133 P. 193 | Okla. | 1913
On the 22d day of April, 1903, articles of agreement and incorporation were filed by the Owen-Willis-Wheeler Mercantile Company in the office of the clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Indian Territory, at McAlester. The corporation so organized thereafter engaged in the general mercantile business in the Indian Territory, and afterwards in Oklahoma, until July 2, 1908, when it was adjudged a bankrupt by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma. The corporation was organized pursuant to an Act of Congress of February 18, 1901, putting in force in the Indian Territory certain provisions of the laws of Arkansas relating to corporations. Among the statutes so put in force was section 960, and the succeeding sections down to and including section 1035, as published in 1884, in the volume known as Mansfield's Digest. Section 968 of the adopted statutes provides that, before any corporation formed and established by virtue of the provisions *618 of said act shall commence business, the president and directors thereof shall file a true copy of their articles of association at full length, and also a certificate setting forth the purpose for which such corporation is formed, the amount of its capital stock, the amount actually paid in, and the names of its stockholders, and the numbers of shares by each respectively owned, with the Secretary of State, and a duplicate thereof with the clerk of the county in which said corporation is to transact business. Under section 2 of the act of Congress, it was provided that wherever the words "Secretary of State" occur there should be substituted therefor the words "clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Indian Territory," and wherever the words "clerk of the county" occur there should be substituted therefor "clerk of the judicial district." So that, to comply fully with the law thus put in force, it was necessary to file a true copy of the articles of association with the clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Indian Territory, and a duplicate thereof with the clerk of the judicial district in which such corporation was to transact business. The former, as we have seen, was done; it does not appear from the record that the latter was. Save in this respect, the organization of the corporation appears in every way to have been regular, and that the corporation so formed continued the exercise of its corporate powers until adjudicated a bankrupt. June 11, 1909, plaintiff sued the defendants, R. A. Owen, A. G. Noble, J. Hamp Willis, and John McDuffee, former stockholders of said corporation, to recover an alleged balance due it amounting to $996.24. The petition charged that the defendants on or about the 18th day of December, 1907, and subsequently thereto, were engaged in the mercantile business at Woodville and Kingston, Okla., under the firm name and style of the Owen-Willis-Wheeler Mercantile Company, and that said concern was indebted to plaintiff on account for goods, wares, and merchandise purchased between December 18, 1907, and March 25, 1908, on which there was a balance due, after allowing all proper credits, of $883.05. *619 A second count in the petition sought to recover the additional sum of $116.19 and attorney's fee, being the balance due on a promissory note, dated March 31, 1908. The answer of the defendants Willis, Owen, and McDuffee contained (1) a general denial; and further charged (2) that the indebtedness sued on was that of the corporation; (3) estoppel by a course of dealing; (4) estoppel arising out of the fact that plaintiff had asserted its claim against the bankrupt corporation, had participated in said bankruptcy proceedings, and received therefrom and accepted dividends on account of its said indebtedness. After a paragraph containing a general denial, plaintiff in its amended reply, filed February 17, 1911, charged as follows:
"Further replying to said answers, plaintiff denies that the Owen-Willis-Wheeler Mercantile Company is a corporation, and denies that it is still in existence, but admits that it was adjudged a bankrupt as alleged in said answer."
Plaintiff's testimony consisted of the deposition of its former adjuster, who testified that the plaintiff had been selling goods to the Owen-Willis-Wheeler Mercantile Company of Kingston and Woodville for several years, and up to and including the transactions of 1908 the plaintiff company dealt with said Owen-Willis-Wheeler Mercantile Company as a corporation. The witness further testified that the bill of goods included in the first paragraph of the petition was sold, not to the corporation, but to a corpartnership composed of Owen, Willis and McDuffee, upon the representation of these parties and one Murphy that the corporation had been dissolved, and a copartnership organized in its stead. At the close of the trial, the court peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendants. This is urged as error for the following reasons: (1) That it does not appear that the Owen-Willis-Wheeler Mercantile Company was duly incorporated, and, if not, the defendants, being stockholders, were liable as partners; (2) that the defendants, having represented that the goods were purchased for the copartnership, were therefore individually liable, regardless of the fact that the corporation was or *620 was not regularly incorporated. A payment of $242.47 was collected and remitted by their attorneys, in addition to which $92.97 was paid it by the trustee, J. P. Haven. These payments, so made and credited, consisted of dividends realized out of the bankrupt corporation. The plaintiff had full knowledge of the bankruptcy proceedings, and at one time made an offer to purchase the bankrupt stock.
