Arnold v. Streck

108 F.2d 387, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2573
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 1939
DocketNo. 7002
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 108 F.2d 387 (Arnold v. Streck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Streck, 108 F.2d 387, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2573 (7th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

TREANOR, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs filed suit against the defendants in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Illinois to recover for an alleged breach of contract. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss for the reason that the complaint did not state a cause of action, and the motion was sustained. Plaintiffs refused to plead further and the court entered final judgment dismissing the complaint. From this judgment plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

The contract involved in this litigation was executed on the third day of February, 1937, between Packers’ Brands Incorporated, a Missouri Corporation, styled “licensor,” and the defendants, doing business under the title of Streck Bros. Packing Co., styled “licensee.” By the terms of the contract the licensor granted the licensee for a period of ten years the exclusive right to manufacture and sell within a limited territory a dog food made with “ ‘Arnold’s Vita-Mix,’ a scientifically compounded dog food mixture owned by licensor.” The licensee agreed to purchase and use in the manufacture of the dog food, and the licensor agreed to sell to the licensee, all the necessary ingredients. Licensee agreed to purchase not less than 1500 pounds of Arnold’s Vita-Mix during the first year of the life of the contract and thereafter “at least ten (10) tons during any twelve (12) month period.” .Among the specific obligations which the licensor, Packers’ Brands Inc., assumed are the following: (1) To pay for the cost of all plates, mechanical preparations and art work required in connection with all advertising which the licensee should “deem necessary for the sale, market and merchandizing of said dog food % * ” (2) To spend 10% of all sums received by it under the contract as purchase price of “Arnold’s Vita-Mix” for advertising. (3) To furnish and pay for all laboratory work which may be necessary to enable the dog food to pass the city, state and federal requirements ; and to furnish and pay for all [388]*388legal services required for such purposes. (4) To make all tags, labels, etc. manufactured by it available to licensee at the cost thereof, plus 10%.

In addition to the foregoing specific obligations the contract must be construed to impose upon the licensor an obligation to continue able and ready to furnish “Arnold’s Vita-Mix” to the licensee for a period of ten years.

On January 1, 1938, Packers’ Brands Inc. was suspended by action of the Secretary of State of Missouri, and on January 1, 1939, it was disfranchised. The action of the Secretary of State was taken under the statutes of Missouri and the correctness of the ruling of the District Court depends upon the legal consequences to be attached to the official action of the Secretary of State.

It is the contention of the-plaintiffs that under the Missouri law1 the disfranchised corporation continued to have a de facto existence and the statutory trustees in charge of its affairs had the power to maintain this suit. The allegations of the complaint disclosed that the corporation was disfranchised as of January 1, 1939, and that the defendants were not required to complete their annual purchase of ten tons for the current year until February 3, 1939. Consequently, defendants Urge that there had been no breach of the contract by them during the life of the corporation. Defendants further urge that the corporation’s disfranchisement necessarily put an end to its corporate existence and to any exercise of its corporate powers; and that under the law of Missouri the statutory trustees had no power to continue the corporate business and, therefore, could not perform the contract obligation which had been assumed by Packers’ Brands Inc. It follows, so defendants argue, that since the corporate obligation of Packers’ Brands -Inc. could not be performed after January 1, 1939, the necessary legal consequence is that the defendants were released from their obligation to perform as of that date, and were not obligated to purchase any more of the product of Packers’ Brands Inc.

The St. .Louis Court of Appeals of Missouri has had occasion to construe and apply the sections of the Missouri Statutes which are relied upon by plaintiffs and defendants. That Court of Appeals in Estel v. Midgard Inv. Co.2 states its construction of two of the pertinent sections as follows:

“It is difficult tc read the provisions of the statute without arriving at the conclusion that it was the intention of the Legislature that the act of the secretary of state should operate as a dissolution of the corporation, leaving it without corporate existence or corporate rights, privileges, franchises, or powers, subject only to the right of rescission and reinstatement, upon the application and showing required by section 4621, R.S.1929 [Mo.St.Ann. § 4621, p. 2050], Section 4619 provides that upon failure to'comply with the provisions of the statute, the corporate rights and privileges of the corporation shall be forfeited, and the secretary of state shall thereupon cancel the certificate, or license, of the corporation, by appropriate entry, whereupon all the powers, privileges, and franchises of the corporation shall, subject to rescission as in the statute provided, cease and determine, and the secretary of state shall notify the corporation that its corporate existence and rights have been forfeited and canceled, and the corporation dissolved, subject to rescission as provided by the statute. Section 4622 provides that the.officers and directors, or managers of the affairs of the corporation, at the time such forfeiture is declared, shall be trustees of such corporation, with full power to settle its affairs and distribute its assets among its stockholders, after paying the debts due and owing by such corporation, and, as such trustees, to sue and recover debts and property due such corporation, and that such trustees shall be jointly and severally responsible to the creditors and stockholders of such corporation, to the extent of its property and assets that may properly come into their hands.”

In Watkins v. Mayer3 it was held that the statutory trustees are the corporation’s legal representatives and are proper and necessary parties to be named and served in a suit instead of the disfranchised corporation. In the course of its opinion the Court of Appeals referred to earlier decisions which had held that the action of the Secretary of State taken in conformity with Section 4619 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1929, Mo.St.Ann. § 4619, p. 2049, operated as a “dissolution of the corpora[389]*389tion, leaving it without corporate existence or corporate rights, privileges, franchises, or powers * * ” The court referred to the case of Nudelman v. Thimbles, Inc.,4 in which it was held that the dissolution of the corporation did not work a discharge of any debts, claims or ’bills outstanding against it at the time of its dissolution, but had “made it possible for the creditors of the corporation to look to the statutory trustees for the payment of the same, to the extent of the property and effects of the corporation that shall have passed into their hands.” The opinion in the Nudelman case further states that the statutory provisions for the winding up of the affairs of the corporation by the trustees “simply have the effect of abrogating the rule of the common law that all debts due to and from a corporation are extinguished by its dissolution, and instead operate to transfer the right of action either to or against the statutory trustees as the case may be.” ‘

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Bluebook (online)
108 F.2d 387, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-streck-ca7-1939.