274 Mo. 361 | Mo. | 1918
I. The State of Missouri, upon the information of its attorney in Mississippi County, charges in quo warranto, that the defendant, a Wisconsin corporation, filed a certificate of its corporate purposes with the Secretary of State,, on January 3, 1894, to-wit:
“To purchase, lease, build, construct, alter, maintain and operate, rent and sell sawmills, grist and. feed*369 mills, planing mills, sash, door, blind and furniture factories, etc.”
That procuring, in accordance therewith, a license to do business, defendant thereafter failed to comply with the laws of this State in the matter of filing' its charter, maintaining a public office and making reports of .its business; that defendant- also violated the Constitution of this State in the tenure of real estate not “necessary and proper” for the conduct of “its legitimate business” for more than six years and that in attempted evasion of the Constitution it put the title to 20,090 acres of land, which it held in this State, in one Gilchrist, who was thereafter a nominal titleholder for .the benefit of the corporation and through whom it bought and sold for itself lands in this State; that said conveyance was made to Gilchrist August 18, 1902, a little less than six years after defendant ceased to do any business in this State other than as incident to the ownership of said land through said trustee. The information prayed a forfeiture of the corporate rights and property and for such other judgments and orders as to the court might seem meet and proper.
The answer admitted defendant to be a corporation organized in Wisconsin, admitted it did not file its articles of incorporation or corporate purposes when it sought admission into this State, except as stated above in the information; denied that it was the owner of any real estate in Mississippi County, Missouri,-six years before the filing of the information, and denied that its conveyance thereof to .Gilchrist in 1902 ' was for the fraudulent purpose of evading the Constitution of this State. The answer set up that it did, however, file'its articles of incorporation in this State on March 28, 1911, under which it was entitled to acquire and dispose of lands and real estate within the United States, and other things. The answer also set up that the lands originally purchased by defendant were valuable at that time only for timber and that it
The reply took issue and also averred that defendant was estopped to deny that its lawful power to do business in this State was confined to the things mentioned in the statement which it filed with the Secretary of State when it obtained a license from him in 189’4.
Upon the trial the court, among other things, found that the defendant had violated the Constitution and statutes of Missouri by holding the lands described in the information for more than six years, which were not necessary and proper for carrying on its legitimate business, and that its conveyance to G-ilehrist in 1902, and the declaration of trust made by him, were for the purpose of evading the Constitution and laws and statutes of Missouri and fraudulent and void. Wherefore the court fined defendant $5000 and costs of suit and ordered execution, to reverse which judgment defendant has- appealed.
II. It is wholly unnecessary to discuss what right's an'd powers defendant might have enjoyed in this State under a land-buying and land-purchasing charter such as it did not file when it obtained a license to do business here, but only filed after the happening of matters charged in the information and the institution of that proceeding on behalf of the State. What is actually produced as its plea for a. right to do business in this State was a statement (copied above) that it was incorporated to build and operate sawmills, furniture factories, “etc.” In accordance with these specific objects it was licensed to do business in this State. That was
“No corporation shall engage in business other than that expressly authorized in its charter or the law under which it may have been or hereafter may be organized, nor shall it hold any real estate for any period longer than six years, except such as may be necessary and proper for carrying on its legitimate business.” [Constitution, art. 12, sec. 7.]
That this was a colorable conveyance by the defendant is further demonstrated by the fact that from the time- it was made until the present, it has kept on its books a separate account of the alleged Gilchrist trusteeship, which shows that all the taxes and disbursements on account therefor, have come from the coffers .of the corporation. This account shows in the aggregate some thirty-one thousand dollars,, with no evidence of interest charged, or closure. It also appears that the corporation claimed the right to receive the money for
A careful consideration of this record has impressed us that the trial court was not only warranted by the undisputed testimony in the record in the imposition of a fine of only five thousand dollars,, but acted with leniency in thus limiting the fine for the misconduct of defendant. That judgment is not, however, to be held to preclude the State from proper proceedings hereafter (in case of further default of defendant) to cause a transfer of the title of the land in question so as to promote the complete alienability thereof contemplated by the Constitution.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. It is so ordered.