Miller Lumber Corp. v. Miller

357 P.2d 503, 225 Or. 427, 100 A.L.R. 2d 376, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 685
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 357 P.2d 503 (Miller Lumber Corp. v. Miller) 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
Miller Lumber Corp. v. Miller, 357 P.2d 503, 225 Or. 427, 100 A.L.R. 2d 376, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 685 (Or. 1960).

Opinion

*429 SLOAN, J.

Plaintiff corporation brought this action to recover money alleged to be due plaintiff from defendant’s decedent, W. D. Miller. Except for qualifying shares, the deceased, Miller, had been the sole stockholder of plaintiff. Defense to the action was that plaintiff was the mere alter ego of Miller so that plaintiff was not a separate legal entity and the action could not be maintained. The case was tried without a jury. The court found for plaintiff, defendant appeals from the judgment entered. It is necessary to decide if a corporation’s separate legal identity is lost for the sole reason that all of the stock is owned by one person. A background of facts will be helpful.

For several years before his death in 1956 Miller had been an entrepreneur of considerable proportions. He had some interest in or owned a lumber mill, timber, hotel, radio station, a construction company, a large ranch in Montana and other unspecified property and business interests. The record is not clear as to the nature of his ownership in each enterprise mentioned. From income tax returns in evidence it appears that he was a partner in the ranch. The construction business, hotel and radio station appear to have been corporations. The record does not reveal the extent of his ownership in any of the business entities mentioned, other than in plaintiff corporation. Miller’s center of operation was in Klamath Falls and northern California.

Plaintiff was organized by Miller in 1949. In exchange for all authorized shares of stock, except the qualifying shares, Miller transferred to the corporation “all of the property and assets of his logging, lumbering and sawmill operations near Etna in *430 Siskiyou County, California,” except timber lands. Thereafter, until his death in 1956, Miller supervised the operation of plaintiff. However, the actual day-to-day management appears to have been conducted by a trusted manager or superintendent who had been a long-time employee of Miller.

The basis of this law suit developed from a “drawing account” entered on the books of plaintiff shortly after its incorporation. This account recorded a large number of transactions, charges and credits between Miller and plaintiff. It ranged from small items of charge and credit in amounts less than $5.00 to timber transactions and payments ranging upwards of $30,000. The exhibit in evidence which contained a complete list of these debits and credits numbered 26 pages of closely typewritten items. The account appears to have been accurately and carefully kept. During the period between 1949 and his death in 1956 there were periods when the account showed a balance due Miller from the corporation and at other times Miller was indebted to the corporation. At the time of his death the account disclosed total charges against Miller of $977,402.05 against total credits due bfm of $859,650.77, or a balance due the corporation from Miller of $117,751.28. There was a second cause of action for which additional judgment was entered. We will not discuss that amount separately. The issues were the same.

Miller’s will gave his shares of stock in plaintiff to certain minor children. The remainder of his estate went to other persons not identified in the record. Within about a year after the will was admitted to probate the stock was distributed to a guardian of the minor children. The guardian assumed the management of plaintiff. The guardian thus determined the *431 amount claimed to be due plaintiff from Miller and caused plaintiff to bring this action against defendant, as executor of Miller’s -will and estate, to recover. The defense, as stated, was that plaintiff and Miller were one and the same legal person and the debt could not be recovered. It may be said that this problem is not limited to a one-man corporation. It also is found in the wholly-owned subsidiary corporations.

There are probably few doctrines in the law so firmly established as the separate legal existence of a corporation as distinct from its stockholders. It has been said that this be true whether the stockholders are one or many. The writings and case law on the subject are so voluminous that it is possible to refer to only the more pertinent references thereto. One of the earlier treatises on the subject, and much cited in later works, is Wormser, Piercing the Veil of Corporate Entity, 1912, 12 Col L E 496. In respect to the “one-man” corporation the author says, in part:

“The cases which hold that the only stockholder in the corporation, or the only two or three stockholders in a corporation, become the corporation itself and can deal with the corporate property ad libitum are marked, it is true, by a disregard of the theory of corporate entity, but the disregard is an unsound and erroneous one. It is just in this class of case, standing on such facts per se, that the doctrine of corporate entity should be adhered to. The writer does not mean to intimate that if in these cases any of the elements previously mentioned which warrant a disregard of the doctrine of corporate entity are present, that the concept should nevertheless be adhered to. What is meant is this: that simply because a company is reduced in number to one or two, or a very few stockholders, does not warrant for a *432 single instant, per se, the disregard of the corporate entity. Whether there is one shareholder in a corporation or whether there are ten thousand makes no difference, in other words, unless some of the circumstances aforementioned which warrant a disregard of the theory of corporate entity are present.” op cit, p 515.

One of the more recent treatments of the subject is found in a symposium on the close corporation found in 18 Law & Contemp Proh, 1953, p 433 et seq. A part of that symposium is a comprehensive treatment of “Limited Liability with One-Man Companies and Subsidiary Corporations” by Bernard F. Cataldo. That author says:

“The extent to which the courts have gone in upholding the doctrine of corporate entity and its companion, limited liability, finds vivid illustration in those cases which concern the closest of close corporations—the one-man company, the family corporation, and the subsidiary corporation.” op cit, p 474.

Another more recent review is Fuller, The Incorporated Individual: A Study of the One-Man Company, 1938, 51 Harv L Rev 1373.

The above references include only those which appear to have been most cited. Most of the authority has been cited and analyzed in O’Neal, Close Corporations, 1958, ch 1. That work affords a complete review of the law on the subject to that date. The author concludes that a corporation’s “legal personality” is not lost because all of the stock is owned by one person. See also, 1 Fletcher’s Cyclopedia Corporations, (Perm Ed, 1931) ch 2.

The case law particularly pertinent to this case is found in the bankruptcy cases in the federal courts. In Wheeler v. Smith, 30 F2d 59, (9th Cir 1929), *433

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Bluebook (online)
357 P.2d 503, 225 Or. 427, 100 A.L.R. 2d 376, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-lumber-corp-v-miller-or-1960.