One of the earliest uses of the term
shareholder democracy is noted in Volume V of William Meade Fletcher's
Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations from 1931
. The term was also used multiple times during a 1955 U.S. Senate Hearing on
Stock Market Study. Usage of the term has increased tremendously from 1928, when it first came into use. Perhaps the greatest proponents of shareholder democracy were Lewis and John Gilbert, two of the earliest activist shareholders in modern finance. The Gilbert brothers are credited with two key features of modern shareholder rights: 1) the ability to ratify the appointment of outside auditors and 2) the right to submit shareholder proposals that would be put to a vote at shareholder meetings. These rights came as a result of the brothers' campaign against
Transamerica Corporation in 1946, which led to SEC rulings in their favor that were later upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals. Commenting on the 1947 case SEC v. Transamerica, Lewis Gilbert wrote, "A corporation is run for the benefit of its shareholders and not that of its management." To some extent, Gilbert's conception of the corporation is resembles that of noted economist Milton Friedman, in what has come to be known as the
Friedman doctrine or shareholder theory. In 1956, Lewis Gilbert published a book on his experiences and views titled
Dividends and Democracy. Professor of History Colleen Dunlavy writes about the history of corporate governance in an article
From Citizens to Plutocrats: Nineteenth-century Shareholder Voting Rights and Theories of the Corporation. Dunlavy notes that corporations were originally governed on the basis of the one-vote-per-shareholder rule, similar to an
egalitarian democracy. She identifies a change from this original principle to the modern one-vote-per-share rule, which more closely resembles a
plutocracy. Dunlavy claims this transition occurred throughout the mid-19th century and was a distinctly American phenomenon. She notes that as a result of corporations inherently being market institutions, "In theory, a shareholder's voting power is in proportion to her property rights in the corporation; the larger her stake, the greater her influence." == Modern Application ==