Granby Mining & Smelting Co. v. Richards

95 Mo. 106 | Mo. | 1888

Black, J.

This action is based upon five promissory notes and an open account, and which, without the •credits, aggregate seventy-five thousand dollars. The notes are dated in 1881 and 1882, and are signed “Missouri Zinc Company,” some of them by “T. T. Richards, Treas.,” and others 'by “Eben Richards, Prest.” The •open account is for a balance for zinc sold in 1881. The petition alleges that the defendant, Eben Richards, and •others not made defendants, were partners doing business under the name of the “Missouri Zinc Company,” .and as such executed the notes and incurred the indebtedness. There was a judgment against the defendant for $49,743.33, and he sued out this writ of error.

That the plaintiff corporation supposed the Missouri Zinc Company was a corporation, and made all of the transactions in question with it as such, is clearly shown. The Missouri Zinc Company has, and has had, a board •of directors and other officers since 1869 ; and the defendant supposed that he was but a shareholder and officer in a corporation, and never professed to be doing business as a partner with the other persons. The plaintiff prevailed in the circuit court on the ground that the Missouri Zinc Company was not a legally organized •corporation, and defendant was held liable as a partner, with the named persons. The defendant insists (1) that Ms company was, and is, a corporation duly organized *109under the charter of the Missouri Petroleum and Mining Company ; (2) that, if it is not a corporation de jure, it is, and was, a corporation de facto; (3) that in either-case the members of the company are not chargeable for its debts as partners. The special act of February 20y 1865 (Acts of 1864-5, p. 268), makes designated persons* their associates and successors, a perpetual body corporate by the name of the Missouri Petroleum ancL Mining Company, with power to mine coal, lead, iron*, and other minerals, to-bore for oil, etc., to refine the* same for trade, to quarry stone, and to buy, sell, and lease real'estate. The capital is not to exceed two million dollars; the chief office to be at St. Louis ; and the-corporation not to be subject to the seventh, thirteenth*, fourteenth, fifteenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth sections of the first article of the corporation law of 1855. It is also provided: “And said corporation-shall have power to create and dispose of special stock, in any one or more of its mining or other operations, which special stock shall be no part of the general stock of the corporation, nor shall its holders be liable-for, or interested in, any other than the special propérty and business for which said special stock shall be created ; the holders of said special stock, when the- same-shall have been taken, may become a- distinct company* under the name and style designating such special enterprise, and may elect its own officers and exercise all the general powers and enjoy all the privileges of a distinct corporation under the provisions of chapter- 34 of the Revised Statutes of 1855, entitled ‘An act concerning corporations,5 approved November 23,1855* with exemption from the provisions of the seventh, thirteenth* fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, eighteenth, and twentieth sections of the first article of said act.55 It is also provided that “when such special company or companies are created and organized, a certificate in -writing shall be filed in the office of the circuit clerk of the-county *110in which, the business of the company is carried on, and a duplicate thereof in the office of the secretary of state, which certificate shall state the name, object, amount of capital stock of said company, and the number of shares of its stock, and the number and the names of the directors of such company, also stating the names of the .towns.and county or counties in which the operations of such company are to be carried on, said certificate to be signed by the president of such company with its seal affixed thereto.” Laws 1865, p. 269.

Defendant became a subscriber for fifty shares of special ■stock at the organization of the Missouri Zinc Company in 1869. A certificate of its organization was then made out in due form, under the above quoted provisions, and filed with the secretary of state in March, 1869. By this certificate the main office of the special company is located at St. Louis, and it states that the mining and other operations are to be carried on in St. Louis and Washington counties, and in such other towns and counties in the state as the business of the company may require ; but this certificate was never filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court in either of those •counties.

1. The first question is, whether the failure to file the certificate with the clerk of the circuit court makes the defendant liable for the debts of the association. In the case of Hurt v. Salisbury, 55 Mo. 311, the articles of association were in due form, had been filed in the recorder’s office, but not with the secretary of state. The general law, by virtue of which the association was ¡attempted to be created, made it the duty of the officers to file a copy of the articles of association with the secretary of state, and provided that “ the corporate existence of such corporation shall date from the time of .filing said copy of such articles.” It was held that, until the officers took this final step, the corporation had no power to issue the note there sued upon, and *111hence the defendants, who were directors, were liable. They had signed the note as directors. That, and the subsequent case of Richardson v. Pitts, 71 Mo. 128, proceed upon the ground that conditions precedent to corporate existence had not been performed. But, as said in Mining Co. v. Woodbury, 14 Cal. 424, there is a broad'and obvious distinction between such acts as are declared to be necessary steps in the process of incorporation, and such as are required of the individuals seeking to become incorporated, but which are not made prerequisites to the assumption of corporate powers. In respect to the former, any material omission will be fatal to the existence of the corporation, and may be taken advantage of, collaterally, in any form in which the fact of incorporation can properly be called in question. . In respect to the latter, the corporation is responsible only to the government, and in a direct proceeding to forfeit its charter.

Now the question in this case is to be determined by the special act before quoted, not by the general law, as in Hurt v. Salisbury, supra. It is true that some of the sections of chapter 34, Revised Statutes, 1855, are made a part of the charter ; but they have no relation to the organization of the corporation. By the special act incorporating the Missouri Petroleum & Mining Company, the disposal of special stock in one of its operations, and the organization , of a special company, are matters to be performed by and under the supervision of the directors of the parent company. All this seems to have been done in the present case, and made matter of record on the books of the parent company. The act says: “ When such special company or companies are created and organized, a certificate shall 'in writing be filed,” etc. This language does not indicate, nor is there anything in the general scope of the act to indicate, that the filing of the certificate with the circuit clerk is made a matter of condition precedent to the *112assumption of corporate powers, or the execution of corporate contracts. The failure to file the certificate with the clerk of the circuit court is an omission of which the state alone can complain. This conclusion is not inconsistent with Kaiser v. Bank, 56 Iowa, 104; Bigelow v. Gregory, 73 Ill. 197, or the cases before cited from this court; for the language of the law in these cases was essentially different from that in this case. But the rule of Hurt v. Salisbury, supra, ought not to be extended.

2. That the power to make laws cannot be' delegated by the legislature, is conceded on all hands; and plaintiff says the act of February 20, 1865, so far as it authorized the organization of the Missouri Zinc Company, was a delegation of legislative power. Morawetz says: It seems, therefore, that a general power to confer corporate franchises cannot be delegated by the legislature to any other agent. However, where the legislature has enacted that a corporation may be formed upon compliance with certain conditions, it is no objection that ministerial duties, such as the issuing of a certificate or charter, must be performed by some officer-before the incorporation takes effect.” 1 Morawetz on Priv. Corp., sec. 15. That corporations may be organized under general laws is no longer a debatable question. The powers of this corporation, The Missouri Zinc Company, and the procedure by which it could be brought into existence, were all fixed and prescribed by statute law, perfect as it left the hands of the legislature. The object seems to have been to enable the parent company to separate from its business some of its mining or other operations. Since corporations may be created under general laws, we do not see how it can be said this law is invalid. We think it is valid, as against any objection made to it.

3. We do not see how the General Statutes of 1865 can have anything to do with the organization of this-*113corporation. The seventh section of article. 1, of chapter 34, Revised Statutes of 1855, does declare that the charter of every corporation thereafter granted shall be subject to alteration and repeal; but that section is, by the special act of February 20, 1865, excluded from any application to the corporations organized thereunder.

We conclude that, upon the undisputed facts of this case, the judgment should have been for defendant. Judgment reversed.

All concur.
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