250 P. 850 | Colo. | 1926
PLAINTIFF in error, plaintiff below, and a creditor of The Alfalfa Farms Company, a corporation, sued defendants, directors of the last named company, for failure to file an annual report of the corporation, with the secretary of state, containing the information required by section 2312, C.L. 1921. Judgment was for defendants, and plaintiff brings the case here for review.
The eighth paragraph of the section referred to, requires corporations of this character to give, "Such other information as will show with reasonable fullness and certainty the condition of its real and personal property, and the financial condition of said corporation, joint stock company or association at the date of filing such report." The answer was, "This company owns 1812 acres of farm and grazing land in Elbert County, Colo. Has live stock of the value of $2,600, feed of the value of $1,500, equipment for the farm amounting to $7,000, and is actively engaged in farming and stock raising."
The only question involved is whether the statement that the company owns 1812 acres of farm and grazing land in Elbert County, Colo., taken in connection with what follows, gives the information required by the statute, with reasonable fullness and certainty, and if it shows the financial condition of the company. *278
The mere statement that the company owns 1812 acres of land in the big county named, without any statement of its value, affords little information as to its condition, or the financial condition of the corporation. It is a matter of universal knowledge that a tract of 100 acres, or even much less, might well be worth far more than 1812 acres of a different character, or with less improvements, or for any number of local reasons, that cannot be guessed by a stranger. The statement is about as informing as it would be to say, "I own a house and lot in Colorado Springs." It lacks all elements of certainty; it is wholly uncertain, and so is not a compliance with the statute. Such being the case, it is the same as if no report were filed at all. International State Bank v. McGlashan,
Defendants file a cross-assignment of error, alleging that the trial court erred in not sustaining their demurrer to the complaint on the ground that it did not state a cause of action. They argue that the complaint is ambiguous in failing to show whether the action is for not filing any report at all, or on account of a defective report, and cite Schroeder v. Snarr,
The judgment is reversed with directions to enter judgment for plaintiff in accordance with this opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE ALLEN and MR. JUSTICE WHITFORD not participating.