Assuming, without deciding, that it was incumbent upon the defendants to prove, under the issues joined, a duplicate of the articles of incorporation was filed with the clerk of the judicial district in which the corporation was to transact its business, what, then, would be the legal effect of a failure to comply with this provision of the statute? The adopted statute authorized the organization of a corporation for the purpose of engaging in or carrying on any kind of manufacturing, mechanical, mining, or other lawful business. There was abona fide attempt to organize a corporation for the purpose of engaging in the general mercantile business, a class of business within the statute. As we have seen, articles of incorporation had been filed with the clerk of the Court of Appeals; of the capital stock, $20,000 had been subscribed and paid in, and stock certificates issued therefor; also that directors and officers had been elected, and for a term of years had proceeded in the discharge of their respective duties. In fact, all of the steps necessary to the formation of a de jure corporation had been effected, except proof is lacking in the one particular above mentioned. There had been an actual user of the corporate franchise for the period of five years, and during all of which time the corporation had been actively engaged in performing its corporate functions. The honest belief and good faith of the incorporators that they had in fact effected a corporation stands unchallenged. The rule applicable to such cases is announced in Tulare IrrigationDistrict et al. v. Shepard,
"From the authorities, some of which are above cited it appears that the requisites to constitute a corporation defacto are three: (1) A charter or general law under which such a corporation as it purports to be might lawfully be organized; (2) an attempt to organize thereunder; and (3) actual user of the corporate franchise."
In Whipple v. Tuxworth,
"During the past few years, however, the great weight of authority has clearly established the rule that, where a supposed corporation is doing business as a de facto corporation, the stockholders cannot be held liable as partners, although there have been irregularities, omissions, or mistakes in incorporating or organizing the company. The corporation is a de facto corporation where there is a law authorizing such a corporation and where the company has made an effort to organize under that law and is transacting business, in a corporate name. * * * It must be admitted that this conclusion of the law is reasonable and just. There is no reason why parties who have dealt with a corporation as a corporation should afterwards be allowed to claim more than they originally bargained for, and to hold the stockholders personally liable. Such a rule would be disastrous in the extreme. Under the rule subjecting stockholders to this unknown peril, the dangers to business were so great, the hardship to innocent parties so intolerable, and the risk of investing in corporate enterprises so increased, the courts gradually departed from the old decisions on this subject and wisely refused to hold the stockholders liable. The equities are against such liability, and recent cases have so settled the law beyond reasonable doubt."
See, also, section 637. Other authorities areNewcomb-Endicott Co. v. Fee,
Not only was the company a de facto organization, but it was so recognized by the plaintiff during a long course of dealing. A person who has entered into a contract with a de facto corporation in its proper name and capacity cannot, in the absence of an averment of fraud, afterwards disregard the existence of the corporation and sue the stockholders individually as partners. Corporations may exist either de jure or de facto. If of the latter class, they are under the protection of the same law, and governed by the same legal principles as those of the former, so long as the sovereignty acquiesces in their existence and exercise of corporate functions.
A private citizen, whose rights are not invaded and who has no cause of complaint, has no right to inquire collaterally into the legality of its existence. This can only be done in a direct proceeding on the part of the state, from whom it derived the right to exist as a corporation, and whose authority is usurped. It was said in Western Union TelegraphCo. v. Mexican Agr. Land Co.,
"It is true that the legality of the organization of a corporation cannot be collaterally questioned, but must be tested by an information; and that where there has been a good-faith effort to organize a corporation under the law, and corporate functions have been assumed and exercised, the organization becomes a corporation de facto, and as a general rule its existence *623 cannot be inquired into collaterally. But the distinction must be kept in view between an attempted incorporation under a statute authorizing the creation of such corporation and an attempted incorporation where no statute authorizes the creation of such a corporation. If there is a law authorizing incorporation, and a good-faith effort has been made to organize under such law, and the company has exercised corporate rights, it becomes a de facto corporation, and its dejure existence can only be questioned by the state."
In Swartwout v. Railroad Co.,
"Where there is thus a corporation de facto, with no want of legislative power to its due and legal existence, when it is proceeding in the performance of corporate functions, and the public are dealing with it on the supposition that it is what it professes to be, and the questions suggested are only whether there has been exact regularity and strict compliance with the provisions of the law relating to incorporattion, it is plainly a dictate alike of justice and of public policy that in controversies between the de facto corporation and those who have entered into contract relations with it, as corporators or otherwise, such questions should not be suffered to be raised."
