38 N.E.2d 754 | Ill. | 1941
Defendant, Edward J. Hughes, Secretary of State, appeals from a judgment of the circuit court of Cook county ordering the issuance of a writ of mandamus commanding defendant to issue to the plaintiff, the Investors Syndicate of America, Inc., a Minnesota corporation, a certificate of authority to transact business in this State as a foreign corporation.
Plaintiff is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Investors Syndicate, an old, established corporation, which parent corporation has done business in Illinois for many years, and at present has outstanding in this State installment savings contracts and certificates of an aggregate maturity value of approximately $40,270,000, with a cash surrender value of approximately $3,460,000. The business dealings of the parent company, in this State, have always been satisfactory and no investment with it has been lost. It became subject to the terms of the Federal Investment Company act, effective January 1, 1941, which provided for the registration and regulation of investment companies with the Securities and Exchange Commission. After due investigation and consideration, the parent company concluded it could best and most efficiently function under that act, through the medium of a wholly owned subsidiary, which plan met with the approval of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Under that plan, the plaintiff company, as such subsidiary, was organized to take over the business of issuing and selling investment contracts after January 1, 1941, under the name the "Investors Syndicate of America, Inc." *416 The parent company ceased selling investment contracts on January 1, 1941. However, in accordance with the obligations of its existing contracts, it continues to collect payments, and keep funds invested on outstanding contracts until they mature. Under the plan all assets of the parent corporation are to remain intact for the benefit of its creditors alone. The operations of both companies are to be carried on by the already existing organization and personnel of the parent company. In plaintiff's statement it appears that it has of paid-in capital and surplus, $1,012,500.
On November 18, 1940, it filed a formal application with the defendant Secretary of State, pursuant to sections 102, 106 and 107 of the Business Corporations act, seeking a certificate of authority to transact business in Illinois as a foreign corporation under the name and style of the Investors Syndicate of America, Inc. Consent of the parent company to the issuance of such certificate was filed. The consent of the parent corporation does not purport to make the new corporation an agent of the parent corporation or to underwrite or guarantee the contracts of the new corporation, or to make any of the assets of the old company available for the fulfillment of contracts entered into by the new corporation. It is conceded that no one contracting with the subsidiary may look to the parent company as security for fulfilling his contract.
The Secretary of State denied the certificate on the ground that he was forbidden by the Business Corporations act to issue it. Section 104(a) (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1939, chap. 32, par. 157.104) of that act is as follows: "No certificate of authority shall be issued to a foreign corporation: (a) Which has a name the same as, or deceptively similar to, the name of any domestic corporation existing under any act of this State or any foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this State, or a name the exclusive right to which is, at the time, reserved in the manner provided in this act," etc. Plaintiff's amended petition for *417 mandamus prayed, as alternative relief, that the trial court grant an appeal from the Secretary of State's decision and hear its petition de novo under section 148 of the Business Corporations act.
Defendant filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds that under said section 104(a) of the Business Corporations act it was his duty to refuse to issue a certificate to plaintiff because its proposed name was "deceptively similar" to that of another corporation authorized to transact business in Illinois. The court denied defendant's motion and ordered him to answer. He, however, elected to stand on his motion to dismiss and a writ ofmandamus was ordered as prayed. The court also denied a trial denovo on the ground that section 148 of the Business Corporations act, purporting to grant that right, is an unconstitutional attempt to impose administrative duties upon the courts. It appears from the record that both parties requested a hearing denovo as on appeal.
Section 148 of the Business Corporations act provides that if the Secretary of State shall fail to approve any document before the same shall be filed in this office, as provided in the act, he shall give written notice to the person or corporation delivering the same, specifying the reasons therefor. The section then further provides: "From such disapproval such person or corporation may appeal to the circuit or superior court of the county in which the registered office of such corporation is or is proposed to be situated, by filing with the clerk of such court a petition setting forth a copy of the articles or other document sought to be filed and a copy of the written disapproval thereof by the Secretary of State; whereupon the matter shall be tried de novo by the court, and the court shall either sustain the action of the Secretary of State or direct him to take such action as the court may deem proper." Plaintiff, appellee here, contends that the court erred in not granting the statutory appeal and in holding section 148 *418 unconstitutional. No cross-appeal has been filed but the Attorney General, in his brief, expresses the opinion that the trial court was right in so holding, but asks that the validity of section 148 be decided on this appeal.
There have been numerous cases in other jurisdictions concerning the validity of similar statutes providing for so-called appeals from decisions of various State officers and bodies to the courts. A statute of this nature which designates the procedure as an "appeal" but provides for a hearing "de novo"
on a petition setting forth a copy of the documents sought to be filed, and a copy of the written disapproval of the officer or commission, this court has held, does not confer appellate jurisdiction upon the court, but merely authorizes it to exercise its original jurisdiction. To that effect are Railroad andWarehouse Com. v. Litchfield and Madison Railway Co.
