Nickum v. Burckhardt

47 P. 888, 30 Or. 464, 1897 Ore. LEXIS 158
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 47 P. 888 (Nickum v. Burckhardt) 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
Nickum v. Burckhardt, 47 P. 888, 30 Or. 464, 1897 Ore. LEXIS 158 (Or. 1897).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Wolverton.

This is an action to recover for assessments levied upon unpaid capital stock of a private corporation. About June 18, 1893, some thirteen persons, among whom were Guy Posson, who signed for two shares; J. E. Juston, for four; F. C. Barnes, for ten; and H. Pease, for three — subscribed the following agreement, each placing opposite his name the number of shares presumably intended to be taken: “We, the undersigned, each in consideration of the promise of the other, agree to subscribe for and take the number of shares of the capital stock set opposite our respective names of a company to be incorporated for the purpose of operating- a fertilizer, feeding and fattening stock and poultry; and, if obtainable, collecting and disposing of swill, and other purposes of like nature; said 'company to be incorporated in accordance with the laws of the State of Oregon, with a capital stock of $15,000, divided into 150 shares of the value of $100 each.” There were seventy-eight shares subscribed for upon this paper, representing $7,800. On the 7th day of October, 1893, three of the subscribers executed, duly acknowledged, and caused to be filed and recorded in the proper offices, articles of incorporation, incorporating the Oregon Fertilizing Co., specifying the object and business thereof to be “to transport wood, produce, and garbage, and to crema’. 2 [467]*467such garbage, or to use the same for feed or fertilizing purposes.” A little later, all the subscribers to said instrument, except the four above named, signed with others the following writing, which is contained in a minute book kept for the purpose of recording the proceedings of the corporation, to wit: “We, the undersigned, hereby subscribe for the number of shares of capital stock of the Oregon Fertilizing Company, set opposite our respective names, and agree to pay for the same at such time or times as may be ordered by the board of directors hereafter to be elected.” Only sixty-nine shares of the capital stock were subscribed for upon this latter instrument. Subsequently all the subscribers to this instrument, together with Posson and Juston, signed an agreement to hold the first meeting of the stockholders on October 14, 1893, waiving the thirty days’ notice required by law, and in pursuance thereof the meeting was held, all said signers being present, either in person or by proxy, but no others, and participated in the election of directors and other business. The corporators having certified to the result of the election, the directors elected took the oath of office, and at once organized by electing the officers of the board. To abate the action, the defendants plead that the plaintiff company is not an incorporation.

It was urged at the hearing that the defendants ought to be estopped from alleging that the Oregon Fertilizing Company is not a corporation duly incorporated and organized in all respects as contemplated by law, inasmuch as they are subscribers or purchasers of stock subsequent to the alleged completed organization of the company; that, having dealt with the company in its corporate capacity, and having entered into contractual relations with it, they have recognized its existence as a body corporate, and that now, when sued upon their obligation to it as such a body, they should not be permitted to deny [468]*468its legal existence. The doctrine here contended for is undoubtedly well grounded in the law, but it cannot be invoked in this case because not pleaded. The opportunity was afforded for setting up the supposed estoppel in the reply, but it was not done, and it is now too late to assert it. It is said that “if a party who has an opportunity to plead an estoppel upon which he relies fails to do so, but goes to issue on the fact, he thereby waives the estoppel, puts the matter at large, and the jury may disregard the estoppel, and.are at liberty to find the truth”: Note to Tyler v. Hall (Mo.), 27 Am. St. Rep. 337-346 (15 S. W. 319). To the same effect are Bruce v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 24 Or. 486 (34 Pac. 16); and Bays v. Trulson, 25 Or. 109 (46 Am. & Eng. Corp. Cas. 386, 35 Pac. 26).

This question disposed of, we come to another, more complex in its nature, and that is whether there has been an organization of the plaintiff corporation under and in pursuance of the general statutes providing therefor. The regularity of the execution and filing of the articles of incorporation is conceded. The persons subscribing the articles are known as the incorporators, and their powers and duties are purely statutory. They.may open books and receive subscriptions to the capital stock; “they shall give notice to the subscribers to meet” at such time and place as they may designate for the purpose of electing directors; they shall act as inspectors at the first meeting for that purpose, certify who are elected, and appoint the time and place of their first meeting. This enumeration comprises the substance of their powers: See section 3222, Hill’s Code. These are all acts necessary to and in furtherance of the completion of the organization. The organization is completed only when directors have been elected, and they have elected a president and secretary, which it is contemplated they shall do at their first meeting. From the time of the first meeting of the directors, [469]*469that is to say, from the time of the organization of the board, “the powers vested in the corporation are exercised by them, or by their officers or agents under their direction” (Hill’s Code, § 3225), thus relieving the incorporators of further duty or power in the premises, or, rather, their functions then cease because their duties have been fulfilled and their powers executed. From the date of its completed organization the incorporation may begin the prosecution of its enterprise or business. It may then sue and be sued, contract and be contracted with, and exercise any of the other statutory powers incident to its organization and the enterprise, business, pursuit, or occupation adopted. The corporation may elect its board of directors when one-half of the capital stock has been-subscribed: Hill’s Code, § 3222; Fairview R. R. Co. v. Spillman, 23 Or. 587 (32 Pac. 688). And one question here is whether one-half of the capital stock had been subscribed when the board was elected. It seems to be supposed that in order to constitute a person a subscriber to the capital stock of a corporation he must have subscribed to the stock books of the concern after its articles of incorporation have been perfected and filed, and Coyote Mining Co. v. Ruble, 8 Or. 284, is cited as authority. Boise, J., at page 294, says, in effect, that to put a person in the position of a subscriber to the capital stock it must be shown by the stock book signed by him, or evidence equivalent to such signing. This would seem to support the proposition, but at another place (page 298) he says: “It is necessary for the corporation to prove the subscription by producing the subscription signed by Ruble, either by himself or by another for him with his authority, or by some acts of his which are equivalent to a subscription.” & that the case does not decide either that the primary subscription must be made upon the stock book, or that it shall have been made subsequent to the execution of [470]*470the articles of incorporation. In a late case (Balfour v. Baker City Gas Co., 27 Or. 307, 41 Pac. 165), Bean, C.

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Bluebook (online)
47 P. 888, 30 Or. 464, 1897 Ore. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickum-v-burckhardt-or-1897.