Lusk Lumber Co. v. Independent Producers Consol.

299 P. 1044, 43 Wyo. 191, 1931 Wyo. LEXIS 17
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1931
Docket1692
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 299 P. 1044 (Lusk Lumber Co. v. Independent Producers Consol.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lusk Lumber Co. v. Independent Producers Consol., 299 P. 1044, 43 Wyo. 191, 1931 Wyo. LEXIS 17 (Wyo. 1931).

Opinion

*193 Rinee, Justice.

This case again comes to this court by direct appeal. Its disposition on its first appearance is reported in Lusk Lumber Co. v. Independent Producers Consolidated, et al., 35 Wyo. 381, 249 Pac. 790, 36 Wyo. 34, 252 Pac. 1029, and there the facts involved in the litigation on its merits are fully detailed. It will be unnecessary to repeat them here, as we are now concerned with what occurred subsequent to the return of the case to the District Court and matters which, as it happens, do not concern the merits.

Pursuant to the mandate of this court, leave was given the plaintiff to file an amended petition, which was done June 7, 1927. On August 5, following, there was filed in the case by the former attorney for the Independent Producers Consolidated, a suggestion to the court “that since the former trial of this cause the said corporation has been dissolved and no one since is authorized to file a pleading or enter an appearance on its behalf.”

*194 After a motion to strike and to make more definite plaintiff’s amended petition bad been filed by O. E. Macy, Receiver of tbe First State Bank of Riverton, Wyoming, and bad been ruled on by tbe trial court, upon leave given, plaintiff, on May 19, 1930, filed its second amended petition. Tbe same date plaintiff also filed a motion for judgment against tbe Independent Producers Consolidated, based on its failure over a period of more tban two years to answer or otherwise plead to plaintiff’s amended petition. June 6, 1930, tbe defendant receiver filed his verified motion to strike the cause from tbe docket, for the reason that:

“Tbe Defendant Independent Producers Consolidated was, at the time of tbe former trial of this cause, a corporation duly organized and existing under and by virtue of tbe laws of tbe State of Wyoming. Since the date of said trial, and prior to August 5, 1927, tbe said corporation was dissolved. Tbe dissolution thereof was called to tbe attention of this court by a written suggestion filed in this cause on August 5, 1927. More than one year having elapsed since tbe dissolution of said corporation, this Defendant moves that pursuant to Sec. 5759, Compiled Statutes of Wyoming, 1920, tbe above entitled cause be stricken from tbe docket.”

Plaintiff interposed, on September 4, 1930, a written “Resistance” to said motion. Subsequently and on tbe 10th of tbe month last mentioned, tbe receiver’s motion came on for bearing, and tbe District Court made an order which, after reciting tbe several appearances of tbe parties by their counsel and tbe reception of evidence in support of tbe motion, found:

“That on July 19, 1927, the corporate franchise of defendant Independent Producers Consolidated was can-celled by tbe State of Wyoming, and that since said date its corporate powers have ceased.
“WHEREFORE IT IS ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that said Motion be and tbe same hereby is sustained and said cause is hereby stricken from tbe docket; *195 costs herein to be taxed in the sum of $. against the plaintiff. ’ ’

To this action of the trial court plaintiff reserved its exception, it has served its notice of appeal and has brought the record and this order in the case here for review, as previously indicated.

It seems to be a conceded fact in the case that the defendant Independent Producers Consolidated, on July 19, 1927, suffered a forfeiture of its charter for failure to pay the annual corporation license tax and file the annual statement, as required by Chapter 117, Laws of 1925 — somewhat over a month after the amended petition of the plaintiff was on file in the ease. The statute last mentioned, after detailing the procedure to be followed by the state officials in order to accomplish the forfeiture of a derelict corporation’s charter, provides: "Any person or persons who shall exercise or attempt to exercise any powers for or on behalf of any corporation named in such proclamation after the publication of such proclamation and the filing of proof thereof in the office of the Secretary of State shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor” (Section 2) and punished as the law directs.

The view of the trial court which led to the making of the order before us and the contention which is urged here, seem to be as follows:

It being well settled that at common law a corporation which has been dissolved implies its utter extinction, the result of the dissolution can not be distinguished from the death of a natural person in its effect. Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. v. State of Oklahoma, 273 U. S. 257, 47 Sup. Ct. Rep. 391, 392, 71 L. Ed. 634, and eases cited. When the dissolution of the defendant Independent Producers Consolidated occurred, as above related, the action instituted by plaintiff became subject to the provisions of Article IV of Chapter 361, W. C. S. 1920 — (Sees. 5747-5763) our law generally governing revivor of actions. The particular sec *196 tions of that law thus invoked are, Section 5747, which declares that: “Except as otherwise provided, no action or proceeding in any court shall abate by the death of either or both of the parties thereto except” certain named actions of which the case at bar is not one; Section 5750, which provides:

“When one of the parties to an action dies or his powers as a personal representative cease before judgment, if the right of action survives in favor of or against his representatives or successor, the action may be revived and proceed in the name of such representatives or successor.”

Section 5759, reading:

“Am order to revive an action against the representative or successor of a defendant shall not be made without the consent of such representative or successor, unless within one year from the time it could have been first made. ’ ’

And Sections 5760 and 5761, in general directing that the order of revivor may be made forthwith, but shall not be made without defendant’s consent after the expiration of one year from the time the order might have first been made, and that when it appears by affidavit that the powers of a litigant personal representative have ceased or that either party to an action has been'dead, “for a period so long that the action cannot be revived in the name of his representatives or successors, without the consent of both parties, the court shall order the action to be stricken from the docket. ’ ’ As more than one year had elapsed since the dissolution of the Independent Producers Consolidated without the action being revived as directed by these sections, the District Court was right — it is argued — in making the order questioned here.

For the plaintiff and appellant the contention is that the matter is controlled by the specific provisions of Chapter 349, W. C. S. 1920, (Sections 5436-5445) which is a part of our state law relating to corporations, and deals solely *197 with the general subject of their dissolution and the consequences flowing therefrom.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
299 P. 1044, 43 Wyo. 191, 1931 Wyo. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lusk-lumber-co-v-independent-producers-consol-wyo-1931.