Counsel for defendant cites North Chicago Hebrew Congregation
v. Board of Appeals,
Plaintiff has raised for the first time in his answer to defendant's appeal to this court, the validity of section 104(a) of the Business Corporations act, arguing that it is unconstitutional in that it attempts to delegate legislative powers to the Secretary of State. In a case such as this, where the appellee won in the court below and the constitutional question comes into existence for the first time in this court, by reason of the position of the People, this court will hear the point as raised. People v. Railway Mail Mutual Benefit Ass'n.
Plaintiff contends that the words "deceptively similar" have no generally known or accepted meaning; that, therefore, the use of those words, in the statute, without including a statutory definition, renders the act incomplete and meaningless and gives to the Secretary of State power not only to execute the law, but also to determine what the *420
law is. This precise question has not heretofore been raised in this court, although the Secretary of State's refusal to issue corporate certificates was upheld in People v. Rose,
There remains for decision the question whether the trial court erred in entering judgment against defendant on the record before it. Counsel for plaintiff argue that section 104(a) of the Business Corporations act is for the sole purpose of protecting a corporation from unfair competition and the property rights it enjoys in the use of its name, and since the parent corporation here has given its consent to the use by its subsidiary, of a name similar to that of the parent corporation, the act of the Secretary of State in refusing to issue a license to the subsidiary, because of the similarity of the names, is arbitrary and capricious. The State, on the other hand, contends that a further purpose of said section is to protect the public from being deceived, through the adoption and use of similar names, and that the act of the Secretary of State in this case is not arbitrary and capricious, but rather is a performance of a duty to protect the public.
While it is true that a majority of the adjudicated cases involving the use of a corporate name have arisen between hostile corporations, thus raising questions of unfair competition and property rights in the use of a corporate name, it is obvious both from a standpoint of public policy and from the construction of the statutes involved, that such a statute has the dual purpose of protecting competing corporations, and likewise the public, from deception in the use of deceptively similar corporate names. If the names of the corporations are "deceptively similar" the act applies and the Secretary of State is required to deny his certificate, though the new corporation may be in a position to deal in a manner more advantageous to its customers than the old. The General Assembly has not seen fit to permit the Secretary of State to weigh benefits in such a case. *422
Plaintiff cites numerous cases where the courts have refused to consider the question of fraud or imposition on the public, in controversies between hostile corporations over the use of a name. In such cases it has been held that the injunctive relief sought was based upon the protection of property rights of the plaintiff, and that an injunction will not issue unless it is made to appear that the proposed use of the name will result in injury to the complainant. (People v. Rose, supra; InternationalCommittee v. Young Women's Christian Association,
That it was the intent of the General Assembly by this section to protect the public, as well as the property rights of existing corporations, is apparent from the trend of legislation in this regard. Earlier provisions expressly permitting an existing corporation to change its name to one similar to another existing corporation, with the consent of the latter, have disappeared from the Corporations act. Section 104(a) of the act now in force contains no provisions for the consent of an existing corporation. The use of the term "deceptively similar" indicates that it was not the sole purpose of the act to protect the property rights of existing corporations, but also that the public be protected against any deception arising out of the use of similar *423 names. Thus we must conclude that the statute in question allowed the Secretary of State to exercise discretion to the end that the public would be protected.
Was plaintiff's name deceptively similar to that of the parent corporation, and was the decision of the Secretary of State so finding, a reasonable exercise of the discretion vested in him? It will be noted that the only difference between the two names lies in the fact that plaintiff has added the words "of America, Inc." to that of the parent corporation, "Investors Syndicate," and the question is whether such addition is such a distinguishing feature as to make it unlikely that anyone dealing with plaintiff would think that he was dealing with the parent company. In United States Ozone Co. v. United States Ozone Co. ofAmerica,
In the present case, where the subsidiary corporation contemplates engaging in the same business as previously transacted by the parent corporation, and conducting that business at the same locations and with the same personnel, the addition of the words "of America, Inc." is not sufficient to eliminate confusion and uncertainty of those dealing with the two corporations. The parent corporation has *424 contracts of over forty million dollars and has very large capital and surplus, yet persons dealing with the Investors Syndicate of America may not rely upon the assets of the parent corporation but must look solely to the subsidiary which has substantially less assets. The similarity of names is sufficient, in all likelihood, to cause persons dealing with the plaintiff to be deceived into thinking that they were dealing with the corporation of larger assets.
In support of its contention that defendant acted arbitrarily and capriciously, plaintiff has taken from the records in the office of the Secretary of State names of various corporations now existing, which, it contends, bear a greater similarity than the two names involved in this case. However, it is impossible for this court to determine the facts concerning the issuance of the certificates in those cases, nor can plaintiff now be heard to say that because "deceptively similar" names have been permitted in the past, the Secretary of State should now allow plaintiff the use of such a name. From the records before us we cannot say that defendant has abused the discretion vested in him by the statute, or that he has acted arbitrarily and capriciously, and this being so, plaintiff is not entitled to a writ of mandamus to compel him to issue the desired certificate.(People v. Board of Review,
Judgment reversed. *425