24 Mont. 515 | Mont. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff has appealed from a judgment entered against him upon his failure to plead further after a demurrer to the complaint had been sustained. Eliminating allegations not material to the case as presented, as well as mere legal conclusions, and confining our inquiry to the points made in this court by counsel for the plaintiff, the questions arise out of the following facts admitted by the demurrer: On July 8, 1886, the plaintiff and one Napton delivered to the Golden Gate Mining Company, a corporation formed under the provisions of Chapter XV of the Fifth Division, General Laws of the Revised Statutes of Montana, 1879, their deed conveying to it certain lode-mining claims owned by them as tenants in common. The certificate of association or articles of in
The contention of the plaintiff is thus stated by his counsel: ‘ ‘The complaint proceeds upon the theory that the corporation went out of existence upon the adoption of the state constitution, the 8th day of November, 1889, and that all subsequent acts mentioned in the complaint were null and void; that the deed from plaintiff became of no force or virtue; that the note given was void; that the sale was void, and that Clark & Bro. have the sheriff’s certificate of sale to property which belongs to the plaintiff, and hold' an adverse claim thereto against him, thereby casting a cloud upon the title of the plaintiff to the property, — that is, conceding, for the sake of the argument, that the facts stated show that the corporation had a de facto existence prior to the adoption of the constitution.” There are, therefore, but two questions to be determined, the first being whether the Golden Gate Mining Company had a legal. existence as a corporation at the time the plaintiff made the grant to it.
Affirmed.