Ames v. Kruzner
Ames v. Kruzner
Opinion of the Court
On October 16, 1900, the defendants, Kruzner and Woodruff, at Nome, made and delivered their promissory note in the sum of $1,514.90 to the Ames Mercantile Company, a foreign corporation. At the same time they made and delivered to the plaintiff, Ames, a mortgage upon an undivided one-half interest in placer mine No. 2 above discovery on Bonanza creek, in the Cape Nome mining district, and also upon the schooner Lady George, to secure the payment of the note and other advances to be made thereafter by the plaintiff, and which were afterwards made in the sum of $206.93. This is a suit to foreclose the mortgage, the note and open account having been assigned to this plaintiff prior to bringing this action.
It is alleged as a defense that upon the date of the making and delivery of the note and mortgage the Ames Mercantile Company, to which the note was made payable, was a foreign corporation, and had not complied with the provisions of chapter 23 of the Civil Code of Alaska (Act June 6, 1900, c. 7S6, 31 Stat. 528), requiring such foreign corporation to file copies of its articles of incorporation, a statement of its financial condition, and the name and consent of its agent to be sued in this jurisdiction in the office of the clerk of this court. Each defendant, answering separately, then alleges that “defendant elects not to be bound by said note and mortgage executed and delivered on the'said 18th (16th) day of October, A. D. 1900, to the said corporation, and described in the amended complaint of plaintiff herein, for the reason that said
It is a sound principle of equity and good conscience that forfeitures are deemed odious, and courts will not resolve a doubt, either of law or fact, in favor of a forfeiture of property rights once fully and fairly vested. The intention of the law to forfeit the estate must be so clear as to leave the court no room for other action before ,it will enter the decree. Equity often interferes to relieve against forfeitures, but never to divest estates by enforcing them. A forfeiture will not be declared unless the law so expressly
In this case the note was made on October 16th, and was due, according to its terms, in four months. Four days after the note was made — on October 20th — the corporation complied with the law. The defendants received the consideration for the note, and the defense has no merit except the technical wording of the statute which they plead.
Sections 228 and 231 of chapter 23 of the Civil Code of Alaska (Act June 6, 1900, c. 786, 31 Stat. 528), upon which defendants rely, read as follows:
“See. 228. Penalty for Failure to Comply. If any corporation or company shall attempt or commence to do business in the district without having first filed said statements, certificates, and consents required by this chapter, it shall forfeit the sum of twenty-five dollars for every day it shall so neglect to file the same; and every contract made by such corporation, or any agent or agents thereof, during the time it shall so neglect to file such statements, certificates, or consents, shall be voidable at the election of the other party thereto. It shall be the duty of the United States attorney for the district to sue for and recover, in the name of the United States, the penalty above provided, and the same, when so recovered, shall be paid into the treasury of the United States.”
“See. 231. Penalty for Failure to Comply. If any such .corporation or company shall fail to comply with any of the provisions of this chapter, all its contracts with citizens of the district shall be void as to the corporation or company, and no court of the district, .or of the United States, shall enforce the same in favor of- the corporation or company so failing.”
Upon a careful study of the chapter including these two sections, it is plain that the purpose of the law is to require foreign corporations to file their articles of incorporation, a statement of their financial condition, and the appointment and consent of their agent to be sued, before they shall commence to do business in the district. A graduated series of
I understand this section to mean that a contract made by any person on October 16th, with a foreign corporation which did not file its statements, certificates, and consent until October 20th, and which came to suit subsequent to that date, is voidable at the election of the other party thereto. It is not void, but only voidable. The other party thereto may waive his statutory privilege, and stand on his contract; it cannot be avoided by the corporation. If the other party thereto does waive his right to avoid, the contract may be enforced, even by the corporation, and the court is not without jurisdiction.
Section 231, however, has but one object, viz., it is a withdrawal of all jurisdiction in the court to enforce, in favor of the corporation, a contract falling within its terms. I understand it to mean that a contract made by any person, say, on October 16, 1900, with a foreign corporation, which wholly
It follows, from this imperfect analysis, that in the case at bar the contract note sued upon is, as against the corporation, only voidable under section 228, and not void under section 231. The court has jurisdiction to enforce the contract, unless it is avoided by its judgment.
This brings us to consider the law and practice when a party seeks to escape from his obligation under a voidable contract. The defendants allege only that they “elect not to be bound by said note and mortgage,” for the reason that the corporation has failed to comply with the law. Can they thus repudiate a “voidable contract,” and retain the consideration, or must they not return the consideration before rescission, or stand by the contract as made?
The avoiding of a voidable contract is termed rescission. “We have already seen that rescission is the avoiding of a voidable contract.” Bishop on Contracts (Enlarged Ed.) § 679. “A party, to accomplish an adverse rescission, must return to the nonconsenting party what will place him in statu quo.” “The party rescinding must return the consideration or whatever else he received under the contract, and otherwise do what will put him and the other party in statu quo, as already explained; and if he cannot do this — as, if he has de
In the case at bar the defendants have received, and do not offer to return, the full consideration for the note which they elect to repudiate upon their voidable contract. This they cannot do, and their plea cannot avail them as a defense under the facts and the phraseology of section 228. For these reasons there must be a foreclosure and decree against the defendants for the full amount of the note and open account.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- AMES v. KRUZNER
- Status
- Published