The Supreme Court of Alabama in Cahill v. Association,
"Whoever contracts with a corporation, in the use of corporate powers and franchises, and within the scope of such powers, is estopped from denying the existence of the corporation, or inquiring into the regularity of the corporate organization, when an enforcement of the contract, or of rights arising under it, is sought."
Taylor, in his work on Corporations, par. 148, having stated the general rule that a corporation when sued on its contract, and the person who contracted with it, when sued on his contract, is estopped to deny its legal corporation, adds:
"Furthermore, persons who have contracted with a corporation as such, and have acquired claims against it, are estopped from denying its corporate existence for the purpose of holding its shareholders liable as partners." *624
While there are authorities announcing a different rule, we believe as a matter of exact justice and correct principle that those dealing with a corporation which has failed in some particular to comply with the statute under which it is organized in the absence of fraud on the part of the de facto
corporation, are by their conduct estopped from questioning the validity of the corporate organization. Having dealt with the corporation upon the strength of its financial worth and liability, it would be most inequitable to make responsible for the corporate debts the innocent stockholders whose personal liability in no wise entered into the relations between the creditor and the corporation at the time of the transaction in question. As was said in Whitney v. Wyman et al.,
"It seems to us entirely clear that both parties understood and meant that the contract was to be and in fact was with the corporation, and not with the defendants individually. The agreement thus made could not be afterwards changed by either of the parties without the consent of the other. Utley v.Donaldson,
Additional authorities supporting our conclusions areDoty et al. v. Patterson et al.,
"The rule, generally, is, as announced in the case ofEstey Mfg. Co. v. Runnels,
No such exceptions appear in the case at bar. Section 46, art. 9 (sec. 263), Williams' Ann. Const. Okla., impliedly, at least, recognizes the rights of de facto corporations where abona fide organization has been effected, and business commenced in good faith, by declaring that all existing charters or grants of special or exclusive privileges, under which a bona fide organization shall not have taken place and business commenced in good faith at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, are ineffective and shall thereafter have no validity.
Passing to the next question, that of the individual liability of the defendants arising out of their representations to the plaintiff that the corporation had been dissolved, and a partnership formed in its stead, it is insisted by defendants in error that again plaintiff is estopped by reason of its participation as a creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings of the corporation. From the statement of the account it appears that the credit extended to the alleged partnership was during the month of March, 1908, and that the representations made were either prior thereto or not later than the 1st day of July of said year. The adjudication in bankruptcy was had July 2, 1908. The dividends were received and accepted by plaintiff during the months of October and December immediately following. The insolvency and subsequent bankruptcy of the corporation did not enlarge the liability of the stockholders, neither did it work a dissolution of the corporation. Clark Marshall on Private Corporations, p. 863;Topeka Paper Co. v. *626 Oklahoma Pub. Co.,
An estoppel by record is the preclusion to deny the truth of matters set forth in a record, whether judicial or legislative, also to deny the facts adjudicated by the court of competent jurisdiction, 16 Cyc. 684; Herman on Estoppel and Res Judicata, secs. 27, 28, 29. In Clark Marshall on Private Corporations, pp. 274, 275, it is said that an estoppel to deny' the existence of a pretended corporation may also arise from a matter of record, as from a recognizance purporting to be in favor of a corporation, or a judgment either for or against a corporation. It is further said:
"A person who sues a corporation as such thereby admits the legality of its incorporation, and is estopped from denying it in that suit. And the same is true where a person files a cross bill or petition, or a counterclaim, against a corporation. * * * In an action by a corporation, the defendant cannot deny the plaintiff's existence as a corporation after admitting it by his plea or answer, and he admits its corporate existence by going to trial on the merits or pleading to the merits, instead of pleading want of incorporation." *627
By the filing of proof of its claim in the bankruptcy proceedings, it was of necessity adjudicated that the de facto
corporation was indebted to the plaintiff on the account, for the balance of which it is sought to hold the individuals liable as partners. The position of the plaintiff in the present case is utterly inconsistent with its position before the bankruptcy court, as it now contends that, regardless of the question of incorporation, the defendants were liable under an express agreement entered into by them as partners. This we hold it cannot do. In legal effect the presentation and allowance of its claim against the bankrupt estate was a determination against it of the liability of the corporation, and is as binding as if plaintiff had prior to the bankruptcy adjudication brought suit against the corporation to recover its indebtedness. In Clausen v. Head et al.,
"Where a person deals with an association of individuals as a corporation, such dealing, by estoppel, as to such transaction, fixes the status of the company to be what it was represented and recognized to be therein. Where certain persons associated together assumed to be a corporation, and as such executed an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and a creditor filed his claim in such assignment proceedings, the claim, if in existence against the association in any capacity, became a claim against the company as a corporation and the assignee in his representative capacity. Even though the creditor, before filing his claim, was not bound by estoppel to recognize the association as a corporation as his debtor, and could have proceeded against the association as a corporation outside of or within the assignment proceedings, or against the members thereof as partners, yet having made an election between the two courses, with knowledge of the facts, by filing his claim with the assignee of the corporation as such, he thereby waived the one not chosen."
