230 Wis. 412 | Wis. | 1939
From the record herein, — consisting of the petition for the writ of prohibition and the exhibits attached thereto, — there appear the following facts, which are admitted by the respondents’ demurrer. The Empire Level Manufacturing Company claims that jurisdiction of the Northwestern Development Corporation, a Delaware corporation not licensed to do- business in Wisconsin, was obtained by the above-mentioned circuit court action by service at Milwaukee of an amended summons and the complaint on July 5 and on July 21, 1938, respectively, by then and there delivering to and leaving with Meyer L. Schwartz, as the vice-president of that corporation, a copy of the summons and complaint, and an order to show cause returnable on July 26, 1938. On July 25, 1938, Messrs. Bloodgood, Kemper & Passmore, as attorneys for the Northwestern Development Corporation, served notice upon the attorneys for the Empire Level Manufacturing Company that they appeared “specially for the purpose of this motion only to object to- the jurisdiction of the court over said defendant and for no other
“why an order should not be made and entered setting aside and vacating the service of the summons in this action on the defendant, Northwestern Development Corporation, which appears herein specially to object to' the jurisdiction of the court over its person, and why this action, the service of the summons, complaint, order and orders to show cause and all proceedings herein against the Northwestern Development Corporation should not be set aside, vacated and dismissed as to said Northwestern Development Corporation specially appearing herein, for the reason that proper and legal service of the summons and subsequent pleadings and orders was not made upon said Northwestern Development Corporation, and that the court has not and never has acquired jurisdiction of the person of said Northwestern Development Corporation.
*418 “It is further ordered that pending the hearing herein and until the court shall have determined whether or not service of said summons and the order to show cause dated August 2, 1938, upon said Northwestern Development Corporation was proper and legal and whether the court acquired jurisdiction of the person of said corporation, all proceedings herein against the Northwestern Development Corporation pending to obtain the adverse examination of Nathan S. Schwartz as secretary and treasurer of the Northwestern Development Corporation and to- examine the books and records of said Northwestern Development Corporation, or otherwise, are hereby stayed until the further order of the court.”
The attached certified copy of the minutes of the meeting of the petitioner’s board of directors is as follows (in so far as material herein) :—
“Special meeting of the board of directors of the Northwestern Development Corporation was held on the 12th day of January, 1938, at 1 o’clock P. M. in Room 5052, Plank-inton building, 161 West Wisconsin avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. . . .
“The president of the company, Harvey Schoenfeld, informed the board that when he consented to- accept directorship and officership of the company, he did so with the understanding that he would not act for more than one term, and that since there was a failure of a quorum for a regular annual stockholders’ meeting on last November, and that since there was therefore no successor elected to> the office of the president, Mr. Schoenfeld informed the board that he wished to be relieved of his services as director and president and offered his resignation.
“Mr. M. L. Schwartz, director and vice-president of the company, voiced the same request. . . .
“N. S. Schwartz voiced his opinion that it was the understanding that the services of Harvey Schoenfeld and M. L. Schwartz as officers and directors of the company were not to be of long duration and that parties in interest, namely, stockholders of the company were to- succeed Messrs. Schoen-feld and Schwartz as such officers and directors.
*419 “Whereupon, after clue deliberation and on motion duly made and seconded and unanimously carried, it was . . . further resolved that Fred Schmit of Saukville, Wisconsin, who is an officer of Great Lakes Engineering Corporation, a stockholder of this company, be, and he hereby is, elected as director and vice-president of the company to succeed M. L. Schwartz, whose resignation is this day accepted.”
In the affidavit of Meyer L. Schwartz, attached to the order to' show cause of August 4, 1938, he stated that he—
“is not now and was not on the above-mentioned dates [July 5, July 21, and August 2, 1938] an officer, agent or employee of the defendant Northwestern Development Corporation ; that affiant duly resigned as an officer and director of said corporation on or about January 12, 1938, and that his resignation was duly accepted and that a successor to his office as director and vice-president of said corporation was duly elected. . . .
