Gillen-Cole Co. v. Fox & Co.

29 P.2d 1019, 146 Or. 208, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 53
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 P.2d 1019 (Gillen-Cole Co. v. Fox & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gillen-Cole Co. v. Fox & Co., 29 P.2d 1019, 146 Or. 208, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 53 (Or. 1934).

Opinion

EOSSMAN, J.

July 18, 1930, the plaintiff instituted this action, alleging that it had sold merchandise of the value of $1,445 to the defendant, Fox & Company, which it averred to be a corporation. July 7, 1931, it recovered judgment. In the latter part of 1928 or some part of 1929, all of the assets of Fox & Company were conveyed to the Plumbing & Heating Sales Corporation which did not require Fox & Company to furnish a list of its creditors and did not notify Fox & Company’s creditors of the intended purchase. The plaintiff, believing that our bulk sales law (sections 64-101 to 64-104, Oregon Code 1930) was applicable to that sale, that its provisions were violated by the omissions just mentioned, and that non-compliance with the act rendered the sale void when attacked by Fox & Company’s creditors, thus leaving property in the possession of the Plumbing & Heating Sales Corporation subject to writs of attachment and of garnishment, caused such writs to be served upon the Plumbing &> Heating Sales Corporation (to which we shall hereafter refer as the garnishee). The garnishee, in its return to the writ of garnishment, stated that it possessed nothing belonging to Fox & Company. Thereafter allegations and interrogatories propounded by the plaintiff were served upon the garnishee, to which it made replies in harmony with its return upon the writ of. garnishment. In this manner there arose the *210 following two main issues: (1) Did Fox & Company at the time plaintiff alleges that it sold merchandise to that business (January 1,1928, to May 1, 1929) possess sufficient corporate character to enable it, as a corporation, to become the plaintiff’s debtor; and (2) if it did, was it indebted to the plaintiff December 11, 1929, when the garnishee delivered to Jay H. Fox, Trustee, a stock certificate for 2,000 shares of its own stock as consideration for the assets of Fox & Company which had been conveyed to it. The following, we believe, is a fair statement of the material facts disclosed by the evidence.

In the year 1906 one J. H. Fox, Sr., organized an Oregon corporation entitled Fox & Company with a capitalization of $5,000 divided into 500 shares, of which Fox acquired 410. Later, the capitalization and number of shares were doubled. In 1924 Fox died. Prior to his death he had transferred all of his stock to his stepson, Charles A. Carson. The latter died in 1928, and thereupon his mother, Kate A. Fox, who was the widow of J. H. Fox, Sr., became the owner of Carson’s stock which at that time consisted of 920 shares. July 6, 1928, Kate A. Fox and one Jay H. Fox, son of J. H. Fox, Sr., effected an agreement whereby her certificate for 920 shares was transferred to Jay H. Fox who at once surrendered it to the corporation and obtained a new certificate for 920 shares in the name of Jay H. Fox, Trustee. The agreement bound him to hold the new certificate in trust for a period of three years, and at the end of that time to divide the 920 shares among A. C. Carson, Cora J. Conley and himself, but, in the meantime, pay all dividends earned by the stock to Kate A. Fox. Pursuant to the agreement, the old certificate was surrendered and a new one obtained in the name of Jay H. Fox, Trustee. Fox & Company, having failed to file the annual re *211 ports required by section 6883, O. L. 1920 (now section 25-237, Oregon Code 1930), with the corporation commissioner for the fiscal years ending June 30,1921, 1922 and 1923, and also having failed to pay to the state the annual license fees exacted by the same section of our laws for the years just mentioned, the governor of this state, on January 7, 1924, in the exercise of the authority conferred upon him by section 6896, O. L. 1920 (now section 25-250, Oregon Code 1930), issued a proclamation declaring the corporate powers previously conferred upon Fox & Company “inoperative and void”. On or prior to January 12, 1929, Fox & Company paid to the corporation commissioner the sum due the state on account of the unpaid license fees for the years ending June 30, 1922 to 1929, inclusive, and on the same day filed with the same official the neglected annual reports, accompanied by an application signed Fox & Co., by Jay H. Fox, its Secy, which, after recounting that the corporation had been dissolved by proclamation of the governor for the nonpayment of license fees, and that “such corporation has done business during such delinquency from June 30, 1922 to January 10, 1929”, requested that the corporation be restored to all of its franchises and privileges. Thereupon the corporation commissioner, obedient to the directions of the governor, and pursuant to the provisions of section 6900, O. L. 1920 (now section 25-254, Oregon Code 1930), issued an order restoring Fox & Company “to all of its franchises and privileges”.

From 1906, when J. H. Fox, Sr., organized the company, Fox & Company was actively engaged in the plumbing and heating business, maintaining a shop at No. 271 Fifth street, Portland. After the issuance of the governor’s dissolution proclamation on January 7, 1924, the same business, without any apparent *212 change and without interruption, was continued at the aforementioned address. The same name, Fox & Company, appeared upon the store windows, letterheads and hank checks. The hank account was continued in the same name and in the same hank without interruption. The same individuals were in charge of the business after the issuance of the dissolution proclamation as before. Charles Carson was the managing officer until his death. Thereupon Jay H. Fox became the official in charge of the plumbing department, while Frank Urban assumed charge of all heating work performed by Fox & Company. The bookkeeper who kept Fox & Company’s books between 1926 and April 15, 1930, testified that in this period of time Jay H. Fox “was secretary, and then he also claimed to be trustee”. While the evidence is not entirely clear, nevertheless, it warrants the statement that in this period Urban signed Fox & Company’s checks as vice-president, and Jay H. Fox attached his signature under that of Urban’s as secretary. In the period between the dissolution proclamation and the order of reinstatement Fox & Company handled a large volume of plumbing and heating contracts aggregating more than $1,000,000.

November 27, 1928, the garnishee, a corporation entitled Plumbing & Heating Sales Corporation, was organized. Some witnesses described it as a merger of several of the larger Portland plumbing and heating concerns. Its president, however, disputed that statement and testified that it was organized by individuals. Be this as it may, all of the equipment and business of several of the larger Portland plumbing and heating companies was transferred to it after its incorporation, including that of Fox & Company. Thereafter these companies ceased operating. The transfer of Fox & Company’s assets to the garnishee is *213 the subject-matter of the attack by the plaintiff. It.

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Bluebook (online)
29 P.2d 1019, 146 Or. 208, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillen-cole-co-v-fox-co-or-1934.