Plaintiff, Mitchell in his complaint, for a first cause of action, alleged that the defendant, Iíeber O. and John Jensen and Thomas D. Eoche, were partners in business under the firm name of the' Southern Utah Mercantile & Lumber Company; that the defendants were indebted to Lowenberg & Co., a copartnership at San Francisco, for goods sold and delivered to the defendants to the value of $579, an assignment thereof to plaintiff, and non payment of the debt. In the second cause of action he alleged that the defendants were indebted to A. Schillings & Co., of San Francisco, for goods sold and delivered to the said defendants to the value of $40 an assignment thereof to plaintiff, and nonpayment of the debt. Defendants Jensens (the only parties served) answered, denying each and every allegation of the. complaint, and further alleged that the said goods mentioned in the complaint were sold to the Southern Utah Mercantile & Lumber Company, a corporation, and that the assignors of the plaintiff dealt with the said company as such, with full knowledge and understanding of its corporate existence, and alleged an es-toppel precluding plaintiff from obtaining a judgment against the defendants as individuals. The case was tried before the court without a jury. Upon findings and conclusions made, judgment was had against defendants Jenson individually on both causes of action for the full amount sued for. The defendants appeal.
The only evidence shown on the part of the plaintiff was that he had a conversation with Heber C. Jenson, in which he stated to plaintiff that he did not know of such a claim against the firm, and, if there was, they expected to settle it, and wanted to know whether he would take fifty cents on the dollar. Plaintiff said that he would communicate with the San Francisco firms, and, after having done so, informed Jensen that they would settle for said amount provided it
1. The principal errors assigned are that the court erred in overruling defendants’ motion for nonsuit, that the findings are not sustained by the evidence, that the court failed to find on some material issues, and, in effect, that the findings are not sufficient to support the judgment. [Respondent asserts the bill of exceptions does not disclose that it contains all the evidence before the trial court, and therefore it will be presumed there was sufficient evidence to support the findings, and that the court had sufficient evidence justifying the overruling of the motion for nonsuit. And in support of which is cited (Hecla Min. Co. v. Gisborn, 21 Utah 68, 59 Pac. 518; Olson v. Ry. Co., 24 Utah 460, 68 Pac. 148; and Fields v. Min. Co., 25 Utah 76, 69 Pac. 528.) This doctrine is well established in this court. And while we have no disposition to relax it, we are disposed to treat this record as containing all the evidence. The bill of exceptions is a transcript of the official stenographer’s notes, containing the testimony of the witnesses by questions and answers; in like manner, depositions, documentary evidence, and remarks of court and counsel; and the transcript is accompanied with a certificate from said stenographer certifying that “the foregoing is a full, true, and correct transcript of the testimony and other proceedings had on the trial of the foregoing entitled cause.” The transcript, with the said declaration of the stenographer, is certified to, allowed and settled and signed by, the court, as and for the bill of exceptions. While, no doubt, it is the better practice to have the declaration either in the body of the bill, at the close of the evidence, or in the certificate of the court, in clear terms, to the effect that the bill contains all the evidence in the cause or bearing on the points illustrating the assigned error, yet we think the foregoing substantially shows this fact. With the statement in the bill that the “foregoing is a full, true, and correct trans-script of the testimony and other proceedings had on the
2. The court found that the goods were sold and delivered to the defendants. But there is no evidence showing that the goods were sold and delivered to the defendants Jensen, or either of them. The evidence conclusively shows that the dealings and transactions had in respect to said matters were with Boche, in the name of the Southern Utah Mercantile & Lumber Company, and the one who had charge of said business ; and, so far as the record discloses, the defendants Jensen were unknown in said transaction, except only as they may have been members of said firm, or were obligors arising from their connection with an abortive corporation. It therefore became necessary and was material for the court to find upon that issue raised by the pleadings, and to find what connection or relation the said Jensens had with such company, or what they had to do therewith, or what they had to do with the business and dealings carried on in said name. This the court did not do. The finding “that the Southern Utah Mercantile & Lumber Company was not a corporation, either de jure or de facto, such as to enable the defendants to bind creditors,” is all there is on the subject. Treating such a finding as sufficient that the said company was not a corporation, still there is a total want of finding as to what the defendants had to do with the business or dealings carried on under such name, or what their relations were with the same.
What we have here said on the question of this company not being a corporation is, of course, to have application only to the specific facts before us. Here there is a total want of evidence that the assignors of plaintiff dealt with said company as a corporation. The only evidence on the subject is that of Lowenberg, who said he did not know the company was an incorporated company which if anything tends to the contrary. The evidence is but scant and meager that the company was transacting business in a corporate capacity, or exercising corporate functions under a bona fide effort to organize under the law, and a belief that such organization had been effected; and, moreover, the court wholly failed to find on this issue presented by the pleadings. “It is the duty of the trial court to find upon all the material issues made by the pleadings, whether evidence be introduced or not, and, if there be no finding on a material issue, the judgment cannot be supported.” (2 Spelling, New Tr. and App., sec. 591; Speegle v. Leese, 51 Cal. 415; Golson v. Dunlap, 78 Cal. 161, 14 Pac. 576.)
We do not wish to be understood in any manner as saying anything conflicting with the doctrine laid down by this court and supported by the great weight of authorities, that “where there has been a bona fide attempt to create a corporation, and an assumption and exercise of corporate functions sufficient to constitute a corporation de facto, as a general rule, its legal existence cannot be called in question collaterally,” and especially where the complaining party has dealt with the company as a corporation. (Marsh & Olsen v. Mathias et al., 19 Utah 350, 56 Pac. 1074; 1 Cook, Cor. (5 Ed.), sec. 234, and numerous cases there cited and collected.)
The court not having found (and, besides, there not being any evidence thereof) that the assignors of plaintiff dealt with the said company as a corporation, nor as to its assumption or exercise of corporate functions, or doing business in a corporate capacity under a bona fide attempt of incorporating
Tbe order of this court, therefore, is that tbe judgment of tbe court below be, and tbe same is hereby, reversed, and tbe cause remanded for a new trial; tbe costs of this appeal to be taxed against respondent.