Cleaton v. Emery

49 Mo. App. 345, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 225
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 49 Mo. App. 345 (Cleaton v. Emery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleaton v. Emery, 49 Mo. App. 345, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 225 (Mo. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Gill, J.

In the year 1889, the defendants, who compose some of the principal business men of St. Joseph, Missouri, conceived the idea of holding at said city a mammoth fair and 'exposition. To this end books were opened, but they were only able to secure subscriptions to the enterprise aggregating $43,000. .In order, doubtless, to impress the country with the magnitude of the proposed undertaking, it was determined to organize a corporation with a stated capital of $1,000,000. But under the corporation laws of Missouri this could not be done with such a meager subscription of only $43,000, since by the provisions of our laws for the incorporation of such business enterprises, the whole of the stock must have been in good faith subscribed, and fifty per cent, thereof paid up before such million-dollar corporation could be organized. R. S. 1889, sec. 2768. To avoid this obstacle, and evade the restrictions of the laws of their own state, the defendants (all citizens of St. Joseph, Missouri) then sought to organize as a corporation under the laws of the state of Colorado, where it seems the capital stock may be named at any sum, however large, [350]*350and the incorporators will be held to no individual liability beyond the amount by them subscribed. Carrying out this plan, these gentlemen entered into articles of association at St. Joseph, pretending the organization of “The National Railway, Electric & Industrial Exposition Association,” with a stated capital of $1,000,000, whereas there was, in fact, at no time a subscription of stock exceeding the $43,000. These articles were, May, 1889, filed with the secretary of the state of Colorado, and a certificate of incorporation procured. By said articles of incorporation, the object stated was to hold said exposition at St. Joseph, Missouri, amd the term of existence of the association limited to one year.

The enterprise proved a serious disaster, at least, financially; the assets of the pretended corporation proved inadequate for the payment of its debts, and this is an action by one of its creditors, whereby it is sought to hold the defendant incorporators liable as partners. The good faith of the corporation is attacked, on the ground that this organizing under the laws of Colorado was a legal fraud on the laws of that state as well as of Missouri; that there was then no incorporation, but that these defendants should be held liable as partners for its unpaid debts. No question is made as to the correctness of plaintiff’s account; the only matter in dispute is whether or not the defendants are individually liable therefor.

The cause was tried by the court below without the aid of a jury; a finding and judgment was had in favor of defendants, and plaintiff has appealed.

I. It is of course well understood that the incorporating in one nation or state, either by special act or general law, has no extra-territorial force. In other words, the statute laws of one state have no force or effect as such in other states. Such recognition as is given corporate entities in states other than the parent [351]*351state, or home, of the corporation comes alone from that international courtesy or law of comity always existing by common consent between different countries. It is then only by virtue of this inter-state “common law of comity” that the existence of this exposition corporation created in Colorado can be at all recognized in this state. It is not meant by this law of comity that because a certain corporation may have been, in form, ■created in one state it shall necessarily be permitted recognition in another state. “This law of comity was not established for the purpose of giving any state an unlimited power to dispose of the franchise of acting in a corporate capacity, in other states. To obtain a charter for the purpose of evading the laws of a foreign state, under cover of the rule of comity, would be a fraud upon the state granting the charter; and to attempt to act under such charter in the foreign state would be a fraud upon the latter.” This statement of the law is quotedfrom 2 Morawetz on Private Corporations, section 965a, and we regard it as a succinct and pointed recognition of the true rule; and under it we must hold the incorporation here in question only colorable and absolutely void. The procuring of the incorporation of this St. Joseph Pair Association was a fraud on the state of Colorado, as by its statutes it never was meant to incorporate a concern whose entire business was to be conducted in a foreign jurisdiction, not even providing for the location of its general or principal office within the limits of said state. Section 2, chapter 19, G-eneral Statutes, Colorado (1883), which must 'give life to this ■corporation (if it has any vitality), admits the right to incorporate for the purpose of conducting a business, a portion of which shall be within and a portion without the state, but impliedly rejects the creation of corporations whose principal office and whose entire business .shall be maintained and operated in other states. It is [352]*352there named as a requisite in the certificate of incorporation, that “it shall state the name of the town or place and the county in which the principal office of the company shall be kept”- (where the entire business is to be transacted in that state) ; and, when any company shall be created under the laws of this state for the purpose of carrying, on part of its business beyond the limits thereof, such certificate shall state that fact, and shall state the name of the town and county in this state in which the principal office of said company shall be kept.”

Clearly then the statutes of Colorado meant to provide for the creation of such .corporations, a part, at least, of whose business was to be transacted in that state, and manifestly, too, it was the intention that the principal office of the corporation should be kept in the state of Colorado; yet we have here in the articles of association signed by these defendants a provision that the principal office of the corporation shall be at St. Joseph, Missouri. It is true that the articles formerly stipulated for the establishment of branch offices at various cities throughout the country, and among them at Denver, Colorado. Still this does not cover up nor conceal the sole design of the incorporation which was the conduct of a fair and exposition at St. Joseph, and nowhere else. It is disclosed, too, that no branch offices were indeed ever established, unless it was from the appointment of an agent, so called, at Denver during the last days of the exposition at St. Joseph,, and when the enterprise .was already a pronounced failure.

"We have here then the state of Colorado granting a corporate franchise to our own citizens to do business alone in this state. Not only that, but the sole purpose was to avoid the restrictions so wisely engrafted onto our corporation laws. To hedge about and protect its [353]*353people from false appearances and merely advertised capital that has no real existence, onr legislature has provided agamst the creation of those corporations of abundant pretenses, and no capital. Hence, it was not in the power of these defendants to incorporate, under the laws of Missouri, with a pretended capital of $1,000,000, while there was in fact less than $50,000 stock subscribed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 Mo. App. 345, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleaton-v-emery-moctapp-1892.