Dundee Mortgage & Trust Investment Co. v. Cooper

26 F. 665, 11 Sawy. 501, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1989
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 26 F. 665 (Dundee Mortgage & Trust Investment Co. v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dundee Mortgage & Trust Investment Co. v. Cooper, 26 F. 665, 11 Sawy. 501, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1989 (uscirct 1886).

Opinion

Deadx, J.

This suit is brought to enforce the lien of a mortgage, given to secure the payment of a note for $10,000, -with interest. It was commenced on October 28, 1884, in the stale circuit court for the county of Linn. On March -12th the defendants, D. M. Cooper and Rebecca, his wife, J. H. Wilson and Mary, his wife, J. M. Wilson and Matilda, liis wife, answered the complaint, denying the corporate existence of the plaintiff, whereupon the latter, on April 7th, removed the cause into this court, where the same was heard on February 3, 1886, on the complaint, answer, evidence, and exhibits.

On the hearing the point was made that the answer should have been replied to, and the court, without passing on- the question, allowed the plaintiff to file a replication thereto, nunc pro tunc, which was done on February 5th.

It is alleged in the complaint that the plaintiff is a corporation, duly organized under the laws of Great Britain, with its principal office at Dundee, Scotland; that on April 14, 1881, the Oregon & [666]*666Washington Mortgage Savings Bank, a corporation also duly organized under the laws aforesaid, loaned to the defendant D. M. Cooper the sum of $10,000, for which he made and delivered to said corporation his promissory note, payable to its order, on December 1, 1885, and also five other notes, payable to its order, on December 1, 1881, 1882, 1883, 1884, and 1885, respectively, for the several amounts of interest payable on said loan at said dates, at the rate of 10 per centum per annum, amounting in the aggregate to $14,632.90, and at the same time, together with the defendant Rebecca, his wife, executed and delivered to said corporation a mortgage of sundry parcels of land in said county of Linn, as a security for the payment of said notes, which was duly recorded on June 9, 1881; that on May 15, 1882, the defendants D. M. Cooper and Rebecca, his wife, conveyed said land to the defendant J. H. Wilson, in part consideration whereof the latter assumed and agreed to pay the notes aforesaid; that on February 23, 1883, said Oregon & Washington Mortgage Savings Bank, for value received, assigned said notes and mortgage to the plaintiff herein, who is now the owner of the same; that said defendants Cooper and Wilson have not paid said notes or any one or part thereof, and therefore the plaintiff, pursuant to a provision in said mortgage, now declares the whole of the .principal sum of said loan, and the interest accrued thereon to be presently due; that, by the terms of said mortgage it is also provided that in case a suit is required to be brought to enforce the lien of the same, that there shall be taxed in favor of the plaintiff therein an attorney’s fee of 10 per centum on the amount due on said notes; that the defendants George E. Chamberlain, W. E. Edwards, N. Whealdon, J. M. Wilson, and Matilda, his wife, have some interest in or lien on the premises, subsequent to the mortgage aforesaid, the nature or value of which is unknown to the plaintiff. The complaint prays for a decree against D. M. Cooper and J. H. Wilson for the sum of $12,632.90,. and $1,000 attorney’s fee, together with costs and disbursements, and, in default of payment thereof, for the sale of the premises to satisfy the same.

The defendants D. M. Cooper and J. H. Wilson, having contracted with the Oregon & Washington Mortgage Savings Bank as a corporation, concerning the payment of this money, are estopped thereby to deny its corporate existence, or power to make such contract. Oregonian Ry. Co. v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co., 10 Sawy. 470; S. C. 22 Fed. Rep. 245; Ang. & A. Corp. (9th Ed.) 640. But as to the as-signee of such corporation, the plaintiff, the case is otherwise. The plea or answer of the defendants purports,to be in abatement. A denial of the corporate existence of a corporation not only controverts its right to sue, but also the cause of action. However, it seems that a party may, if he will, plead such non-existence in abatement only. Oregonian Ry. Co. v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co., 10 Sawy. 469; S. C. 22 Fed. Rep. 245. This plea or answer consists simply of a denial of the allegation in the complaint that the plaintiff is a corporation duly [667]*667organized under the laws of Great Britian. In effect it is the old plea of mil tiel corporation.

By the provisions of the Code, under which these pleadings were made, this affirmative and negative allegation made an issue. Together they constitute a fact, affirmed on the one side, and denied on the other. There is no new matter in the answer, and therefore there is nothing really to reply to. Nevertheless, it seems, that at common law, the analogous plea of nul tiel record requires a replication to put the matter formally in issue. 1 Chit. Pl. 632. And in equity it seems that the matter in a plea, whether negative or affirmative, is put in issue by a replication thereto. Story, Eq. Pl. § 697. This anomaly could and should be cured by a rule of the supreme court dispensing with a replication to a plea, unless and only so far as it contains new matter.

Upon the evidence taken on the plea two questions arise: (1) Is the proof of the law of Great Britian, under which it is claimed the plaintiff was incorporated, sufficient? and (2) is the proof of the incorporation thereunder also sufficient?

The only witnesses examined as to the law are William Mackenzie and Hugh Rogers. The former is a resident of Dundee, Scotland, a stockbroker, and the secretary of the plaintiff from the time of its organization. The latter is the resident agent of the plaintiff in Portland for the past three years; hut he is a native of Scotland, and resided there until he came here, during which time he was engaged as an accountant, for six years in Edinburgh, in the management of corporations organized under the law of Groat Britain, and with the winding-up of the same, under the supervision of the court of sessions, the highest court in Scotland. They both testify that Exhibit A, a bound volume of statutes, purporting to be the acts of the parliament of Great Britain on the subject of “the incorporation, regulation, and winding-up of trading companies and other associations,” including the act cited as “The Companies’ Act, 1862,” and sundry amendments thereto, made in the years following, and as late as 1883, is published by William Blackwood & Sons, the queen’s printers, in Scotland, under license from the government, and is commonly received in Scotland as an authoritative copy thereof; and Mr. Rogers says that copies of this publication are universally received by all professional men and all courts in Scotland as official, and there are no oilier official copies of the companies’ act in use there; and that the book is generally received in Scotland as published by authority of a license from the government issued by the lord advocate for the time being. On the first page of the book there is an imprint of the royal arms, and the title:

“Anno vicésimo quinto & vicésimo sexto Victoria; Regina,
“Cap. LXXXIX.
“An act for tho incorporation, regulation, and winding-up of trading companies and other associations, (7th August, 1862.)”

[668]*668Then follows the act,-r-the enacting clause being to the effect that-, the same is enacted by the queen with the advice and consent of the lords and commons in parliament assembled, — the first section thereof providing that it may be cited as “The Companies’ Act, 1862.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F. 665, 11 Sawy. 501, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dundee-mortgage-trust-investment-co-v-cooper-uscirct-1886.