4 N.E.2d 679 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1936
Appellant's action, pleaded in thirteen distinct paragraphs of complaint, seeks to impose personal liability upon appellees for appellant's debt for liability insurance sold and furnished, on the theory, first, that appellees were a partnership doing business under the name of the Fort Wayne Transfer and Yellow Cab Company; second, that appellees were doing business under the name of Fort Wayne Transfer and Yellow Cab Company pretending to be a corporation, and appellees pretending to be stockholders and members of said pretended corporation, when no such corporation had been organized and no steps had been taken to organize the same; third, that the appellees were doing business under the name of Fort Wayne Transfer and Yellow Cab Company and were pretending to be a corporation, and that they were pretending to be directors of said pretended corporation, and that they had become personally liable because they had not complied with the law with reference to the organization of said corporation and changing the name thereof. The appellees filed five paragraphs of answer, and appellant filed its demurrer to the fourth and fifth paragraphs, which demurrer was overruled, and the issues were closed by a reply filed by appellant to the appellees' answers. There was a trial by the court and judgment for the defendants. The appellant has assigned as error the overruling of the appellant's demurrer to the fourth and fifth paragraphs of appellees' answer and the overruling of appellant's motion for a new trial, which motion recites that the finding of the court is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law and that error was committed in the admission and rejection of certain evidence. *508
The appellant contends that, so far as the first paragraph of complaint is concerned, the issue was made by said paragraph of complaint and an "unverified" general denial thereto; that 1. appellant was entitled to a finding upon the undisputed proof that insurance was furnished by appellant to appellees at their instance and request under a pleading that averred that said defendants were a partnership, with no other answer thereto but an "unverified" general denial; that appellant was entitled to such a finding as a matter of law, citing section 2-1034 Burns 1933 (§ 138 Baldwin's 1934) which provides that the character or capacity in which a party sues or is sued, shall require no proof on the trial of the cause unless such character, capacity or authority be denied by pleading under oath. Upon examination of appellant's first paragraph of complaint it will be observed that the appellees were sued in their individual capacity and not under the name and style of a partnership, and therefore this section of the statute is not applicable.
The appellant further contends that appellees were doing business under the name of Fort Wayne Transfer and Yellow Cab Company, pretending to be a corporation, and appellees 2. pretending to be stockholders, members and directors of said pretended corporation, when no such corporation had been organized and no steps had been taken to organize the same and they had not complied with the law with reference to the organizing and changing of the name of said corporation, and that by reason thereof said appellees became personally liable. It is conceded by appellant that the appellees in the incorporation of the Fort Wayne Transfer Company complied with all of the statutory requirements of the Voluntary Association Act of 1901, at page 289, but failed to file a duplicate of the articles in the recorder's office of the county in which the principal *509 place of business of such association was located, as by said Act provided. The appellees assert that the debt sued upon by appellant herein was incurred by the Fort Wayne Transfer Company and that said company was incorporated under the Voluntary Association Act of 1901 and that all of its provisions have been complied with except the filing of a duplicate of the articles of incorporation in the recorder's office of the county in which the principal place of business of such association was located, and that since its incorporation, on the 10th day of November, 1911, said corporation has exercised its corporate powers and that the Fort Wayne Transfer Company was a de facto corporation at the time the applications and liability insurance policies were executed. Therefore, did the failure of the appellees to file and record the articles of incorporation in the recorder's office prevent the Fort Wayne Transfer Company from being a corporationde facto at the time in question?
In the case of Doty et al. v. Patterson et al. (1900),
"While, under the facts alleged in the complaint, the `Fortville Butter Cheese Factory' was not a corportion dejure, they do not show that it was not a corporation de facto, but, on the contrary, it appears that an attempt was made to create a corporation under and in compliance with a law authorizing the creation of a corporation of its class and powers, and an actual exercise of corporate functions. Under the settled law of *510 this State, therefore, the `Fortville Butter Cheese Factory' was a de facto corporation, and its corporate existence cannot be questioned by appellees in this proceeding. This rule is not limited to cases where one by contract admits corporate existence, but is a rule of general application. . . . The rule established by the great weight of authority is that the stockholders in a de facto corporation cannot be held liable as partners, although there have been irregularities, omissions, and mistakes in incorporating the company. Clark on Corp. pp. 99-110," and cases cited.
