Middleton v. Arastraville Mining Co.

79 P. 889, 146 Cal. 219, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 512
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1905
DocketSac. No. 1093.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 79 P. 889 (Middleton v. Arastraville Mining Co.) 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
Middleton v. Arastraville Mining Co., 79 P. 889, 146 Cal. 219, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 512 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

HARRISON, C.

Action for the foreclosure of a mortgage upon certain mining property executed to the plaintiff by the defendant corporation. The other defendants claim an interest in the property by virtue of certain mechanics’ liens for labor performed upon the mining ground subsequent to the execution and recordation of the mortgage. The corporation suffered default, and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the satisfaction of tiis claim and for the satisfac *221 tion of the claims of the defendants out of the surplus. The latter have appealed from that portion of the judgment which postpones their liens to that of the plaintiff, and urge in support of their appeal that there was no valid execution of the plaintiff’s mortgage; that its execution was not ratified by the holders of two thirds of the capital stock of the corporation; and that the plaintiff is estopped from claiming a priority for his lien over their liens.

These propositions involve a consideration of the following facts: After the secretary of state had issued his certificate that the articles of incorporation had been duly filed, the incorporators therein named adopted a code of by-laws, and on April 7, 1897, the persons named in the articles as directors for the first year, organized as a board and elected a president and secretary, and thereafter, on the same day, passed a resolution authorizing the president and secretary to enter into an agreement with the plaintiff herein for the purchase of certain mining property, including that described in the mortgage, upon certain specified terms. On April 12th the plaintiff herein executed to the corporation a conveyance of the said property, and as a part of the consideration therefor the president and secretary executed to him certain promissory notes of the corporation. May 25, 1897, the board of directors authorized an execution to him of a mortgage upon its mining property to secure the said promissory notes, and on the next day the mortgage described in the complaint herein was executed. The annual meeting of the stockholders was held July 20, 1897, and at that meeting a resolution was adopted, approving and confirming the act of the directors in purchasing the said property and exécuting the said promissory notes and mortgage. During the years 1899 and 1900 the plaintiff was the manager of the defendant corporation, and the appellant Ton-kins was the superintendent of its mining properties, and during that period the appellants other than Tonkins performed labor upon the said mining ground, with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff, and afterwards filed in the recorder’s office notices of their claim of mechanics’ liens therefor. The appellant Tonkins, as said superintendent, performed labor and expended money on said mine for the corporation, and in September, 1900, in an action therefor against it, caused an attachment to be levied upon the prop *222 erty, and, subsequent to the commencement of the present action, obtained judgment against the corporation for the amount of his claim.

1. The objection to the sufficiency of the. execution of the mortgage must be overruled. It was executed by the president and secretary of the corporation in pursuance of a resolution of the board of directors expressly authorizing them to execute it. The contention of the appellant that, as under section 305 of the Civil Code the corporate powers of the corporation are to be exercised by a board of directors “elected” from the stockholders, and as the directors in office at the time the mortgage was executed were merely the persons who had been named as such in the articles of incorporation, and had not been “elected,” they could not confer any valid authority to execute the mortgage, would set at naught many of the provisions of the code.

By section 296 of the Civil Code, upon the issuance by the secretary of state of his certificate that proper articles of incorporation have been duly filed, the corporation is brought into existence, with all the corporate rights and powers that are given by statute. The corporation can exercise these powers only through its board of directors, but it is not to be supposed that the legislature intended that it should be an inert and lifeless body during the interim between its coming into existence and the time of holding its first annual meeting. The. provision of section 290 of the Civil Code, that the articles of incorporation must set forth the number of directors and the names and residences of those who are appointed for the first year, taken in connection with the provision of section 302 of tShe Civil Code, that the directors are to be elected annually, and, in the absence of any by-law in reference thereto, that such election must be held on the first Tuesday in June, necessarily implies that in the interim between the organization of the corporation and the first election of directors, the corporate powers and authority of the corporation may be exercised by the directors named in the articles of incorporation.

2. The objection that the mortgage was not ratified by the stockholders in the manner required by law is based upon the record made by the secretary of the proceedings had at the annual meeting in reference to such ratification. In this *223 record he stated that there were present at the meeting the holders of 25,062 shares of the capital stock of the corporation, and that the resolution for ratifying the act of the directors was unanimously adopted. In this record it is also stated that the secretary announced to the meeting that 44,065 shares of the capital stock of the corporation had been issued, and it is urged by the appellants that it is hereby shown that the resolution did not receive the approval of the holders of two thirds of the outstanding stock.

The plaintiff, however, against the objection of the defendants, was allowed by the court to introduce other evidence, some of which was taken from the stock-book and stock-journal kept by the corporation, and some of which was his own testimony, against the secretary’s record of the annual meeting, both as to the amount of the outstanding stock and the amount represented at the meeting. From this evidence it appeared that only 41,365 shares had been issued, and that there were present at the meeting the holders of 31,775 shares,—that is, 6,713 more shares than was stated in the record kept by the secretary. In the records of the meeting the secretary had stated that the plaintiff was present and represented 11,515 shares. The plaintiff, however, testified at the trial that at that time he owned and held 18,828 shares of the capital stock that had been issued to him. It thus appears that by the unanimous vote of those present at the annual meeting the holders of more than two thirds of the outstanding stock ratified the acts of the directors.

The court did not err in receiving this evidence. There is no principle of law or provision of statute under which the records of a private corporation kept by its secretary are to be regarded as conclusive evidence of the facts therein stated. (See Thompson on Corporations, secs. 7739, 7740.) The record which section 377 of the Civil Code requires to be kept by the corporation of “every act done or ordered to be done” and of “who were present and who absent” at any meeting, may be regarded as prima facie

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P. 889, 146 Cal. 219, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/middleton-v-arastraville-mining-co-cal-1905.