Bank of British North America v. Madison

33 P. 762, 99 Cal. 125, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 622
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 1893
DocketNo. 14308
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 P. 762 (Bank of British North America v. Madison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of British North America v. Madison, 33 P. 762, 99 Cal. 125, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 622 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Harrison, J.

This case involves principles similar to those presented in the Bank of British North America v. Alaska Improvement Co., 97 Cal. 28. The plaintiff seeks herein to recover from the defendants as stockholders of the Alaska Improvement Company their proportionate liability of the amount represented by the bills of exchange upon which the former action was brought. The defense thereto is the same as was presented in that action, and the question involved is whether the statements which the plaintiff had filed and published before the commencement of the present action sufficiently conform to the requirements of the act of April 1, 1876 (Stats. 1876, p. 729), whose provisions were construed in the former case, and take the present case out of the rules there laid down.

1. The present action was commenced April 8, 1890, and the statement relied upon by the plaintiff was published and filed April 4,1890, aud it is objected that as the act in question required the statement to be published aud filed “in January [128]*128and July of every year,” it must be published and filed in those respective months in order to relieve the plaintiff from the penalty prescribed by the statute. The statute does not, however, in terms declare that any penalty shall be enforced against the corporation for a failure to publish and file the statements, or that any consequence shall result from its omission to do these acts within the designated months, and it must, therefore, be held that the naming of the months in the statute is merely directory. The penalties named in the statute are the liability of the officers for making a false statement, and the prohibition of the corporation from maintaining any action in the courts of this state “until they shall have first duly filed the statements herein provided for, and in all other respects complied with the provisions of this law.” The use of this phrase shows that the prohibition to maintain an action was not intended to be absolute by reason of the failure to do the acts within the designated months, but was intended to exist only “until” they should have been done. (See Byers v. Bourret, 64 Cal. 73.) The object of the statute is not that the statement shall be published and filed in any particular months, so much as that the public shall have information of the financial standing of the corporation, and for the purpose of enforcing this requirement it declares that the corporation shall not maintain any action until it shall have complied therewith. The statute does not fix the time at which the statements shall be prepared, but as some time must necessarily elapse after their preparation before they can be published, and as they are to be published semiannually, it is reasonable to hold that it is a sufficient compliance with the provisions of the statute if a semi-annual statement is published and filed before the time named in the statute for the publication of the next statement.

2. Although the statute provides for the publishing and filing of two statements, one of the capital stock and the other of the assets and liabilities of the corporation, it does not require that they shall be presented in two distinct documents, nor does the appellant advance any reason in support of his objection that the incorporation of them both in one document is not a sufficient compliance with the statute. No such reason occurs to us, and we hold, therefore, that when the corporation has made proper [129]*129statements of the amount of its capital actually paid in, and of the actual condition and value of its assets and liabilities, and where said assets are situated, the objection that such statements are incorporated into one document and published and filed together is not tenable, especially if they are recorded in each of the books kept for that purpose by the county recorder.

3. The verification of the statements under consideration sufficiently conforms to the requirements of the act. The statute requires that the “sworn statement” shall be verified in the case of a foreign corporation “ by the agent or manager of the business of such corporation, resident in this state,” “before some judge or officer of this state authorized to take affidavits to be used before any court in this state.” In the present case the statements are each accompanied by the affidavit of William Lawson, “sworn to” before a notary public, in which he states that he is “ the managing agent at San Francisco of the above-named bank, and that said bank has no cashier or secretary at its agency in said place . . . that the foregoing statement is to the best of his knowledge and belief a true and correct statement,” in the one case “of the actual condition and value of the assets and liabilities of said bank, and of the situation of the said assets on the 31st of December, 1889,” and in the other case “of the capital actually and bona fide paid in money into the treasury of said bank.” The objection that the affidavit is not positive, or made upon the actual knowledge of the affiant is not tenable. Necessarily all the transactions of a corporation are not within the actual knowledge of any one individual, and the contents of the statement required by the statute must be obtained from different sources. The legislature did not intend to require an affidavit of a higher degree than could be made on the part of the officer from whom it is demanded, and when an affidavit is to be made of matters which are presumptively derived through information from others, it is sufficient if the affiant states that it is made to the best of his knowledge and belief.

4. The statement of the amount of capital actually paid in is as follows: —

“Statement of the amount of capital of the Bank of British North America (incorporated by Boyal Charter, 1840), at the [130]*130close of business hours on the 31st of December, 1889, and April 4, 1890.
Capital subscribed...................................$ 4,886,500 00
Capital actually and bona fide paid in money
into the treasury of said bank.............. 4,866,500 00
Reserve fund......................................... 1,240,957 00
Undivided net profit................................. 214,496 12
“The above accounts are made upon the basis of $4.8665 to the pound sterling.”

To this statement is annexed the affidavit of the managing agent of the plaintiff, made April 4, 1890, in which he states “that the foregoing statement is to the best of his knowledge and belief a true and correct statement of the capital actually and bona fide paid in money into the treasury of said bank, of the reserve fund and undivided net profits thereof at the close of business hours on the thirty-first day of December, 1889, and at the date of the verification of this statement.”

The statement of the actual condition and value of its assets and liabilities is as follows:—

“ Statement of the liabilities and assets of the Bank of British North America (incorporated by Royal Charter, 1840), at the close • of business hours, on the 31st of December and April 4,1890.
“Actual condition and value of said bank’s liabilities: —
Capital................................................$ 4,866,500 00
Reserve fund............................

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Related

London & San Francisco Bank v. Block
117 F. 900 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 P. 762, 99 Cal. 125, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-british-north-america-v-madison-cal-1893.