Lattimer v. Mosaic Glass Co.

7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 430
CourtHancock Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 430 (Lattimer v. Mosaic Glass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hancock Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lattimer v. Mosaic Glass Co., 7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 430 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Finley, J.

This cause comes into this court by way of appeal from the judgment and of the finding of the eourt of common pleas of Hancock county, at its September term, A. D. 1896.

The contest is between the plaintiff herein and The Findlay Clay Pot Co., a defendant in the action, as to priorities of liens, the plaintiff claiming to hold the prior lien on the property of The Mosaic Glass Co., by virtue of a mortgage executed by the last named party, corporation, on or about the 5th day October, 14.

The defendant, The Findlay Clay Pot Company, claims to hold a lien by virtue of an attachment upon the property of The Mosaic Glass Company, levied about the 14th day of September, 1895, which though younger in point of time than the alleged lien of the plaintiff, ir contended by the defendant, the Clay Pot Company, to be superior to and have precedence over that of the plaintiff, for the reason, as alleged by the Findlay Clay Pot Company in its answer filed herein April 4,1896, and its supplemental answer, filed December 8, 1896, as follows:

First — That the glass company being an Ohio corporation, with its office and place of business in the city of Fostoria, Ohio, about the 81st of August, 1898, abandoned its plant, office, place of business and residence in said city, ceased all business operations and manufacturing there, and removed its office, place of business and manufacturing plant and machinery to New York, where it has since had ana maintained its only place of business, and has ever since operated and transacted its business under its corporate name The Mosaic Glass Company; and that by reason of this abandonment of the plant and place of business, it forfeited its charter and ceased to have corporate existence so as [431]*431to have power, as such corporation, to execute a mortgage in the state of New York upon its property in Ohio that, in law, would operate as a lien having priority over the attachment lien of the answering defendant, The Clay Pot Company. And further alleges that the mortgage in question, upon which the plaintiff seeks to hold in this case, was so executed in New York state, under the circumstances here indicated, and having been so executed, is, as against the Clay Pot Company, void, and without authority of law.
' “As a second ground why the attachment lien of the answering defendant, The Findlay Clay Pot Company, should have priority over plaintiff’s alleged mortgage, said answering defendant says that it had no notice or knowledge of the existence or execution of said mortgage other than that afforded by an inspection of the record thereof, and that the same is void as against the lien of this answering defendant, The Find-lay Clay Pot Company, for the reason as shown in the mortgage itself, that the conditions of it are so vague, uncertain and indeterminate, and do not sufficiently describe the debt therein attempted to be secured, as to put this answering defendant upon the notice of the nature and extent of plaintiff’s alleged lien, and, therefore, as to said Findlay Clay Pot Company, it is null and void.”

The plaintiff, by reply to the answer and supplemental answer, puts in issue the several contentions of the Findlay Clay Pot Company.

The city of Findlay is also a party defendant, claiming to hold a prior lien upon a portion of said premises to either of the other parties. Its claim was conceded below on the trial of the case, and decree rendered accordingly, and the same is not disputed here.

On the trial of the case in this court, no serious claim was made on the part of The Findlay Clay Pot Company to any portion of its defense set forth in its answer, except as to the two propositions hereinbefore mentioned, and therefore all questions in the case practically drop out of it, except those two.

On the trial of the case, it was agreed, in writing, signed by the parties, that the following facts are truer

First — That The Mosaic Glass Company was a corporation incorporated and organized under the laws of Ohio, with its office and place of business in the city of Fostoria, Seneca county, Ohio.
Second — That from the time of its incorporation and organization to about the 14th day of March, 1891, until about the 31st day of August, 1893, The Mosaic Glass Company was operated, transacted its corporate business, manufactured and sold glass, and had its plant, office and place of business in the city of Fostoria, Seneca county, Ohio, and a majority of the membérs of the board of directors, as also its officers, resided there.
Third — That on or about the 31st day of August, 1893, The Mosaic Glass Company vacated its plant, office, and place of business in said city and state of Ohio, ceased all further business, manufacturing and operations there, and removed its office, place of business and manufacturing plant and machinery, except its buildings, to and located in the city of Addison, in the state of New York, where it has since had and maintained its office and place of business, established its plant, operated and transacted its business, and manufactured glass under its corporate name of The Mosaic Glass Company, as an Ohio corporation, and under the charter originally issued by the state of Ohio, and a certificate of [432]*432authority from the state of New York, to do business in New York, as an Ohio corporation. _ .
_ Fourth — On the first of January, 1896, The Mosaic Glass Company became insolvent, and has not transacted business, or manufactured glass, and has ceased operations.

Do these facts, which constitute the ground of the answering defendant’s contention, operate to divest The Mosaic Glass Company, as a corporation, of the power to execute a mortgage in the state of New York, upon its real estate in Ohio, so as to make it a binding and subsisting lien upon said premises as against a subsequent lienholder ? This is the question presented for our consideration.

•Counsel for defendant contends that inasmuch as section 3248, Revised Statutes of Ohio, provides that the corporate powers, business and property of corporations, must be exercised, conducted and controlled by a board of directors, and that a majority of the directors must be citizens of the state; that, when the directors cease to be citizens of the state, and attempt to exercise their powers as directors in another state to which the property and business has been removed, the corporation thereby so far forfeits its franchise that it ceases to be a corporation within the meaning of the statutes to the extent that its so-called board of directors may make a valid mortgage upon its property within this state; contends that this condition of affairs differs from and is unlike a corporation which merely ceases to do business, the directors nevertheless remaining in this state; contends that the difference lies in the fact that in the one case, by removal from the state, bag and baggage, the corporation puts itself beyond the visitorial power of the state to take away its charter, while in the other that power remains; and that, as a principle of law, there can be no corporation de facto unless there is back, of it a corporation de jure, and cites in support of this principle a number of authorities; among others, the 20 O.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Ohio Cir. Dec. 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lattimer-v-mosaic-glass-co-ohcircthancock-1896.