People v. Rosenstein-Cohn Cigar Co.

63 P. 163, 131 Cal. 153, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 751
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1900
DocketL.A. No. 773.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 63 P. 163 (People v. Rosenstein-Cohn Cigar 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
People v. Rosenstein-Cohn Cigar Co., 63 P. 163, 131 Cal. 153, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 751 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

COOPER, C.

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of defendants and from an order denying plaintiff a new trial.

The proceeding is in the nature of a quo warranto by the attorney general to deprive the defendant, a corporation, of its corporate charter and procure its dissolution. The principal ground, as we gather from the complaint, upon which it is claimed the corporation should be deprived of its charter is that it did not proceed to organize and commence the transaction of business within one year from the date of its incorporation, as provided in Civil Code, section 358: “If a corporation does not organize and commence the transaction of its business or the construction of its works within one year from the date of its incorporation, its corporate powers cease.” It is alleged that on the nineteenth day of December, 1894, articles of incorporation were filed with the county clerk of Los Angeles county by the M. L. Polaski Company, Limited, which set forth the object and purposes of the corporation, the place of business, the term for which it was to continue, the names of five directors, the capital stock, the number of shares subscribed, and the amount subscribed by each director.

That the said articles were subscribed and acknowledged by the five directors, and a certified copy thereof sent to the secretary of state, and that the secretary of state issued to said M. L. Polaski Company, Limited, the usual certificate, under the great seal of the state, showing “that a copy of the articles” containing the required statement .of facts had been filed in his office.

The complaint then proceeds to allege “that no other, further, or different steps in the organization of said corporation were taken; no by-laws were adopted, no officers were elected, no record was kept embracing the acts dome, or who were present and who absent, no stock and transfer book was kept, and no meetings of the directors were had.” It is mot alleged that the said M. L. Polaski Company, Limited, did not organize within the year, nor is there any allegation as to when it commenced the transaction of its business. It is further alleged that a petition was filed in the superior court of Los Angeles *155 county, on the twenty-fourth day of May, 1897, for change of name of the said M. L. Polaski Company, and that “upon proceedings had therein an order was made and entered on June 39, 1897, changing the name of said corporation to the Rosenstein-Cohn Cigar Company, the present defendant.”

No attempt is made to allege that the defendant, under its present name, did not organize and commence business within one year after June 39, 1897. On the contrary, it is alleged that after the order so changing the name the corporation “carried on business in the city of Los Angeles, county and state aforesaid, as cigar dealers under the name of Rosenstein-Oohn Cigar Company, claiming to be a corporation.” It is further alleged that “the exercise of corporate power by the defendants, or any of them, is contrary to the statutes of the-state of California, and each and every exercise of said corporate power subsequent to the lapse of one year from the date of its incorporation has been, as to the people of the state of California, void and of no effect.”

The prayer for judgment asks “that said corporation did not organize within one year from the date of its incorporation, and that its corporate powers ceased at the expiration of the said year.”

The evident intention of the pleader was to show that the corporation, while using the name M. L. Polaski Company, Limited, did not, within one year from the date of its incorporation, organize and commence the transaction of its business. W'e may, for the purposes of this case, concede that the complaint so alleges, and that such facts would entitle the plaintiff to judgment depriving the corporation defendant of its charter. But the court found: “The said corporation adopted and used a seal in due form of law. The said corporation organized and commenced the business for which it was incorporated immediately after the issuance of said certificate of incorporation, and by the twenty-first day of December, 1894, and ever since that time, has continued to operate and is now operating the same.”

It is claimed by plaintiff that the above finding is not supported by the evidence. We have carefully examined the evidence and find in it sufficient to support the finding.

*156 The "witness Rosenstein testified that he was secretary of the M. L. Polaski Company, and further said: “We adopted bylaws the same week of the incorporation.....The by-laws were in the safe.....Right away after the incorporation of the M. L. Polaski Company we organized by electing officers. It was within thirty days, and the by-laws were adopted within thirty days. We transacted business right away. The company had a seal. The corporate meetings were held at the cigar store regularly.”

The witness Robertson was bookkeeper for the M. L. Polaski Company, Limited, from the time it was incorporated until its name was changed. He testified: “I was there just about the time the articles of incorporation were filed. I started a set of books; .... from the 21st of December, the date of the incorporation, the business went right along at the old stand buying and selling tobacco, cigars and articles.”

The witness Polaski testified: “We were conducting business at the same place as a partnership before the corporation was formed.....After the incorporation the business went right along as before, so far as the selling of goods was concerned. Q. Did you organize a board of directors then by the election of officers? A. I think so. Q. Did you commence business? A. Tes, sir.”

The above evidence not only supports the finding, but is uncontradicted, and upon the finding defendants were entitled to judgment.

The court, after certain other findings, found: “That none of their said acts were injurious to plaintiff, nor prejudicial to the interests of the relator, the said defendant E. Cohn, or any of the stockholders or creditors of said corporation.” We think, treating last-named finding as a conclusion of law, that it is correct and entitles defendants to judgment. The courts treat a franchise as a trust, and the terms of the charter of a corporation are the conditions of the trust. A forfeiture of the charter takes place when some one or more of the essential conditions of the trust are violated. (People v. Dashaway Assn., 84 Cal. 119.) It is said in the above case that cases of forfeiture are divided into two classes: “1. Cases of perversion; as where a corporation does an act inconsistent with the nature and. *157 destructive of the ends and purposes of the grant. In such cases, unless the perversion is such as to amount to an injury to the public who are interested in the franchise, it will not work a forfeiture. 2. Cases of usurpation; as where a corporation exercises a power which it has no right to exercise. In this last case the question of forfeiture is not dependent, as in the former, upon any interest or injury to the public.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 P. 163, 131 Cal. 153, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rosenstein-cohn-cigar-co-cal-1900.