Martin v. Deetz
Martin v. Deetz
Opinion of the Court
This action was brought by the plaintiffs against Alva Jacob Deetz, George Lewis Deetz, Susannah D. Hathaway, Mary Polly Metcalf, Mary Elizabeth Deetz, and Henry John Deetz, who are called in the papers the Deetz family, upon a note and mortgage made by them on April 15, 1891, for $22,000, to M. A. Harding, and assigned by the latter to the Bank of California, and by said bank to the plaintiffs herein. The mortgage was upon certain timber lands, with a sawmill thereon, owned by said Deetz family. The Deetz family, in their answer, set up certain defenses, and upon cer
The note and mortgage sued on were given in lieu of,
It is alleged in the cross-complaint, and found by the court, that after the filing of the articles of incorporation Harding conceived the fraudulent purpose of preventing the organization of the corporation, and of throwing its business into confusion and injuring its credit, so that it could not continue its business, and he would be able to foreclose his mortgage and secure the whole property, “ the value of which greatly exceeded the amount of said mortgage.” And for this purpose—as it is averred and
The court attributes the failure of the corporation to organize entirely to Harding; and finds that the failure to organize prevented the borrowing of said $3,000, which would have enabled the company to go on with its business. It is found that “ arrangements had been made by said Day” to advance $3,000 to the company, provided shares of stock had been issued to him, which he could have hypothecated as security for a loan; but as the directors would not meet or organize there could be no certificates of stock, and, therefore, no loan. And so the business was thus stopped by the said acts of Harding to the great damage, as is alleged, and found, of said alleged corporation. As damages it is found that for four months after the mill stopped it could have out one million feet of lumber per month at a cost of $6.50 per thousand; that the stum page would have been $2 per thousand; that there could have been realized, therefore, $13 per.thousand; and that, therefore, the net profit for the four months would have been $18,000.
The first contention made by appellants is that the Deetz Mill and Lumber Company, the cross-complainant, never was a corporation, either de jure or de facto, and, therefore, cannot maintain this or any action. This contention is, in our opinion, a sound one.
It is quite clear that the cross-complainant was never a corporation de jure. Under our system of incorporation through general laws, a corporation de jure is an artificial body created by operation of law upon the execution, filing, and certification of certain written instruments by persons desirous of incorporating, and certain public officers, in accordance with the provisions of such general laws. When these instruments are executed, filed, and certified as required, the corporation, eo instante, comes into legal existence. Its corporate life is then complete, without any further act or user; and it can be destroyed only by some subsequent act of forfeiture. ^The corporation is then regularly formed. But this result can be accomplished only by compliance with the prerequisites of the statute. It may be conceded that a substantial compliance is sufficient; but it is clear that a necessary prerequisile cannot be omitted. Under our code the first necessary thing to be done, after signing and acknowledging the “articles of incorporation” by the parties, is to file that instrument “in the office of the county clerk of the county in which the principal place of business of the company is to be transacted,” and to have a certified copy thereof made by said clerk and sent to the secretary of state. (Civ. Code, sec. 296.) These are conditions precedent in that statutory process by which an
As to the necessity of filing the articles with the proper county clerk, the law, as deduced from the authorities cited, is thus stated in Morawetz on Corporations, section 27: “A substantial compliance with all the terms of a general incorporation law is a prerequisite of the right of forming a corporation under it. Thus, where it is provided that a certificate, or articles of association, setting forth the purposes of the corporation about to be formed, the amount of its capital, and other details, shall be filed with some public officer, a performance of this requirement, is essential; and until it has been performed the association will have no right whatever to assume corporate franchises.” And again, the. same author says: “In order to prove the existence of a corporation de jure, i. e., a corporation having a legal right to exist, it is necessary to prove not only the existence of the corporation de facto, but also the legislative authorization of its existence. A public law authorizing the formation of a corporation will be judicially recog
But respondent, also, relies upon the doctrine that the existence and acts of a corporation de facto can be inquired into only by the state. This is, no doubt, true. The rule is stated in the second sentence of section 358 of the Civil Code. The whole section is as follows: “ If a corporation does not organize, and commence the transaction of its business or the construction of its works within one year from the date of its incorporation, its corporate powers shall cease^. The due incorporation of any company claiming in good faith to be a corporation under this part, and doing business as such, or its right to exercise corporate powers shall not be inquired into collaterally, in any private action to which such defacto corporation may be a party; but such inquiry may be had at the suit of the state on information of the attorney general.” This does not mean, however, that whenever a pleading is signed and filed in an action by an attorney at law in which some named company whom he appears for is averred to be a corporation, all the world except the state is at once estopped from denying the existence of such a corporation. In referring to this section this court in Oroville etc. R. R. Co. v. Plumas Co., 37 Cal. 360, per Rhodes, J., said: “ This provision does not .go to the extent of precluding a private person
An averment of the existence of a de facto corporation is as issuable as an averment of the existence of a corporation de jure; and its existence does not consist in the mere assertion of its existence in a pleading. What is a corporation de facto ? It exists where a number of persons have organized and acted as a corporation; have put on the habiliments of a corporation; have assumed the form and features of a corporation; have conducted their affairs to some extent, at least, by the methods and through the officers usually employed by corporations; and have assumed the appearance, at least, of the counterfeit presentment of a legal corporate body. Nothing of this kind was done by the Deetz Mill and Lumber Company. The court finds, it is true, in general terms, that said company became and is a corporation, and has claimed in good faith to be such, and has done business as such, and that “ under, and in pursuance of said contract, * Exhibit A,’ entered into the possession of the mill,” and manufactured lumber “ under the management of said Day as provided in said contract”; but this general finding is inconsistent with the specific findings and averments, which show what was, and what was not, done in the premises. And it is clear from those other findings, and from the averments of the cross-complaint, that said Deetz Mill and Lumber Company never did
The foregoing views are determinative of the case against the cross-complaint, and make necessary a reversal of the judgment.
