37 Cal. 538 | Cal. | 1869
Three questions have been discussed in argument:
First—Does the plaintiff exist as a corporation under the name of “Pacific Bank?”
Second—Is the defendant in a position to question the corporate existence of the plaintiff?
Third—Do the Bevenue Laws of the United States require a waiver of “ presentation and demand, notice of non-payment and protest for value received,” written upon the back of a promissory note by an indorser, to be stamped ?
The first question involves the power of the Legislature to change the name of a corporation by special statute, it being claimed that the power is denied by the thirty-first section of the Fourth Article of the Constitution, which provides that “ corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by special Act, except for municipal purposes.” The mere changing of the name of a corporation is not, as it appears to us, the creation of a corporation in the sense of the Constitution. As suggested by counsel for the plaintiff*, it would seem that the changing of the name of a corporation is no more the creation of a corporation than the changing of the name of a natural person is the begetting of a natural person. The Act, in both cases, would seem to
The waiver of presentation, demand, notice of non-payment, and protest was not a contract within the meaning of the laws of the United States requiring a stamp. The statute requires a promissory note to be stamped, but so far as
Judgment affirmed,