Colcord v. Granzow

1928 OK 211, 278 P. 654, 137 Okla. 194, 64 A.L.R. 699, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 957
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 27, 1928
Docket17807
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1928 OK 211 (Colcord v. Granzow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colcord v. Granzow, 1928 OK 211, 278 P. 654, 137 Okla. 194, 64 A.L.R. 699, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 957 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

JEFFREY, C.

This is a suit by certain creditors of a dissolved corporation against certain directors of the corporation by reason of the fact that said directors created the indebtedness sued upon in excess of the subscribed capital stock of the corporation as provided by section 5336, C. O. S. 1921. H. W. Granzow, C. F. Woodward, J. H. Hoback, G. W. Campbell, Victor Peterson, O. W. Callerman, and Alfred Smith joined as plaintiffs in the petition, and named as defendants, C. F. Colcord, J. J. Culbertson, K. W. Dawson, W. F. Harn, D. F. Sparrow, S. L. Brock, O. G. Lee, and Orin Ashton, directors of the State Capitol Building Company, a corporation, dissolved, and also H. E. Beem-blossom and Estelle Beemblossom Baker, who also were creditors of said dissolved corporation but refused to join as plaintiffs in the suit. M. M. Ashton, who also was a creditor, intervened as a party plaintiff. A separate cause of action was pleaded for each of the plaintiffs, and the prayer of said petition asked for judgment on each of said causes of action for the amount therein pleaded in favor and for the benefit of such respective plaintiff. The petition discloses that some of the parties had reduced their claims to judgment prior to the dissolution of the corporation, but others had not. The original indebtedness of each of the plaintiffs was represented by promissory notes, and evidenced a balance due on the purchase price of certain lands conveyed to the corporation. The same is true of the defendants H. E. Beemblossom and Estelle Beemblossom Baker, who filed cross-petition asking judgment against said directors, and *196 will hereinafter also be designated as plaintiffs. All plaintiffs asked for interest at 8 per cent, from date of the various notes as provided thereby until June 20, 1922, the date of dissolution of the corporation.

If the statute of limitations is applicable in this character of case, all claims of plaintiffs, including both the judgments and notes, were barred by the statute prior to the dissolution of the corporation. The corporation was dissolved June 20, 1922.

This suit was commenced on the 18th day of September, 1922 The cause was tried to the court on the 19th day of October, 1925. At the conclusion of all the evidence, all parties joined in a request for findings of' fact and conclusions of law. Defendants submitted, in writing, findings of fact and conclusions of law on all questions, and requested their adoption, which was denied by the court, and other findings and conclusions of law were made and entered by the court, and judgment was rendered thereon in favor of plaintiffs and against the defendants O. B. Coleord. K. AV. Dawson, AAr. F. Ham, and Orin Ashton on each cause of action for the full amount therein prayed for. The defendants Coleord, Dawson, and Ham have appealed. Numerous assignments of error are made, but are argued under certain propositions of law, which seem to cover all serious questions raised in this court.

The first proposition urged by defendants is as follows:

“To have a legal corporate existence, a private corporation must be organized for some authorized purpose.”

Under this proposition, it is contended that the State Capitol Building Company never had a corporate existence; and that a corporate existence was a prerequisite to the statutory liability of the directors. The purposes for which the company was organized, as shown by its articles of incorporation, are as follows:

“To promote the building of a State Capitol at the • intersection of Twenty-second (22nd) street extended and Lincoln Boulevard in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma county, state of Oklahoma, as contemplated in the act of the Legislature of the state of Oklahoma, providing for the location of such Capitol at. Oklahoma City; to acquire by purchase, gift, donations or devise, and to hold for the purposes hereinafter mentioned, real estate in or as additions to Oklahoma City, and to lay out- and plat the same into streets, alleys, lots and blocks, and to sell and dispose of the lots and blocks so surveyed, laid out and platted, for the purpose of providing a fund for the construction of said building; to act as trustee for the donors of such fund, and for the state of Oklahoma ; and to do generally such other and further business, and have such other and further powers as are necessary or desirable, to effectuate and carry out the above purposes.”

Section 5391, C O. S. 1921, provides that private corporations may be formed for a number of purposes, one of which is:

“Dor the purpose of locating, laying out, improving town-sites, and buying and selling real estate therefor, including the sale and conveyance of the same in lots, subdivisions or otherwise.”

Defendants say that if the State Capitol Building Company ever had a legal corporate existence, it was a public or quasi public corporation, and created by virtue of Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 8, Session Laws 1910-1911. AYith this we canot agree. This resolution incorporated a proposal from the defendants and a number of other persons wherein it was proposed that the State Capitol Building Company would be organized, under the laws of the state of Oklahoma, with a capital stock of $1,000 divided into 100 shares of the par value of $10; that said corporation would acquire, plat, subdivide, and sell real estate within the near proximity of the Capitol site, proposed to be established at the intersection of Lincoln boulevard and Twenty-second street in the city of Oklahoma City, for the purpose of raising a fund in the sum of $1,000 000 to be donated the state for the erection of the Capitol Building, on condition that the same should be established and located at said point. The resolution in no manner attempts to create this corporation or to provide for its creation. The articles of incorporation in no manner bring it within the terms of section 5296, C. O. S. 1921, which defines public corporations. Section 5297, C. O. S. 1921, provides that all corporations not public are private. If the State Capitol Building Company had a corporate existence, the authority therefor must be found in section 5301, C. O. S. 1921. It will be noticed that a part of the purposes for which the company was attempted to be organized, as set forth in its articles of incorporation, to wit:

“* * * ¶0 acquire by purchase, gift, donations or devise, and to hold for the purposes hereinafter mentioned, real estate in or as additions to Oklahoma City, and to lay out and plat the same into streets, alleys, lots and blocks, and to sell and dispose of the lots and blocks so surveyed, laid out and platted * * *”

—are very similar to that portion of sec *197 tion 5301, C. O. S. 1921, above quoted. To this extent and for this purpose the law authorized the incorporation of the company, it is the other purposes therein named, and the purposes for which the company proposed to use its income, that raise the question as to its right to corporate existence under the law. In the case of Staacke v. Routledge (Tex. Civ. App.) 175 S. W. 141, a corporation was organized and chartered for the purpose of maintaining stage lines, mercantile business, and renting automobiles with drivers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 211, 278 P. 654, 137 Okla. 194, 64 A.L.R. 699, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colcord-v-granzow-okla-1928.