that its forfeiture or
annulment by appropriate judicial proceedings, for such a reason,
would not impair the obligation of the contract arising between the
state and the corporation out of the mere granting of the charter.
In
Chicago Life Ins. Co. v. Needles, 113 U.
S. 574,
113 U. S. 580,
an insurance company contested the validity, under the contract
clause of the Constitution, of a statute of Illinois prescribing
certain regulations (not in force when the company's charter was
granted) in reference to the conduct of life insurance business in
that state. This Court overruled the contention, observing:
"The right of the plaintiff in error to exist as a corporation,
and its authority, in that capacity, to conduct the particular
business for which it was created, were granted, subject to the
condition that the privileges and franchises conferred upon it
should not be abused, or so employed as to defeat the ends for
which it was established, and that, when so abused or misemployed,
they might be withdrawn or reclaimed by the state in such way and
by such modes of procedure as were consistent with law. Although no
such condition is expressed in the company's charter, it is
necessarily implied in every grant of corporate existence.
Terrett
v. Taylor, 9 Cranch 43,
13 U. S.
51; Angell & Ames on Corporations (9th ed.), §
774, note. Equally implied, in our judgment, is the condition that
the corporation shall be subject to such reasonable regulations, in
respect to the general conduct of its affairs, as the legislature
may from time to time prescribe, which do not materially interfere
with or obstruct the substantial enjoyment of the privileges the
state has granted, and serve only to secure the ends for which the
corporation was created.
Sinking Fund Cases, 99 U. S.
700;
Commonwealth v. Farmers & Mechanics'
Bank, 21 Pick. 542;
Commercial Bank v.
Page 208 U. S. 384
Mississippi, 4 Sm. & Marsh 439, 497, 503. If this
condition be not necessarily implied, then the creation of
corporations, with rights and franchises which do not belong to
individual citizens, may become dangerous to the public welfare
through the ignorance, or misconduct, or fraud of those to whose
management their affairs are entrusted. It would be extraordinary
if the legislative department of a government, charged with a duty
of enacting such laws as may promote the health, the morals, and
the prosperity of the people, might not, when unrestrained by
constitutional limitations upon its authority, provide by
reasonable regulations against the misuse of special corporate
privileges which it has granted and which could not, except by its
sanction, express or implied, have been exercised at all."
These principles were expressly reaffirmed, upon a review of the
adjudged cases, in
New Orleans Waterworks Co. v.
Louisiana, 185 U. S. 336,
185 U. S.
347.
It must therefore be held that the contract between the club and
the state did not authorize the club to disregard the valid law of
the state regulating the licensing and sale of liquors. Such a
course upon the part of the club was alleged to be a misuse of its
corporate privileges and franchises. The district charge against
the club in the corporation court was that it was being conducted
for the purpose of violating and evading the statute regulating the
licensing and sale of liquors -- a statute which the commonwealth
could rightfully enact under its power to care for the health and
morals of its people. And the court adjudged that the charge
against the club was sustained -- the result being that, by the
statute, the chartered rights and franchises of the club ceased
without any further proceedings. Even if this Court could reexamine
the judgment of the corporation court on the facts, the present
record would not justify us in holding that error was
committed.
Was this result consistent with the due process enjoined by the
Constitution? This question must be answered in the affirmative.
The proceedings against the club were had in a
Page 208 U. S. 385
court competent under the Constitution and laws of Virginia to
determine the questions raised by the complaint against the club.
This must be assumed to be the case after the highest court of
Virginia refused a writ of error upon the ground that the judgment
of the corporation court was plainly right. The mode of proceeding
against the club was not unusual in such cases. As early as
Terrett v.
Taylor, 9 Cranch 43,
13 U. S. 51, this
Court said:
"A private corporation created by the legislature may lose its
franchises by a misuser or a nonuser of them, and they may be
resumed by the government under a judicial judgment upon a
quo
warranto to ascertain and enforce the forfeiture."
So, in
New Orleans Waterworks Co. v. Louisiana, above
cited, the first of several questions raised there was that, since
the charter of a certain waterworks company prescribed mandamus as
the remedy to maintain a lawful tariff of water rates, was not the
substitution by the writs of forfeiture of charter, as a remedy for
the maintenance of unlawful rates, a breach of the contract, and a
deprivation of the property without due process of law, and a
denial of the equal protection of the laws? The Court answered the
question by saying:
"The answer to the first question, as to mandamus being the
exclusive remedy for illegal rates, is that the state court has
otherwise construed the charter, and has held that mandamus is not
the only remedy, but that the company was liable to be proceeded
against by
quo warranto at the suit of the state, through
its attorney general. The claim that, by so proceeding, there is
any impairment of the obligation of a contract by any subsequent
legislation, or that there has thus been a deprivation of property
without due process of law, or a denial of the equal protection of
the laws, has no colorable foundation. An examination of this
question, among others, was made by the state court after full
hearing by all parties, and all that can possibly be claimed on the
part of the plaintiff in error is that such court erroneously
decided the law. That constitutes no federal question."
It thus appears that the club ceased to exist as a
corporation
Page 208 U. S. 386
in virtue of a judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction,
all the parties being before it and given full opportunity to be
heard. Such a judgment cannot be held to have violated any right
belonging to the club under the contract or other clause of the
federal Constitution.
Foster v. Kansas, 112 U.
S. 201,
112 U.S.
206;
Kennard v. Louisiana, 92 U. S.
480;
New Orleans Waterworks Co. v. Louisiana,
above cited.
Judgment affirmed.
*
"Chapter 116. An act to amend and reenact § 142 of an act
of the General Assembly of Virginia entitled 'An Act to amend and
reenact §§ 75-147, inclusive, of an act approved April
16, 1903,' and to provide how social clubs chartered since April
16, 1903, shall obtain licenses to sell ardent spirits, etc."
Acts of Assembly, 1904, p. 214.