Liberian Exodus Joint-Stock Steamship Co. v. Rodgers

21 S.C. 27, 1884 S.C. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 22, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 21 S.C. 27 (Liberian Exodus Joint-Stock Steamship Co. v. Rodgers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liberian Exodus Joint-Stock Steamship Co. v. Rodgers, 21 S.C. 27, 1884 S.C. LEXIS 68 (S.C. 1884).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

This was an action to recover $7,325 on the following contract:

“Charleston, December 1st, 1879.
“I will sell and convey all my right, title, and interest in the Azor, unto the Liberian Exodus Joint Stock Steamship Co., for the sum of twenty-six hundred and seventy-five dollars. This offer to be accepted and the above amount of twenty-six hundred and seventy-five dollars paid into my hands on or before November 11th, 1880, otherwise this offer to be null and void.
(Signed,) “F. S. RODGERS.”

Paragraph I. of the complaint alleged : “That the plaintiff is and was, at the date of the agreement hereinafter mentioned, a [30]*30body corporate under the laws of the state of South Carolina;” to which the defendant ansAvered as follows: “That he has no knowledge or information .sufficient to form a belief as to the truth of the allegation contained in the first paragraph of the complaint.”

The plaintiff proved that on November 8th, 1879, the bark Azor was bought by the defendant from the U. S. marshal for $2,950, $450 of Avhich being furnished by the plaintiff, and the bill- of sale Avas taken in the name of the defendant. On June 7, 1880, the defendant sold the Azor for $4,500. The plaintiff also offered in evidence a charter of incorporation from the clerk of the Court of Common Pleas of Charleston county under the act of 1874 (reenacted as chapter XXXIX. of Gen. Stat.), upon the subject of “corporations organized under general statutes,” granting to certain persons, under the name and style of “The Liberian Exodus Joint Stock Steamship Company of Charleston, S. C.,” the right to carry on and conduct the business of “transporting passengers and freight along the Atlantic sea-coast and high seas in general;” that the company in 1877 organized under this alleged charter of incorporation, and carried on business as such in Charleston up to the commencement of this suit. The plaintiff then rested.

When the plaintiff closed their testimony, the defendant moved for a nonsuit on the grounds: 1. That the act of 1874 Avas unconstitutional. 2. That there Avas no proof that the plaintiff had complied Avith the conditions prescribed in the said act precedent to their right to obtain a charter. And 3. That there Avas no authority in the act for the incorporation of a navigation company. The Circuit judge held that at common law it was necessary for the plaintiff to prove themselves duly incorporated by competent authority; that “in some of the states, notably in NeAv York, to relieve corporations from the expense and inconvenience of preparing in every case of an action by a corporation, when the general issue was pleaded, to prove its charter, the common law rule Avas modified, and the defendant was required, if he really desired to litigate that question, to plead in abatement or bar that the plaintiffs Avere not a corporation. No such legislation has been adopted in this state, and the common [31]*31law rule was accordingly recognized and applied in the case of The Chicora Company v. Crews, 6 S. C., 243.” And, thus taking the view that the general denial in the answer put in issue the existence of the corporation of the plaintiffs, he held that there was no corporation, and granted the nonsuit on the third ground taken, that the clerk of the court, in granting the charter “to carry on the business of transporting passengers and freight along the Atlantic sea-coast and high seas,” had acted beyond the scope of his authority under the act aforesaid, and the charter was void.

From this order the plaintiff appeals to this court, upon the following grounds: 1. Because his honor erred in granting a nonsuit, there being evidence to sustain every material allegation in the plaintiff’s complaint, and the plaintiff was entitled to the verdict of a jury on the evidence. 2. Because the defendant having contracted with the plaintiff as a corporation, or as doing business under a corporate name, cannot in this action question its corporate existence, and his honor erred in not so deciding. 3. Because one who contracts with a corporation, or acting corporation, or copartnership, doing business under a corporate name, cannot defend himself against a claim on such contract, in a suit by the corporation, by denying its corporate existence; and it was error not to so rule. 4. Because a corporation, either de jure or de facto, can only be attacked and its charter taken away in a suit by the attorney general of the state, and his honor erred in not so ruling.

From the view which the court takes of this case, it will not be necessary or even proper to consider now the questions, whether the charter granted by the clerk to the plaintiffs is utterly without authority and void; or whether the defendant, having contracted with the plaintiffs assuming to act as a corporation and in their corporate name, is estopped from now denying that they are in fact such a corporation. It seems to us that the pleadings as disclosed in the “case” did not put in issue the existence or legality of the plaintiffs’ corporation; that the defendant, having put in only a general denial, thereby waived the right to assail the charter of incorporation, and it was unneces[32]*32sary for the plaintiffs to have put it in evidence, and it may be regarded as not in the case.

We think legislation has been adopted in this state, as in New York, requiring a defendant, when sued by a corporation, and desiring to question its right so to sue, to give the plaintiff notice of such intention in advance, either by demurrer, plea in abatement, or special answer. Where the objection is that the plaintiff has not legal capacity to sue, our code, as well as that of New York, requires such objection to be made in a particular manner. If the alleged want of legal capacity to sue appears upon the face of the complaint, the proper course is for the defendant to demur under subdivision 2 of section 165 of the code. If it does not appear upon the face of the complaint, then it is incumbent on him to take the objection by answer; and if such special objection is not taken, either by demurrer or answer, the defendant shall be deemed to have waived the same. Code, §§ 168, 169.

In this case the objection to the plaintiff’s capacity to sue was not made by demurrer, for the very good reason that it did not appear upon the face of the complaint, as that only stated that “the plaintiff is and was, at the date of the agreement hereinafter mentioned, a body corporate under the laws of the state of South Carolina.” Then did the defendant, as required, make the objection by answer?

The only answer made to this part of the complaint was “that he has no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the truth of the allegation contained in the first paragraph of the complaint.” This was only one of the modes of making a general denial under section 170 of the code, which declares that “the answer of the defendant must contain a general or special denial of each material allegation of the complaint contested by the defendant, or of any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief,” &c. Did this general denial put in issue, in the manner required, not only the general merits of the ease, but also the legal capacity of the plaintiff to sue as a body corporate? As we understand it, the authorities both of New York and of this state hold that it did not.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 S.C. 27, 1884 S.C. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberian-exodus-joint-stock-steamship-co-v-rodgers-sc-1884.