75 So. 178 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1917
The defendant was indicted (together with another, who was acquitted), for the offense of embezzlement. The indictment charged that Harry A. Speaker, an officer, agent, or clerk of the W.D. Wood Lumber Company, a body corporate, did embezzle, or fraudulently convert to his own use, or to the use of another, or did fraudulently secrete with intent to convert to his own use, or the use of another, certain building materials aggregating several hundred dollars in value, etc.
Before entering upon the trial, the defendant, under section 6876, Code 1907, filed a sworn plea denying the existence of such corporation, as follows:
"Comes the above defendant and for plea to the indictment heretofore filed against him says that there is not now, and that there was not at the time of the finding and filing of the indictment in this cause, a corporation in existence as the W.D. Wood Lumber Company, nor was there any such corporation as the W.D. Wood Lumber Company in existence within the period of three years next and before the finding of the indictment in this cause."
The plea was properly sworn to, and as a result thereof cast upon the state the burden of proving the existence of the corporation mentioned. Barr v. State,
"I charge you that the law was not complied with in the attempted change of the name of the Wood-Norris Lumber Company to the W.D. Wood Lumber Company."
The court also gave at the request of the defendant, written charge No. 20:
"I charge you that there is no proof before you that there was in existence a legally organized incorporated company, known as the W.D. Wood Lumber Company."
It would appear, therefore, from the undisputed evidence in this case that the real legal name of the body corporate in question still remained and was at the time of the alleged embezzlement and at the time of the bringing of the indictment the Wood-Norris Lumber Company. This company had been duly and legally in existence for some period of time, and it could not be said that a futile effort to simply change its name would operate as a dissolution of said incorporated company, or to convert it into a de facto corporation. The statute (Code 1907, § 3510) prescribes how to dissolve a corporation. The attempt to change its name which resulted in failure could not affect said incorporated company's legal status; hence it would appear from the evidence that, notwithstanding how the business was conducted, the legal name of the company at the time of the alleged offense was the Wood-Norris Lumber Company, and not the W.D. Wood Lumber Company, as averred in the indictment.
The sworn plea interposed by the defendant cast upon the state a burden it did not and could not meet (Barr v. State, supra; Boykin v. State, supra; Burrow v. State,
Other questions presented need not be passed on, as such of them as would have merited discussion in any event are not liable to arise in another trial.
Reversed and remanded.