110 Kan. 532 | Kan. | 1922
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On April 9, 1920, T. W. Harris brought an action in the district court of Bourbon county against a defendant described as United States Mexico Oil Company, a corporation, asking judgment for $2,999 claimed to be due him under a written contract with such defendant executed May 24, 1918, for the drilling of three wells, one north and two south of the .Osage river, in Bourbon
“The term corporations, as used, in this article, shall include all associations and joint-stock companies having powers and privileges not possessed by individuals or partnerships; and all corporations may sue and be sued in their corporate name.” (Art. 12, § 6.)
In Idaho a somewhat similar constitutional definition has been held (one of the three justices dissenting) not to include such organizations. (Spotswood v. Morris, 12 Idaho, 360.) The provision there interpreted, however, contains two very significant words which are omitted from that of the Kansas constitution — those which we italicize in the following copy of the section:
“The term ‘corporation,’ as used in this article, shall be held and construed to include all associations and joint stock companies' having or exercising any of the powers or privileges of corporations not possessed by individuals or partnerships.” (Idaho Const., Art. 11, § 10.)
The word “corporations” in the italicized phrase obviously means corporations in the general sense, not enlarged or modified by the definition in which it occurs; otherwise the word would be defined in its own terms. The powers and privileges of corporations as such, as the word is ordinarily used, may well be regarded as those conferred by legislative act. That this feature of the matter influenced the decision of the Idaho court is indicated by the language of the syllabus — “To legally possess or exercise powers or privileges of corporations requires a sovereign grant.” When the Kansas constitution was adopted a provision like that of the constitution of Idaho, including the words “of corporations,” was contained in the constitutions of New York (Constitution of 1846, Art. 8, § 3) and Michigan (Constitution of 1850, Art. 15, §11), with which the framers of our own constitution were presumably familiar. The Kansas provision was obviously derived from that of New York. Its omission of the words “of corporations” must be regarded as intended to affect the meaning and give to it much the same force as though it read: “The term corporations, as used in this article, shall include all associations and joint stock companies having powers and privileges not possessed by individuals or partnerships,
“The thing that brought these Pure Trusts in existence in Massachusetts and New York, was the fact that corporations could not hold real estate and deal in the same, and the Trust organization was created to do the very thing that corporations were not permitted to do, and were made necessary to transact business which corporations were forbidden by law to transact.”
The defendant cites and relies upon a decision that a statutory limited partnership is not a corporation within the application of the rule treating a corporation as a citizen of the state creating it for the purpose of determining the jurisdiction of the federal courts where based on diverse citizenship — a rule founded on the presumption, or rather fiction, that all the .stockholders of a corporation are citizens of the state under whose laws it is created. (Great Southern Fire Proof Hotel Co. v. Jones, 177 U. S. 449.) The case, in our judgment, sheds no light upon the question we are now considering. In the opinion it was said:
“Nor can we accede to the suggestion that this question of jurisdiction is affected by the clause of the Constitution of Pennsylvania providing that the term ‘Corporations,’ as used in article XYI of that instrument, ‘shall be construed to include all joint stock companies or associations having any of the powers or privileges of corporations not possessed by individuals or partnerships,’ Const. Pa., art. XVI, § 13. The only effect of that clause is to place the joint stock companies or associations referred to under the restrictions*536 imposed by that article upon corporations; and. not to invest them with all the attributes of corporations.....That a limited partnership association created under the Pennsylvania statute may be described as a 'quasi corporation,’ having some of the characteristics of a corporation, or as a ‘new artificial person,’ is not a sufficient reason for regarding it as a corporation within the'jurisdictional rule heretofore adverted to. That rule must not be extended. We are unwilling to extend it so as to embrace partnership associations.” (pp. 456, 457.)
