Breitzke v. Bank of Grand Prairie

187 S.W. 660, 124 Ark. 495, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 19, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 187 S.W. 660 (Breitzke v. Bank of Grand Prairie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breitzke v. Bank of Grand Prairie, 187 S.W. 660, 124 Ark. 495, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 78 (Ark. 1916).

Opinion

Wood, J.,

(after stating the facts). (1) The Hazen Creamery Company (hereafter, for convenience, called company) was incorporated March 16, 1912, under the provisions of. chapter 31 of Kirby’s Digest. Under the law it is the duty of the president and secretary of every business corporation, annually on or before the 15th day of the months of February or August, to file with the county clerk of the county in which the company transacts its business a certificate showing the condition of the financial affairs of the corporation on the first day of. January or July next preceding, in the particulars specified in section 848 of Kirby’s Digest. A failure or refusal upon the part of the president or secretary of a corporation to comply with the above provisions renders them jointly and severally liable for all debts of the corporation contracted during the period of any such neglect or refusal, and they are also guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of $500, for each and every day that they neglect to comply with the above provisions. Act 222, Acts of 1909, page 643.

In Griffin v. Long, 96 Ark. 268-273, concerning this statute, we said: £ ‘ The reason of the statute is to require corporations to make such public showing of their affairs as will enable those dealing with them to determine whether they can safely give them credit. ’ ’ And in Beekman Lumber Co. v. Ahern, 75 Ark. 111, speaking of this act, we said: £ £ There is nothing in the act that requires an officer who has neglected to file the statement within the time named in the act to wait until .after the first day of the next succeeding July or January before filing the statement. On the contrary, as the act declares that, upon the failure to file the statement, within the time named, the officer becomes liable for all debts of the corporation contracted during the period of such neglect, we are of the opinion that it was the intention of the law to make it to the interest of the officer to file the statement at as early a date as possible, when he discovers his oversight, and when he does file such statement, even though it be after the dates named in the act, that he is not liable for debts thereafter contracted by the corporation until he makes another default in the filing of another statement.”

While the president and secretary are made individually liable, both civilly and criminally, for a failure to comply with the provisions of the above statute, yet the duty which the statute imposes attaches to them as officials of the corporation, and not as individuals. It is an official duty which these officers of corporations owe to those of the public who may have dealings with such corporations. The duty attaches to the individual only by virtue of the office he holds in the corporation. When there is a failure to comply with the statute the dereliction continues on the part of the individual only so long as he is an officer of the corporation. When his relation as such is severed he has no longer any duty to make and file the certificate required by the statute, and he has no power to do so.

The civil liability imposed upon these officers “for all debts of such corporation contracted during the period of any such neglect or refusal,” therefore.includ.es only those debts which were contracted while the individuals were officers of the corporation. When the last of the optional dates for making the report specified in the statute has expired, these officers are also liable criminally for each day thereafter that they fail to make such report until they go out of office, but no longer.

(2) The duties and responsibilities of the newly elected president and secretary begin when they take the place of the old. One of these duties would be to acquaint themselves with the financial affairs of the corporation and to know whether or not the statute requiring the filing of the annual certificate had been complied with by their predecessors. If it had not, then it would be the duty of the new officers to file the same as soon as they ascertained that fact, after a reasonable time has elapsed for making an investigation of the financial affairs of the corporation. The newly elected officers from that time, so to speak,- step into the shoes of their predecessors in office, and their liability, both civil and criminal, for dereliction in failing to make the certificate is the same as their predecessors would have been had they continued in office. The dereliction, as we have seen, attaches to the ones who hold the offices of president and secretary and is a 'continuing dereliction so long as the statute is not complied with.

Unless the newly elected officers, succeeding old ones, were required to make the certificate within a reasonable time after assuming the duties of their offices there might be a long interval in which the financial standing of business corporations would not be made known to the public. To illustrate, if the first elected president and secretary of such corporation should let the 15th day of February or the 15th day of August go by without filing the certificate, and thus fail to comply with the -statute,- and if they then were immediately displaced by new officers, these newly elected officers could wait until the next annual period before making the certificate required by law and there would be an interval of a year wherein no certificate was filed and debts could be contracted by the corporation and neither the old nor the new officers liable therefor'. This would frustrate the salutary purpose of the law, which is to require business corporations, through their president and secretary, to advise the public by these annual certificates of their financial standing.

(3) But counsel for appellants contend that the outgoing president and secretary, having failed to comply with the statute while in office, would continue liable for debts of the corporation contracted until the next annual date for filing the certificate; that the period of “such neglect or refusal” continues till that time. To support this contention, they cite and quote at length from Providence Steam Engine Co. v. Chas. Hubbard, 101 U. S. 188, 25 L. Ed. 786. In that case it was held that where an outgoing president (under a statute fixing the same dates as ours for filing the certificate) failed to file the certificate while he was in office on the 15th of February, and retired without doing so, that the incoming president who was elected “less than two months prior” to the 15th of August — the next annual date — would not be liable for a debt of the corporation contracted before he took his office, nor during the short period of less than two months between the ‘date of his election and August 15 — the date when he had to file his certificate — that he was not liable for such debt even though .his default continued after that date, because he was not in default during the period when the debt was contracted. While the statute under review in that case is similar to ours, the facts are quite different. Much that is said in the opinion is in harmony with the views we have expressed, and we do not regard the case as authority to support the contention of counsel. But even if it were, we could not follow it, for we could never hold, under our statute, that the retiring president and secretary who had failed to file the certificate would toe liatole for debts contracted toy the corporation after they went out of office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 S.W. 660, 124 Ark. 495, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breitzke-v-bank-of-grand-prairie-ark-1916.