62 Ark. 63 | Ark. | 1896
This is a suit and attachment against W. E. Boyington and V. P. Atwell, under the firm name and style of Boyington & Atwell, and also against the Cypress Dumber Company, of which the complaint alleges the said Boyington and the said Atwell were principal members. The allegations of the complaint are substantially to the effect that defendants are indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $6,195.92, for money loaned and advanced to them; that Boyington and Atwell were the principal subscribers to the capital stock of the Cypress Dumber Company, an alleged corporation organized under the laws of Wisconsin, but whose domicile and place of doing business is in Arkansas, and the said Boyington and Atwell have each failed to pay in their part of the capital stock, and there is now due on said capital stock a large sum, viz., ten thousand dollars; that the Cypress Dumber Company failed to file proper constituting instruments required by the law of the state of Wisconsin, or by the law of the state of Arkansas, or to comply with any of the statutory provisions of the state of Wisconsin, or of Arkansas; that all business done by defendants in the name of the Cypress Dumber Company, or of Boyington and Atwell, was really in truth and fact the business of Boyington & Atwell, and managed by them, and was done in the state of Arkansas, and in the counties of Pulaski and Jefferson, of said stale; that they did in said counties a large amount of business, and the debt sued on herein was contracted in said counties, and as business carried on therein; that if defendants were ever protected by any corporate •existence of the Cypress Lumber Company as a corporation, under the laws of the state of Wisconsin, they rendered themselves liable as partners by reason of said Cypress Lumber Company emigrating from said state •of Wisconsin, its original domicil, to the state of Arkansas, and in failing to comply with the statutory provision of the state of Arkansas. Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment.
An attachment was sued out, and the individual property of Boyington and Atwell attached.
Boyington and Atwell demurred, and this was sustained as to the non-payment of the shares of the capital stock by defendants, and overruled as their individual liability for the debts of the corporation. They then answered that they had no business dealings with the plaintiff at any time; that he had at no time loaned them money; that it is not true that they (the defendants) were the principal stockholders in the Cypress Lumber Company, if by that is meant that they own most of the stock; that it is not true that they had not paid up their subscribed stock; that they together never owned more than one •share over one-half of the capital stock, and that all this has long since been paid up, and that they now owe nothing to the corporation; that the Cypress Lumber Company was a corporation formed under the laws of Wisconsin, for the transaction of such business as it was engaged in in the states of Wisconsin and Arkansas; that it was formed in strict compliance with the requirements •of the laws of Wisconsin for the formation of such corporations, and had complied with all the requirements of the laws of Arkansas imposed on foreign corporations -doing business in this state, and it was, while doing business in Arkansas, a valid corporation; that J. N. Boyington was treasurer, and James A. Brown was vice-president, W. E. Boyington was president, and V. P. Atwell was secretary; that defendants had no business relations with plaintiff, except for the Cypress Lumber Company, and as officers of the same; that plaintiff, in a long course of dealing with the Cypress Lumber Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Wisconsin, recognized and treated it as such, which it really was; and pleaded that he is estopped now to deny its corporate existence.
When the evidence was all in, the court below, on motion of plaintiff, instructed the jury to return a verdict for plaintiff, which was done, and judgment for the debt and on the attachment was rendered by the court. Defendants saved exceptions, appealed, and asked leave to tender their bill of exceptions, which was accordingly, done.
There was evidence tending to show that plaintiff had dealt with the Cypress Lumber Company as a corporation, and recognized it as such; that the same was a corporation formed and existing under the laws of Wisconsin; that defendant did not owe plaintiff anything individually, and never had any dealings with him, except as officers and members of the corporation; that they were owing nothing to the corporation. It is, therefore, difficult to see how the court below could take the case from the jury and direct a verdict against the defendant.
That a corporation should transact business in another state, unless such corporate business is prohibited in the one state or the other, or both, is not only no ... ground to treat it as an invalid corporation, but the transaction of such business is now very generally encouraged under the usual restrictions. Some of the earlier cases announce a different rule, because such manner of operating was supposed to be somehow fraudulent, as against the states concerned, as in Hill v. Beach 12 N. J. Eq. 31; but the decided weight of the more recent authorities is in support of the more liberal policy, and dealing with the subject as one growing out of the comity of states. Stout v. Zulick, 48 N. J. L. 599; Merrick v. Van Santvoord, 34 N. Y., 208; Saltmarsh v. Spaulding, 147 Mass. 224; Hanna v. Int. Petroleum Co. 23 Ohio St. 622; Second National Bank v. Hall, 35 Ohio St. 158, and numerous others.
When once regularly formed in a foreign state, until dissolved according to the laws of that state, the existence of a corporation cannot be destroyed, or even called in question, except to ascertain the fact of its existence at home, by the courts of this state. At least such seems to be the reasonable doctrine. Such a corporation may be forbidden to enter this state at all, and is forbidden by legislative enactment to do business here except on conditions, but that is all. There is no law making such null and void when attempting to do business here, without complying with conditions. The law makes their contracts, made in the course of doing business, void as against citizens.
The objection that the bill of exceptions does not show that it contained all the evidence is not well rounded in a case like this, where the judgment is based on a total want of evidence on the part of defendants, however well founded it might be in a case determined on the weight of evidence. The answer to the objection in this case is that the bill of exceptions shows some evidence on the part of defendant, and when, as in this case, the appeal is taken to correct the error of the lower court in refusing to permit the jury to consider this evidence, whatever may be its weight or value, all the evidence in the case is not needed.
Reversed and remanded for a new hearing.