“That affiant is not now, and was not on the dates of the aforesaid attempted service upon him as an officer of said corporation, nor since his resignation in January, 1938, done or performed any duties or any business for or on behalf of said Northwestern Development Corporation, nor has he had any authority to act on behalf of said corporation; that Mr. Fred Schmit was duly elected to succeed affiant as vice-president and director on January 12, 1938, and that Fred Schmit has qualified and assumed and performed the duties of vice-president and director since his election.”
Upon the hearing before Judge Gehrz, pursuant to that order to show cause, the petitioner submitted further affidavits by C. A. Jillson, Fred Schmit, Nathan S. Schwartz, respectively, president, vice-president, and secretary and treasurer of the petitioner, in which it was stated (so far as material herein) that the petitioner had not held any meetings in Wisconsin since January 12, 1938; that on January 12, 1938, at a duly convened meeting of the board of directors of said corporation, Meyer L. Schwartz tendered
“does not impress the court as having been regular or straight. It is not deemed sufficiently credible or convincing to overcome the presumption above stated based upon the undisputed facts and formal corporation report filed in Delaware on January 4, 1938, only a week before the alleged special meeting. Ecjually unsatisfactory and unconvincing are the affidavits presented in support of the instant motion.”
There is justification for the court’s criticism that the recitals in the minutes seerii unnecessarily self-serving, and that the procedure in relation to Schwartz’s resignation and the election of his successor was rather unusual and irregular. However, the departures in those respects from the usual and regular formal procedure did not render the resignation ineffectual, if there was in fact such a meeting of the directors, and then and there Schwartz offered his resignation. That terminated his relation as an officer of the corporation, and he thereby vacated the offices of vice-president and director thereof, regardless of any irregularity in the acceptance of his resignation, or the election of his successor. Will of McNaughton, 138 Wis. 179, 208, 118 N. W. 997, 120 N. W. 288; Western P. & M. Co. v. American M. S. Co. 175 Wis. 493, 185 N. W. 535. The fact that the annual Delaware corporation report, certified December 31, 1937, and filed January 4, 1938, listed Meyer L. Schwartz as vice-president constituted sufficient basis for the application of the presumption of law that a condition or status once proven to> exist is presumed to continue in the absence of evidence to the contrary. S. S. Kresge Co. v. Garrick Realty Co. 209 Wis. 305, 310, 245 N. W. 118; Racine County v. Industrial Comm. 210 Wis. 315, 317, 246 N. W. 303; Krantz v. Krantz, 211 Wis. 249, 257, 248 N. W. 155. But that presumption is appli
“. . .It must be kept in mind that the peculiar effect of a presumption ‘of law’ ... is merely to invoke a rule of law compelling the jury to reach the conclusion in the absence of evidence to the contrary from the opponent. If the opponent does offer evidence to the contrary (sufficient to satisfy the judge's requirement of some evidence), the presumption disappears as a rule of law, and the case is in the jury's hands free from any rule.”
See Smith v. Green Bay, 223 Wis. 427, 430, 271 N. W. 28. Consequently, the presumption in question was inapplicable in the face.of the facts which are stated in the minutes of the directors’ meeting and in the uncontradicted and un-impeached affidavits submitted by the petitioner, and which, in so far as they are alleged in the petition herein, have been admitted to be true by the respondents’ demurrer to that petition. Those facts compel the conclusion that Meyer L. Schwartz was not an officer of the petitioner after January 12, 1938, and that, therefore, no jurisdiction over the petitioner was acquired by the attempted service upon Schwartz on July S and July 21, and August 2, 1938. Will of McNaughton, supra; Western P. & M. Co. v. American M. S. Co., supra; People’s Tobacco Co. v. American Tobacco Co. 246 U. S. 79, 38 Sup. Ct. 233, 62 L. Ed. 587.
The respondents also contend that on two grounds the trial court was warranted in holding that the petitioner made
Likewise, the respondents’ contention that petitioner made a general appearance cannot be sustained in so far as it is based on the ground that in moving, pursuant to the order' to show cause of August 4, 1938, to vacate the service, the petitioner attempted to set aside the order of July 26, 1938, denying petitioner’s former motion to set aside the attempted
It follows that the circuit court was without jurisdiction to proceed against the petitioner, and it is entitled to a writ of prohibition commanding the circuit court to desist and refrain from proceeding further against the petitioner in the action in question.
By the Court. — The writ of prohibition is granted.