The judgment in favor of the cross-complainant, however, would have to be reversed on other grounds. The legal wrong which Harding did, if he did any, consisted in his refusal to meet and act as a director. The averment that he persuaded the Deetz family to help to prevent the organization of the corporation can hardly be considered as of any value. It is averred that he did this “by false and fraudulent misrepresentations to said Deetz family as to the purposes and intentions of said Day.” But there are no facts stated as to the nature of said misrepresentations. The finding is that the misrepresentations were that “Day intended to and would, if said company was organized, deprive and rob said Deetz family of all interest in said corporation and in said Deetz property, and' ruin them all.” This is very general; and it amounts to little more than mere business advice as to a matter about which the Deetzes had as good opportunity as Harding to form an opinion. But if we were to waive all other points, and assume that it was Harding’s duty to assist in the formation of a mere defacto corporation, and that his refusal to meet with the other directors, and his advice to the Deetzes not to so meet, were wrongful acts, and the cross-corn
Our conclusion is, that upon the cross-complaint and findings the judgment should have been against the cross-complainant, and in favor of plaintiffs and defendant Harding.
The case has been argued on both sides almost entirely upon the issues made by the cross-complaint and the answers thereto, and as if the determination of those issues would be determinative of the whole case. Appellants contend that upon a reversal of the judgment in favor of the cross-complainant, the court below should be directed to give judgment foreclosing the mortgage as prayed for in the complaint. The judgment, as a whole, no doubt so involves the rights of all parties that it must stand or fall as an entirety, and its reversal will perhaps practically end the litigation; but upon the record we do not see our way clear to direct the court below to at once enter a judgment in favor of plaintiffs and against the Deetzes foreclosing the mortgage. Upon that branch of the litigation the cause must be remanded for further proceedings.
The entire judgment is reversed, with directions to the court below to dismiss the cross-complaint of the so called Deetz Mill and Lumber Company, with costs to plaintiffs and defendant Harding-; and with respect to the defendants, Alva Jacob Deetz, George Lewis Deetz, Susannah D. Hathaway, formerly Deetz, May Polly Metcalf, formerly Deetz, May Elizabeth Deetz, and Henry Deetz, the cause is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Rehearing denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- H. P. MARTIN v. ALVA JACOB DEETZ, M. A. HARDING
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- 27 cases
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- Syllabus
- Corporations—Organization—Filing of Articles in Wrong County.— Where an intended corporation did not file its articles in the clerk’s office of the county in which the principal place' of business of the company was - to be transacted, but filed it in the clerk’s office of another county, the fact that a copy of the certificate of incorporation, signed by the secretary of state, was filed with the county clerk of the county in which the business of the corporation was to be carried on, is not sufficient to make the intended corporation a corporation de jure. Id.—Conditions Precedent to Incorporation.—A corporation de jure is an artificial body created by operation of law upon the execution, filing, and certification of certain written instruments by persons desirous of incorporating, and certain public officers, in accordance with the provisions of general laws; and while a substantial compliance with the statutory conditions precedent to the incorporation is sufficient, yet no necessary prerequisite can be omitted, and the filing of the articles of incorporation in the office of the county clerk of the county in which the principal place of business of the company is to be transacted, and the sending of a certified copy thereof, made by said clerk, to the secretary of state, are conditions precedent to the corporation. Id.—Corporation De Facto.—A corporation de facto exists where a number of persons have organized and acted as a corporation; and where the directors named in the articles never met nor acted, and no stock is issued, nor by-laws passed, nor seal adopted, nor any election held, nor any other corporate act done by an intended corporation, it is not a corporation de facto, and its right to exist as a corporation may be collaterally attacked in a private action. Id.—Pleading—Issuable Avermf.nt.—An averment of the existence of á de facto corporation is as issuable as an averment of the existence of a corporation de jure. Id.—Prevention of Organization.—Where one of the directors named in a proposed incorporation persuaded other members and directors of the proposed corporation not to enter into the organization, under an alleged misrepresentation that one of the proposed directors intended to and would, if the company was organized, deprive and rob them of all interest in the corporation and in their property, and ruin them all. such representations amount to little more than mere business advice, aá to a matter about which the persons advised had as good an opportunity to form an opinion as the person giving the advice; and the other directors who, owing to the alleged misrepresentations, refused to-enter into the organization, cannot, in the name of the corporation, defend against a mortgage executed by them on account of results caused by the financial embarrassment of the proposed company, and its loss-of prospective profits owing to the failure to organize the corporation. Id.—Remote Damages—Prospective Profits.—Remote results produced by intermediate sequences of causes are beyond the reach of any just- and practicable rule of damages, and financial embarrassment and loss of prospective profits by a proposed incorporation are too remote, contingent, speculative, indirect, and uncertain to come within a legal measure of damages for an alleged wrong in refusing to act as a director of such proposed corporation, and inducing others not to participate in the organization. Id.—Prospective Profits, When Allowable.—Prospective profits are-sometimes allowed as damages for breach of contract or tort; but they must be the clear, proximate, and natural results of the wrong, and must be confined to the principal thing complained of, and to its naturally attendant consequences.