In Keystone Bank v. Donnelly, 196 Fed. 832, an association organized under a Pennsylvania statute describing it as a partnership was held to be a corporation by virtue of the constitutional provision quoted in the foregoing extract. In the opinion it was said:
“It is hardly .necessary to say that, in determining whether the act of 1899 empowers the creation of corporations or of partnerships, the name used by the statute is not decisive. If the association is really a corporation — that is, if it receives the distinctive rights and privileges of a corporation — it cannot be a partnership, no matter what label the Legislature may choose to affix. The Pennsylvania Constitution has gone far to settle controversy on this subject. It declares in section 13 of article 16 — this article makes numerous provisions concerning ‘private corporations’ — that: ‘The term “corporation” as used in this article shall be considered to include all joint-stock companies or associations having any of the powers or privileges of corporations not possessed by individuals or partnerships.’ And this I think may fairly be quoted as the constitutional definition of a corporation, which should be applied unless context or subject-matter should forbid.
“Let us turn, therefore, to the act of 1899 and inquire what powers or privileges it gives to an association organized thereunder. That it calls the association a ‘partnership’ is of some, but not of much, value. It certainly does not use the word in the ordinary sense, for nobody can suppose that such a statute would have been passed, except for the definite purpose of authorizing the formation of an extraordinary ‘partnership’ — an association possessing special privileges, similar at least to those possessed by a corporation. . . The Trust Company had all the essential marks of a corporation, and in my judgment is to be treated as such an association.” (pp. 833, ¿37.)
The constitution of Minnesota, the state in which the trust agreement creating the defendant association was executed, contains a provision quite similar in effect to that we are considering, although the language is somewhat different. It reads:
*536 “The term ‘corporations’ as used in this article, shall be construed to include all associations and joint stock- companies having any of the powers and privileges not possessed by individuals or partnerships, except such as embrace banking privileges, and all corporations shall have the right to sue,
We find nothing in the argument presented by the defendant or elsewhere sufficient to justify us in overruling the decision already made that “Massachusetts trusts” are corporations, within the meaning of our statutes where reasonably applicable.
“That the said ‘Trust’ [referring to the defendant] did not enter into any contract with one T. W. Harris on the 24th day of May, 1918, for the reason the same was not then in existence', that on said 24th day of May, 1918, the said ‘Trust’ did not own leases south of Osage River in Bourbon County, nor did it authorize the drilling of wells on same ...”
These averments being addressed to the merits of the plaintiff’s claim upon the facts are nonjurisdictional, and in raising them in this manner the defendant entered a general appearance and waived any defect in the service. (Barnett v. Insurance Co., 78 Kan. 630, 97 Pac. 962.)
We do not understand that any appeal was taken from the order overruling the motion to dismiss the case which was filed May 29, 1920, or that complaint is now made of that ruling. The motion, however, was properly overruled because it was not verified and no showing of fact was made in support of it, and for this reason
The defendant asserts that the publication notice was defective because the first publication was made April 15, 1920, and the proof of publication wag made May 1, 1920. It is argued that it was impossible to make three weeks’ publication between these dates. The proof showed the publication to have been made in a weekly paper, and we see no reason why the insertion of the notice in the issues of April 15, April 22 and April 29 was not sufficient. However, the general appearance would cure the defect if it existed.
No injustice can result from upholding the judgment in the present case. Under the liberal practice prevailing in this state the defendant might before trial have made its showing against the validity of the service and upon an adverse ruling upon that point could without waiving it have defended on the merits. It elected to rely solely upon the jurisdictional question presented in an attack upon the judgment. By including nonjurisdictional grounds in its motion to set aside the judgment it entered a general appearance and thereby waived all defects in the service. If it were conceded that the defendant is not a corporation within the constitutional definition, and that the provision that corporations may sue and be sued in their corporate name does not apply to it, the contention that it is not such a legal entity as to be capable of being sued would still be unsound. A judgment is not a nullity although rendered against a mere partnership by its firm name upon publication notice addressed in that manner. (Neiswanger v. Ord, 81 Kan. 63, 105 Pac. 17; Notes, 29 L. R. A., n. s., 285, 287. See, also, Packing and Provision Co. v. Casing Co., 34 Kan. 340, 8 Pac. 403.)
The judgment is affirmed.