In the case of Inter-Ocean Newspaper Company v. Robertson,
decided by the Supreme Court of Illinois in (1921),
It is insisted by appellant that the contrary doctrine was declared by the Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, inHarrill v. Davis et al. (1909),
The doctrine that members of a corporation de facto are protected from liability as partners seems to be *514
generally adopted in more recent cases, and the weight of authority is in favor of protecting the corporators from individual liability if there is a de facto corporation. The contrary doctrine appears in a few cases, one of which is the case of Garnett v. Richardson (1879),
In discussing the subject of the failure to comply with particular statutory requirements, the author of Corporations in 7 Ruling Case Law section 45, at page 64, says: "There are decisions, however, which in effect affirm that in the absence of any filing of the articles of incorporation there is neither a charter nor a colorable attempt to obtain one and therefore that the persons acting as a corporation are necessarily a mere association or partnership. However the better view seems to be that the failure to file the articles of incorporation, though indispensable to the creation of a corporation de jure, is not conclusive against the existence of a corporation de facto."
In the case of Huntington Manufacturing Company v.Schofield,
In Williamson v. The Kokomo Building and Loan *515 Fund Association (1883),
Therefore, we conclude that the failure to file a duplicate of its articles in the recorder's office of the county in which the principal place of business of such association is located did not prevent the Fort Wayne Transfer Company from being a defacto corporation.
Answering appellant's further contention that appellees are personally liable for using the name Fort Wayne Transfer and Yellow Cab Company without taking any steps required by the 3. statute to change the name of the corporation, the evidence discloses that some time before appellant's debt was created, the members of the Fort Wayne Transfer Company acquired the exclusive license to use yellow cabs in their business in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and added the words "Yellow Cab" to the corporate name Fort Wayne Transfer Company. The Fort Wayne Transfer Company *516 continued in existence after its articles of incorporation were issued on the 10th day of November, 1911, with the same stockholders, officers, and agents and carried on the same business as before but under an unauthorized name. The evidence further discloses that at the time the appellant's debt was created appellant was furnishing liability insurance to and was dealing with the Fort Wayne Transfer and Yellow Cab Company as acorporation. The debt sued upon by appellant is for premiums of liability insurance furnished by appellant to the Fort Wayne Transfer and Yellow Cab Company as an Indiana corporation. It will be noted that if there had been an actual change of name in conformity with the law, it would not have affected in any manner the identity of the corporation or added to or detracted from its rights or obligations.
In the case of Pilsen Brewing Co. v. Wallace (1920),
The evidence discloses in the instant case that the stockholders, officers, and agents and the business of both the Fort Wayne Transfer Company and the Fort Wayne Transfer and Yellow Cab Company were the same and that the officers, directors, and members of the Fort Wayne Transfer Company continued in the same business of the Fort Wayne Transfer Company after it had added the words "Yellow Cab" to its corporate name, and at the time of incurring the debt of appellant sued on herein, the appellees were carrying on the same business which they had formerly carried on under the corporate name of Fort Wayne Transfer Company, and, therefore, the evidence was such that the trial court was justified in concluding there was not such an unauthorized change of name in this case as would incur liability upon the members of the corporation as partners.
We feel it unnecessary to set out all of the facts pleaded in appellees' fourth and fifth paragraphs of answer to the appellant's second to thirteenth paragraphs of complaint for the reason that said paragraphs *518 are in substance similar and that they each substantially disclose that the Fort Wayne Transfer Company was a corporationde facto and that by using the words "Yellow Cab" in connection with the corporate name Fort Wayne Transfer Company the identity of the Fort Wayne Transfer Company as a corporation was not changed; that in truth and in fact the debt of appellant was that of the Fort Wayne Transfer Company. Therefore, the trial court committed no error in overruling appellant's demurrer to each of said paragraphs of answer.
Appellant assigns as error the admission in evidence of certain proceedings in the receivership of the Fort Wayne Transfer Company upon the theory that said proceedings were 4. immaterial and irrelevant and self-serving. The evidence discloses that Lennart and Ortlieb were agents representing the appellant locally in the furnishing of the liability insurance in question and that said Lennart and Ortlieb had on former occasions taken notes for premiums from the Fort Wayne Transfer Company and had filed these notes as claims in said receivership proceeding. Therefore, the receivership proceedings were not immaterial and self-serving.
The appellant points out in its brief a number of other rulings of the court in the admission and rejection of evidence, and upon our examination of them we fail to find any error of the court affecting the substantial rights of the parties. We think there is no harmful error shown, and the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed. *519