California Telephone & Light Co. v. Jordan

126 P. 598, 19 Cal. App. 536, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 194
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 22, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 982.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 126 P. 598 (California Telephone & Light Co. v. Jordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Telephone & Light Co. v. Jordan, 126 P. 598, 19 Cal. App. 536, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 194 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an original application for a writ of mandate to compel the respondent, as Secretary of State of the state of California, to file, nunc pro tunc, as of date of March 21, 1912, in his said office of Secretary of State, a certified copy of the amended articles of incorporation of the petitioner.

The petitioner, whose principal place of business is in the city of Santa Rosa, county of Sonoma, was duly formed as a corporation on the eighth day of November, 1911, and its original articles of incorporation, duly executed and such execution duly acknowledged, were on the twenty-second day of November, 1911, filed in the office of the county clerk of the said county of Sonoma, and a copy thereof, properly certified by said county clerk, was filed with and in the office of the Secretary of State, as required by law.

Before the filing of said original articles, the petitioner complied with all the essential requirements prescribed by law for the formation of corporations and which entitled such articles and a copy thereof to be filed in the offices of the county clerk and the Secretary of State, respectively.

“On the nineteenth day of March, 1912,” the petition proceeds to set forth, “said corporation amended its original *539 articles of incorporation by a majority vote of its board of directors and by the written assent of its stockholders owning, holding of record and representing more than two-thirds of its subscribed capital stock. Thereupon a copy of said corporation’s articles of incorporation amended as aforesaid, duly certified by the president and secretary of said corporation and of its board of directors to be correct, was filed in the office of the county clerk of said county of Sonoma. The certificate of said president and secretary attached to said copy of said articles as amended was duly acknowledged by said president and secretary before a notary public of the state of California, in and for said county of Sonoma, who made, signed and sealed a certificate of acknowledgment to the certificate made as aforesaid by said president and secretary. ’ ’

On the twenty-first day of March, 1912, a certified copy of said copy of said amended articles, with a copy of said certificate of the president and secretary attached thereto, duly certified by the county clerk of the county of Sonoma, was presented by the petitioner to the respondent, as Secretary of State, for filing in his office. The respondent then refused, and still refuses, to file said certified copy of a copy of the amended articles in his office on the ground that there is not attached or annexed thereto a copy of the certificates of acknowledgment which were attached to the original articles of incorporation, claiming that, as a prerequisite to the right of the petitioner to have the copy of the amended articles filed in the office of Secretary of State, it is essential, under the law, that such copy should have attached thereto a copy of the certificates of acknowledgment referred to.

The attorney general, representing, the respondent, has interposed and filed a general demurrer and an answer to the petition, and by argument not only undertakes to support the ground, as above indicated, upon which the respondent refuses to file the amended articles in his office, but makes the additional point that the respondent’s position is further sustained by the fact that said amended articles, in violation of the statute relating to that subject, has attempted to increase its capital stock.

We are unable to agree to either of the propositions advanced by the attorney general. .

*540 1' Under the heading, “Articles of Incorporation—What They shall Contain,” section 290 of the Civil Code specifically enumerates, in various distinct subdivisions, the matters or facts which such instrument must contain, or, in other words, the matters which must be embodied in the original articles of incorporation in order to legally constitute them such an instrument. That section and section 291 of the same code (the latter having exclusive application to certain classes of corporations) are the only provisions of our law to which our attention has been directed which pretend to set forth what matters or facts shall be contained in articles of incorporation, and in the absence of any other provision of law requiring other matters and things than those enumerated in said sections to be set out in such articles, the specific enumeration by said sections of the various facts which the articles must contain necessarily implies the exclusion, ex industria, of any other matters than those thus specifically named.

Now, then, nowhere in either of said sections are certificates of acknowledgment of the execution of articles of incorporation referred to by name or by any language furnishing ground for even the remotest inference that such certificates are any part of articles of incorporation, or that the legislature intended that they should become or be made a part thereof. Unless, therefore, there is to be found elsewhere in the code some provision by which such certificates are declared either expressly or by reasonable construction to be an essential part of the articles of incorporation themselves, we must hold that the argument advanced in support of the proposition cannot prevail. We have not succeeded in finding in any of the sections of the code relating to corporations and their formation any language indicating that the legislature intended to include such certificates as a part of the articles themselves any more than the acknowledgment of a deed—a prerequisite to the right to record it—is made by the statute a part of the deed proper.

The requirement that articles of incorporation shall be subscribed and acknowledged by certain persons is contained in section 292 of the Civil Code. It is therein provided that “the articles of incorporation must be subscribed by three or more persons, a majority of whom must be residents of this state, and acknowledged by each before some officer authorized to *541 take and certify acknowledgments or conveyances of real property.” The meaning of the language of that section and the purpose of the section is merely this: That when the articles of incorporation themselves have been prepared in accordance with other requirements of the code, the requisite number of the parties intending to form or associate themselves together as a corporation must acknowledge the due execution of the articles and thus furnish proof that such articles have been properly executed. In other words, the primary purpose of the certificates is to secure “the state and all concerned against the possibility of any fictitious names being subscribed to the articles, and to furnish proof of the genuineness of the signatures.” (People v. Golden Gate Lodge No. 6, 128 Cal. 257, 263, [60 Pac. 865, 867].)

But the attorney general insists that, according to the true construction of section 362 of the Civil Code, under the terms of which original articles of incorporation may be amended, it is essential that, where such articles are amended, the amendment must not only contain all the matters and things required by the statute to be embodied in original articles, but must further have annexed or attached thereto the certificates of acknowledgment of the execution of the original.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 P. 598, 19 Cal. App. 536, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-telephone-light-co-v-jordan-calctapp-1912.