Lorntsen v. Union Fisherman's Co.

143 P. 621, 71 Or. 540, 1914 Ore. LEXIS 206
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 143 P. 621 (Lorntsen v. Union Fisherman's 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
Lorntsen v. Union Fisherman's Co., 143 P. 621, 71 Or. 540, 1914 Ore. LEXIS 206 (Or. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the court.

There is no issue of fact in the case at hand. The answer discloses that the defendant was incorporated under the general laws of this state October 13, 1896, with perpetual duration, having its principal office at Astoria, Oregon, and for the purpose, among other things, of pickling and canning salmon on the Columbia River. It has upward of a quarter of a million dollars invested in the enterprise, and has built up an annual business of $750,000, extending all over the civilized world, all under the name of Union Fishermen’s Co-operative Packing Company, as designated in its articles of incorporation. It has on hand upwards of $2,000 worth of supplies for use in the conduct of its business, all having its corporate name engraved or printed thereon, and it is generally alleged *542 that the word “co-operative” as part of its corporate name is of great value to the defendant in the business world, and among the persons, firms, and corporations with whom the defendant has been engaged in trade during its existence. All this is admitted by the plaintiff.

At the twenty-seventh regular session of the legislative assembly it passed the act of February 20, 1913 (Laws 1913, p. 106), entitled:

“An act to protect co-operative associations, by preventing the use of the word 'co-operative’ by any person, firm, association, or corporation, as a part of its associate, corporate or business name, or as a trademark or designation, and providing a penalty for violation of the act.”

The first section forbids the use of the term “cooperative” as the corporate or business name or trademark, unless the person, firm, association, or corporation employing that designation has complied with Sections 6766 to 6783, inclusive, of Lord’s Oregon Laws, relating to co-operative associations and enacted-in 1909. The second section authorizes a suit at the behest of any person, firm,, association or corporation to enjoin the use of the word “co-operative” by one who has not complied with Sections 6766-6783, L. O. L.; and further requires the Attorney General or district attorney, at the request of the Secretary of State, to institute and prosecute to final determination all necessary and proper suits or actions to dissolve an offending corporation and wind up its affairs. Acting under this statute of 1913, the plaintiff, describing himself as a citizen and resident of Astoria, Clatsop County, Oregon, after declaring that the defendant is a corporation organized by, pursuant to, and under the laws of Oregon, and is engaged in the business of packing, *543 pickling, and freezing salmon, and wholesaling the same, alleges:

“That said defendant corporation has not complied with Sections 6766 to 6783, inclusive, Lord’s Oregon Laws, the same regulating co-operative associations, and said defendant corporation is not doing nor actually conducting nor engaged in a co-operative business, but notwithstanding that said defendant has not complied with said laws above quoted, and is not engaged in actually conducting a co-operative business, the said defendant continues to use the word ‘co-operative’ as a part of its corporate and business name.”

The answer admits all the complaint, and sets forth the new matter already recited. The averment that the defendant has not complied with the sections relating to co-operative associations states only a conclusion of law, and may be disregarded. Reduced to its lowest terms, the substance of the complaint is that the defendant is not engaged in a co-operative business, but uses the word “co-operative” as a part of its corporate name. The question involved is the validity of the statute mentioned.

1. At the time the defendant corporation was formed, Article XI, Section 2 of the state Constitution read thus:

“Corporations may be formed under general laws but shall not be created by special laws, except for municipal purposes. All laws passed pursuant to this section may be altered, amended, or repealed, but not so as to impair or destroy any vested corporate rights.”

• At that time also it was statute law that “whenever three or more persons shall desire to incorporate themselves for the purpose of engaging in any lawful enterprise, business, pursuit or occupation, they may do so in the manner provided in this act: Section 6679, *544 L. O. L. It was required as set forth, in the present Section 6683, being part of the same act, that:

“The articles of incorporation shall specify—(1) The name assumed by the corporation and by which it shall be known, and the duration of the corporation, if limited. * * ”

Under this statute the defendant was organized as a corporation, and has since then conducted its affairs using the corporate name there specified. The substance of the situation is that through this statute the state offered certain corporate privileges and immunities to those who accepted its terms, which offer was accepted in this instance by the filing of articles of incorporation and organization of the defendant.

From Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518 (4 L. Ed. 629), down to the present time the principle has been maintained that such an offer and acceptance constitute a contract between the state and the corporation, the obligation of which cannot be impaired by any subsequent legislation. It is a compact which is within the protection of Article I, Section 10 of the national Constitution forbidding any state to pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts, and Article I, Section , 21, of our state Constitution, containing the same prohibition. The identical question has been settled by the utterances of Mr. Chief Justice Thayer in Liggett v. Ladd, 17 Or. 89, 100 (21 Pac. 133, 137):

“The legislature cannot alter the charter of any private fcorporation. The old ease of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518 [4 L. Ed. 629], settles that question. * * When the Corvallis College was organized into a corporation, the name it assumed, and by which it was to be known, was specified in its articles of incorporation j and the legislature had no *545 power to change it, or to merge the corporation into another organization, either real or imaginary.”

It is plain that in this respect the act, as applied to a corporation already in existence when it was passed, is unconstitutional, in that it violates the charter or contract with the state under which it exists. It had a vested right to the name which it chose and under which it was accepted as a corporation by the state. By the terms of the Constitution, as it then stood, a part of that contract was that, while the legislature could amend or repeal laws relating to the formation of corporations, it could not impair nor destroy any vested corporate rights. All the cases cited by the plaintiff on the subject of charter changes are those where unlimited power was reserved for that purpose, or the change was consented to by the corporation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 P. 621, 71 Or. 540, 1914 Ore. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorntsen-v-union-fishermans-co-or-1914.