Comstock v. Wood

216 N.W. 617, 204 Iowa 1027
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 13, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 216 N.W. 617 (Comstock v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comstock v. Wood, 216 N.W. 617, 204 Iowa 1027 (iowa 1927).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

For many years-, the decedent and two brothers, II. R. and Guy II. Straight, were engaged in the manufacture and sale of clay products at Auburn, Iowa, as a copartnership, under the firm name and style of the Auburn Brick & Tile Company. In the fall of 1912, they filed' articles of incorporation, providing for 'a capital of $100,000. At the same time, an application was filed for permission to .pay the capital with the property of the. copartnership and certain real property, title to which was held in the names of the respective partners. In due time, a certificate authorizing the cox’poration to commence business was issued by the secretary of state.

Later, and in 1918, the same parties, who were the owners of all of the stock of the corporation, adopted an amendment to the articles, providing for an increase of- the capital of the corporation to $250,000, and, together with an application for pex-mission to pay. the increased capital in property, filed the same with the secretary of state.- In due time, the appropriate certificates were issued by the secretary of state. The old stock of the corporation was surrendered, and new stock issued for $200,000. In addition thereto, stock of the par value of $14,000 was sold.

The claim filed against the estate of decedent is based upoxx a series of xxegotiable promissox-y notes executed by and in the xxame of the corporatioxi to the appellant. The aggregate amouixt due thereon at the time the claim was filed was in excess of $36,000. Either - concurrently with the filing of the claim or a few days later, appellant filed a petition in equity against the administrator. Both the claim and the cause of action in equity against the estate were predicated upon the alleged personal liability of the . decedent as a stockholder of the corporation; ,

Three propositions are argued by appellant. They are: (a) That the property of the copartnership was-never conveyed *1029 to the corporation, ■ .and hence the .capital .was never, paid in; (b) that the notice of the original articles of incorporation and of the amendment thereto did. not substantially comply with the requirements of -the statute; and (c) that the indebtedness of the corporation, if any, was in excess of- that allowed by law. We will dispose of the foregoing propositions in the order stated.

I. The property of the copartnership consisted of the plant, .equipment, machinery, etc., which were fully described and itemized in the application to the -executive council for permission to pay the capital in property, and there was included therein certain real estate, title to which was held in the name of the individual partners. The property was appraised, as required by law, and thoroughly inspected by an engineer appointed by the executive council. Deeds conveying the real estate to the corporation were duly executed, and the property of the copartnership was taken over thereby and entered upon its books. No bill of sale or other conveyance was executed to the corporation. The property was, however, at all times held by, and treated as the property.of, the corporation. The stock was issued and the business conducted in the corporate name. A formal transfer thereof could not have more effectually vested the title to the personal property in- the corporation than did the entry thereof on the .books thereof, the assumption of ownership thereby, and the issuance of stock based thereon. There was at this point substantial compliance with the statute.

II. The alleged defects of the notice required by Section 1613, Code of 1897 (Section 8357, Code of 1924), to be published, may be summarized as follows: ■ That it did not specify the amount of capital stock authorized or the times and conditions on which it was to be paid; that it did not state the date on which the corporation would commence business, nor the duration of the corporation. The notice recited that the capital stock of the corporation should be $100,000, to be divided into shares .of $100 each, and to be fully paid before the corporation began business, and that the business should begin on the date the secretary of state issued the certificate, and would continue for twenty years thereafter. It is true that the capital was to be paid in property, but the statute requires only that the *1030 times and conditions on which it is to be paid shall be stated. The statement in the notice that it was to be paid before the corporation should commence business sufficiently met the requirements of the statute. The notice substantially complied with all statutory requirements. Thornton v. Balcom, 85 Iowa 198; Brinkley Car Works & Mfg. Co. v. Curfman, 136 Iowa 476; Union Tr. & Sav. Bank v. Blair-Harper Seed Co., 200 Iowa 374.

The published notice of the amendment to the articles increasing the capital to $250,000 is less specific. It did not state the terms or conditions upon which the capital should be paid in. The application to the executive council for authority to pay the capital in property included the original property of the corporation, together with accumulations, the total value of which, it was alleged, exceeded $250,000. The claim is that the business of the corporation prospered, and that its property had so far enhanced in value as to justify an increase in capital. The property was duly appraised by competent appraisers, and again inspected- by an engineer selected by the - executive council. Appellant herein was one of the appraisers, both when the incorporation was originally formed and when the amendment to its articles was adopted,so that he must have had full notice of the assets of the corporation and- the form in which its capital was paid.

Section 1616, Code of 1897 (Section 8362, Code of 1924), provides that:

“A failure to substantially comply with the foregoing requirements in relation to organization and publicity shall render the individual property of the stockholders liable for the corporate debts.”

Section 1631, Code of 1897 (Section 8394, Code of 1924), is as follows:

“Neither anything in this chapter contained, nor any provisions in the articles of corporation, shall exempt the stockholders from individual liability to the amount of the unpaid installments on the stock owned by them, or transferred by them for the purpose of defrauding creditors; and execution against the company may, to that extent, be levied upon the private property of any such individual.”

*1031 Unless there was a failure on the part of the incorporators to substantially comply with the statute regarding organization and publicity, the decedent would not have been liable as a stockholder for the corporate debts, under Section 8362, Code of 1924. We think there was substantial compliance with the statute in these particulars, certainly as to the original proceedings for the incorporation of the business of the copartnership,- and we think as to the amendment. The object of the publication of the notice is that parties dealing with the corporation may know, or be charged with, knowledge that they are not dealing with natural persons. Thornton v. Balcom, 85 Iowa 198; Brinkley Car Works & Mfg. Co. v. Curfman, 136 Iowa 476.

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216 N.W. 617, 204 Iowa 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comstock-v-wood-iowa-1927.