Fidelity Adjustment Co. v. Cook

95 S.W.2d 1162, 339 Mo. 45, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 622
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 30, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 1162 (Fidelity Adjustment Co. v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Adjustment Co. v. Cook, 95 S.W.2d 1162, 339 Mo. 45, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 622 (Mo. 1936).

Opinions

The trial court, having sustained the demurrer of defendants R.M. Cook, Chester L. Charles, John O. Patterson, *Page 48 A.L. Cooper and Frank W. McAllister to the petition of Fidelity Adjustment Company, a corporation, plaintiff, and plaintiff having declined to plead further, entered judgment for defendants. Plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff seeks to recover of defendants $29,118.29 alleged due plaintiff from Pan American Feed Company, a corporation. The petition is in fifteen counts, each based upon a separate note or open account endorsed or assigned for value to plaintiff; and is based upon the personal civil liability imposed upon defendants as directors of said Pan American Feed Company under Section 4628, Revised Statutes 1929 (Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 2053).

Defendants filed demurrers to plaintiff's petition putting in issue the constitutionality of said Section 4628. Plaintiff's right to maintain its alleged cause of action against defendants, being purely statutory, under the issues presented, involves a ruling on the constitutionality of said Section 4628; for if unconstitutional no cause of action exists. From the view we take of the case, we perceive no useful purpose to be served by inserting the averments of plaintiff's petition. Summarized, the petition alleges the incorporation of plaintiff; that said Section 4628, setting the same out verbatim, was in full force and effect at all times mentioned in said petition; that the Pan American Feed Company was a corporation; that the charter of said Pan American Feed Company was forfeited January 1, 1930, for failure to comply with the annual registration laws of the State; and that defendants were directors of said Pan American Feed Corporation on, and, pretending to act as directors aforesaid, continued to exercise the powers and privileges of said corporation subsequent to, said date of said forfeiture of said charter. Next, the respective counts of the petition set forth a cause of action against said Pan American Feed Company, some of said items of indebtedness having been incurred prior and other items subsequent to said forfeiture of said charter; and allege that defendants, by reason of the premises and the provisions of said Section 4628, are severally and individually liable to plaintiff for the specific item of indebtedness.

The annual registration laws referred to in the petition are Sections 4613 et seq., Revised Statutes 1929 (Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 2047), requiring the registration of, the filing of an antitrust affidavit and certain other information, and the payment of a registration fee by certain corporations annually. Under the provisions of Section 4619, Revised Statutes 1929 (Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 2049), the corporate rights and privileges of a corporation failing to comply with the provisions of said sections on or before the 31st day of December of any given year "shall be forfeited, and the secretary of state shall thereupon cancel the certificate, or license, of such corporation by appropriate entry on the margin of the record thereof," whereupon all the *Page 49 powers, privileges and franchises conferred upon such corporation shall cease and determine, etc.

[1] One of the constitutional issues common to the demurrers and presented as an issue on this review is that the portion of said Section 4628, upon which plaintiff's cause of action is based, is not clearly expressed in the title to said act as required by Section 28, Article IV, of the Constitution of Missouri.

Section 28, Article 4, of our Constitution provides: "No bill . . . shall contain more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title."

Section 4628, supra, reads (that portion here involved being set forth in italics):

"Any person, or persons who shall exercise, or attempt to exercise, any of the powers, privileges, or franchises of any corporation after the certificate or license of the same has been forfeited and canceled as in this article provided shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction punished as hereinafter provided; and the officers and directors, or principal agent in Missouri, if a foreign corporation, of anycorporation which shall so violate the provisions of this articleshall be held as partners and become severally and individuallyliable for the debts of such corporation."

Said Section 4628 was Section 17 of an act appearing in Laws 1919, pages 227-235 [now Secs. 4613-4640, of Art. 1, Chap. 32, R.S. 1929], the word "article" reading in said original law "act" [See Sec. 9807, R.S. 1919, for authority for the change in wording, and Sec. 9822, R.S. 1919].

The title to said Act of 1919 [Laws 1919, p. 227], insofar as material (the portion thereof here involved appearing in italics), reads:

"An Act to provide for the supervision of certain corporations; for annual registration of, and filing of annual statements, and anti-trust affidavit by, requiring the filing of a statement setting forth the name and address of each of the officers and directors thereof, such corporations; fixing fees for registration; providing for the forfeiture of corporate charters; suspension and forfeiture of corporate charters for violation of this act; prescribing penalties on officers and directors whoshall attempt to exercise any of powers, privileges or franchisesafter the certificate or license has been forfeited andcanceled; reinstatement after suspension or forfeiture; and fixing fees for registration, prescribing fines and penaltiesfor violation. . . ."

The title of a legislative act may be general, or it may carve out specific details of the general subject-matter legislated upon. In either event "the title must express the subject of the act in such terms that members of the General Assembly and the people may *Page 50 not be left in doubt as to what matter is treated of" [State v. Burgdoerfer, 107 Mo. l.c. 30, 17 S.W. 646]. In City of Columbia v. Public Service Commission, 329 Mo. 38, 45, 43 S.W.2d 813, 816 (2), we said: "The general rule of construction is thus stated in 36 Cyc., p. 1029, n. 27: `The title need not express limitations in the body of the act, but where the title is restrictive the act must be also.' In State ex rel. v. Edwards et al., 241 S.W. 945, 950, we have said that, `where the title of an act descends to particulars and details, the act must conform to the title as thus limited by the particulars and details.' In State ex rel. v. Hackmann, 292 Mo. 27, 32, 237 S.W. 742, 743, we have thus stated the rule more fully: `Though subject-matter in an act be such as might constitutionally be enacted under one title, it cannot be so enacted in a particular act, unless it be within the subject "clearly expressed in the title" of such act. [St. Louis v. Weitzel, 130 Mo. 616, 31 S.W. 1045.] If follows that if the title of such an act "descends to particulars," and states such particulars as the subject of the act, then not the general subject within which such particulars fall, but the particulars stated, become the subject stated in the title. In such a case the provisions of the act enactable under such a title must be such as fairly relate to and have a natural connection with, not the general subject which might have been stated, but the subject which is stated, i.e., the particulars set out in the title. [State v. Rawlings, 232 Mo. l.c. 557, 558, 134 S.W. 530; State v. Sloan, 258 Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 1162, 339 Mo. 45, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-adjustment-co-v-cook-mo-1936.