Other authorities in support of the rule are Cresswell et al.v. Oberly,
"Under the general law of Arkansas in force in the Indian Territory, the filing of articles of incorporation with the clerk of the Court of Appeals was a sine qua non of any color of a legal corporation. Without that there was not, and there could not be, an apparent corporation or the color of a corporation. * * * The defendants cannot escape individual liability for the $4,700 on the ground that the Coweta Cotton Milling Company was a corporation de facto when that portion of the plaintiff's claim was incurred, because it then had no color of incorporation, and they knew it, and yet actively used its name to incur the obligation."
Again, in the course of the opinion:
"One who deals with parties who masquerade under a name which represents no corporation de facto is no more estopped from denying that it is a corporation than he would be from denying that they constituted or acted for the Union Pacific *629 Railway Company, or any other well-known corporation, when they did not. The fact that the plaintiff dealt with and treated the Coweta Cotton Milling Company as a corporation did not estop it from denying that it was such before the defendants filed their articles of incorporation, because it was not a corporation de facto before that time. * * *"
Further it was said:
"They represented themselves to be a corporation when they knew they were not; under the name of a corporation which did not exist they purchased these goods and services."
Obviously the case does not support the position of the plaintiff in error, the facts being altogether dissimilar. The true rule in such cases is recognized by Judge Sanborn in said case, wherein he says:
"The general rule is that parties who associate themselves together and actively engage in business for profit under any name are liable as partners for the debts they incur under that name. It is an exception to this rule that such associates may escape individual liability for such debts by a compliance with incorporation laws or by a real attempt to comply with them which gives the color of a legal corporation, and by the user of the franchise of such a corporation in the honest belief that it is duly incorporated."
An able differentiation of the facts in this case from the rule applicable to the liability of de facto corporations is found in Magnolia Shingle Co. v. J. Zimmern's Co. (Ala.) 58 So. 90.
Finally, it is insisted that the court erred in sustaining a demurrer to paragraphs 3 and 4 of the plaintiff's amended reply. That part of the reply to which the demurrer was sustained sought to hold the defendants individually liable by reason of the fact that, while there was but $20,000 of the capital stock of the corporation subscribed, yet the defendants as directors and officers in said corporation had permitted it to become indebted in a sum in excess of $60,000. While numerous objections are made to the legal sufficiency of these paragraphs of the reply, all of which present serious questions, but one is necessary for our determination. Section 1297, Comp. *630 Laws 1909, under which it was sought to fix the individual liability of the defendants, provides in part:
"The directors of corporations must not * * * create debts beyond their subscribed capital stock. * * * For a violation of the provisions of this section the directors under whose administration the same may have happened * * * are, in their individual and private capacity, jointly and severally liable to the corporation, and to the creditors thereof, in the event of its dissolution, to the full amount of the * * * debt contracted."
[It will be noted that the cause of action in the first instance is given to the corporation, and in the event of dissolution to the creditors thereof. We have already seen that the mere fact of the corporation having been declared a bankrupt did not work its dissolution. Hence, there being no dissolution, no cause of action accrued, except to the corporation or its trustee in bankruptcy. In Topeka Paper Co.v. Oklahoma Publishing Co., supra, it was sought to hold directors individually liable under the same statute. A recovery was denied, and it was said in the opinon:
"The act by which the defendant corporation undertook to associate itself with the Press-Gazette corporation, and to form a new corporation, and receive stock therein in fixed proportions, is not, in our view, a 'division, withdrawal or payment' to the stockholders of the defendant corporation of any part of its capital stock. And, if it were, the liability would not accrue until, in the terms of the statute, 'in the event of is dissolution.' Therefore, before any liability could be claimed or set up, or could have accrued, so that an action could be brought against the defendants for the debts of the corporation. * * * which, as is expressly provided in section 968 Statutes 1893, could only have taken place upon the 'expiration of the time,' limited by its articles of incorporation, or by the judgment of a competent court,"
The demurrer was properly sustained.
From a careful examination of the record, we are of the opinion that no error was committed in the trial court, and its judgment should in all things be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered. *631