66 Cal. 288 | Cal. | 1885
The gravamen of the complaint is that the defendant has usurped the franchise to be a corporation ; and, inasmuch as a corporation in this State can exist only by virtue of a compliance with the law which authorizes the creation of a corporate body, the respondent insists that the allegation that it never was incorporated is the equivalent of an allegation that it never existed as a natural person or corporation, and therefore cannot be sued under section 803, Code Civil Proc., which provides that an action may be brought “ against any person who usurps, intrudes into, or unlawfully holds or exercises any public office, civil or military, or any franchise within this State.” “ The word 6 person ’ includes a corporation as well as a natural
An allegation that a person had usurped the office of supervisor of the county of A, would be inconsistent with one that there was no county of A. And since a city cannot exist in this State without incorporation, it is equally inconsistent to sue one as a corporation, and at the same time deny its existence as a corporation. But for this there is a precedent (People v. Nevada, 6 Cal. 143); and as no substantial right of any one can be prejudiced by following it, we think no good would result from not doing so ; particularly as the object of the code will be effected, and justice promoted thereby. (Code Civil Proc., § 4.) And in Regina v. City of Chester, cited in King v. Amery, 2 Term R. 565, there seems to have been a judgment against the city of Chester on default for failing to show its right to be a corporation. In People v. Flint, 64 Cal. 49, the judgment that the association, of which the defendants were alleged to be officers, never had any legal existence as a corporation, was reversed on the ground that such a judgment could not properly be rendered in an action to which the association was not a party.
In New Jersey it has been held that, in an action to have it
The complaint shows : (1) That the petition presented to the board of supervisors was not one that had been signed by at least one hundred electors of the county, but was a copy of one which had been signed by them. The law requires the presentation of a petition signed by the stated number of electors, and does not authorize the board to act on a copy. (2) That the board did not ascertain and determine how many inhabitants resided within the boundaries of said proposed corporation. The law requires this to be done, before notice of an election is given. (3) That the notice of election did not require the voters to cast ballots containing the names of persons voted for to fill the various elective municipal offices prescribed by law for such a corporation. The notice should have contained that requirement. (4) That the board did not declare to which class of municipal corporations this one belonged. It should have done so. (5) That the board made no order declaring the territory included within the proposed boundaries of “ the city of Riverside ” duly incorporated. That is one of the requirements of the law.
Thornton, J., and Myrick, J., concurred.