Lewis v. Curry

103 P. 493, 156 Cal. 93, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 286
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1909
DocketS.F. No. 5200.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 103 P. 493 (Lewis v. Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Curry, 103 P. 493, 156 Cal. 93, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 286 (Cal. 1909).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The respondent, Miller & Lux, was duly and regularly incorporated under the laws of California in the year 1897. It did not pay to the state of California the state license-tax for the year 1907, which the law requires to be paid annually by corporations organized under the laws of this state. The petitioners are stockholders of said corporation and, as such, on behalf of said corporation, they tendered to the secretary of state the amount due the state on account of such tax for the year ending June 30, 1909. The secretary refused to receive the money on the ground that the corporation had forfeited its charter by its failure to pay the tax for the year 1907. The present proceeding is an application to this court for a writ of mandate to compel the secretary of state to receive such license-tax, either from said corporation, or from the petitioners as stockholders thereof.

An answer was filed on behalf of the respondent Miller & Lux. It alleges that the managing officers of said corporation refused to pay the state license-tax of said corporation which became due on July 1, 1907, intending thereby to cause a forfeiture of its corporate charter and the dissolution of the corporation; that thereupon, as the law provides, the secretary of state reported said failure to the governor who, on September 18, 1907, duly issued his proclamation that said corporate charter would be forfeited, unless such tax were paid on or before November 30, 1907; that the, tax was not paid and that, consequently, said charter became forfeited, whereupon the directors of the corporation took charge of its property as trustees, under the authority given by section 400 of the Civil Code, and that they are proceeding with the settlement of its affairs. The answer purports to be filed by said *96 trustees of the corporation, as trustees of a dissolved corporation. The secretary of state -has submitted the case upon a general demurrer to the petition. Melissa A. Potter, a stockholder of the Miller & Lux corporation, has intervened and filed an answer giving a full history of the corporation and of the facts leading to its dissolution, and praying that the writ be denied. The facts are all admitted.

The statute expressly provides for the forfeiture of the charters of all domestic corporations at four o’clock p. m. on November 30th of each year, in all cases where there has been a failure to pay the annual charges required by law and a due report of delinquents and proclamation thereof by the governor, and it further provides that it shall be unlawful for any such corporation thereafter to do any corporate business. (Stats. 1906, p. 22.) It is conceded that if this law is valid, self-executing, and applicable to the Miller & Lux corporation, then the secretary of state has no authority and is under no obligation to receive further state license-taxes from or on account of that corporation, that his refusal to accept the tax was justifiable and that the writ of mandate should not issue.

A number of objections are raised to the validity of the law. We presume it will be admitted that if it is wholly invalid, no tax became due and the secretary could not be compelled to receive for the state that which is not due. Admitting its validity, so far as it imposes an annual tax or charge, counsel for petitioners advance various reasons against the validity and effect of the provision declaring the forfeiture of the charters of delinquent corporations, and against its application to the particular corporation, Miller & Lux. The case of Kaiser Land & Fruit Co. v. Curry, 155 Cal. 638, [103 Pac. 341], was pending before this court at the time the present case was submitted. It involved, with three exceptions, the same questions as are here presented. In the consideration of that case the briefs and arguments in this case were used. The points raised there are fully stated and treated in the opinion filed in that ease, and the petitioners’ contentions, so far as they are identical with those made here, are declared to be untenable. We refer to that opinion for a full statement and disposition of those questions. We will consider here only the questions peculiar to this case.

*97 1. It is claimed that Miller & Lux is not a corporation for pecuniary profit, and, hence, that it is not subject to the operation of the law. Section 7 of the statute declares that “All educational, religious, scientific and charitable corporations, and all corporations which are not organized for pecuniary profit, are exempt from the provisions of this act.”

The following facts show the purpose, object, and powers of said corporation. There was formerly a partnership between Henry Miller and Charles Lux, known as “Miller & Lux.” It possessed vast properties in California and other states. Lux died and his estate, including his interests in said firm, was ready for distribution by the probate court. The distributees were numerous and the property of the firm was of such character and its business so large and complicated, that it was believed that it would cause serious pecuniary loss and injury to all interested parties, and that it would be impracticable, also, to undertake to carry it on by so many persons as partners, and that it would involve a great sacrifice of its actual value to attempt to sell the property and distribute the proceeds, either in the administration proceedings then pending, or in a subsequent action for partition. To meet this condition the plan was conceived of forming a corporation, conveying and transferring to it all the property of said firm and dividing the corporation stock among the distributees and the surviving partners in proportion to their interests in the firm and in the estate of Lux. The respondent corporation was formed accordingly, under the name of “Miller & Lux,” and the plan was carried out in all details. Its articles gave it power to acquire the property of said firm, to dispose of the same as soon as it could be done without loss, to divide the proceeds among the stockholders, and, in the mean time, in order to preserve the value of the property, to carry on the business formerly conducted by the said firm, and in the same manner, and divide the net profits of the business among the stockholders annually as dividends. (See Baldwin v. Miller & Lux, 152 Cal. 480, [92 Pac. 1030].)

We have no doubt that this was as much a corporation for pecuniary profit, in contemplation of law, as if its sole object had been to carry on the business and distribute the earnings as dividends. The fact that it was to take and hold the property as trustee and sell the same and distribute the proceeds *98 among the former owners does not make it any the less a corporation for pecuniary profit. The main object of the entire scheme which led to its organization was to promote, preserve, and protect the property interests of its stockholders, by preventing the sacrifice thereof which the ordinary processes of law would entail. Its purpose and object was wholly of a pecuniary nature and its powers were designed to either increase the property interest of its stockholders, or to prevent depreciation-thereof. It would be immaterial, where such is the case, whether the corporation was required by its articles to declare direct dividends or not.

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Bluebook (online)
103 P. 493, 156 Cal. 93, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-curry-cal-1909.