Pierce Oil Corporation v. Weinert

167 S.W. 808, 106 Tex. 435, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 81
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1914
DocketMotion No. 3182.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 167 S.W. 808 (Pierce Oil Corporation v. Weinert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pierce Oil Corporation v. Weinert, 167 S.W. 808, 106 Tex. 435, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 81 (Tex. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. 'Justice P.HILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The relator, Pierce Oil Corporation, is a Virginia corporation, chartered on June 21, 1913. It has heretofore made application in due form to the Secretary of State for a permit to do business in the State, tendering in that connection the anti-trust affidavit required by law, and all lawful fees. Upon his refusal to issue the permit, it has filed this motion for leave to file its petition for a mandamus to compel its issuance.

On. June 1, 1907, in a suit by the State in the District Court of Travis County, the Waters-Pierce Oil Company, a foreign corporation chartered in 'Missouri, was by final judgment convicted of violation of the anti-trust laws of this State, for which a large fine was imposed, its permit to do business canceled, and an injunction issued perpetually enjoining it from transacting any but interstate business within the State. The relator was incorporated with the purpose of acquiring the property and business of the Waters-Pierce Oil Company, then conducting its business in Missouri, in other States and in the Republic of Mexico; and shortly after its incorporation it purchased and took over from the Waters-Pierce Oil Company all of its property and business and assumed all of its obligations, which business it now owns and operates.

We do not find it necessary to determine whether the relator is but a corporate continuation of the Waters-Pierce Oil Company, and therefore subject to the injunction decreed against that company in the suit above referred to, one of the positions here advanced by the respondent as a ground for his refusal to issue the permit. The question is, in our opinion, plainly ruled by the statute, article 7805, Revised Statutes, 1911, which is as follows:

“When any foreign corporation has been convicted of a violation of any of the provisions of this chapter, and its right to do business in this State has been forfeited, as provided in article 7803, no other corporation to which the defaulting corporation may have transferred its properties and business, or which has assumed the payment of its obligations, shall be permitted to incorporate or do business in Texas.”

The Waters-Pierce Oil Company having been convicted of violation of the anti-trust law of the State embodied in the chapter of which article *437 7805 is a part, and its right to do business in the State having been forfeited, the relator, a foreign corporation to which it has transferred all of its properties and business and which assumed the payment of all of its obligations then existing, comes directly within the statute and is prohibited from doing business in Texas, unless, by construction, the statute is given an effect contrary to the meaning of its literal terms.

Several contentions are made by the relator in respect to the proper construction of this statute, all of which we have examined but none of which we regard as sound. Among others it urged, principally: (1) That the whole policy and purpose of the anti-trust legislation of the State is only to prevent illegal combination in restraint of trade, and it was not the intention of this statute to exclude from the State an independent foreign corporation not a member of any such combination, which will afford competition in its line, and is able to truthfully make the anti-trust affidavit required of foreign corporations under article 1315, and has done so, merely because it has acquired the properties and business or has assumed the obligations of another foreign corporation once convicted under such laws and its permit forfeited, but which, at the time of the sale of its property and business, was free from any illegal alliance. (3) That under the proposition just stated the statute should be limited in its application to such corporations as constitute but a reorganization or continuance of the convicted corporation. And (3) that, regardless of any other view, the statute should be held to apply to only such transfers of the properties and business of the defaulting corporation as were made prior to its conviction. In connection with these general propositions it is also urged that to hold the relator barred, from the State because of its purchase, out of the State, of the prop-' erties of the Waters-Pierce Oil Company not situated within it, is, in effect, to attaint such property, and is likewise to give the statute an extra-territorial operation.

The transaction by a foreign corporation within the State of other than interstate business, is only a privilege, which the State may extend or withhold; it is not a right which the corporation possesses. The State is free, therefore, to prescribe the terms or conditions upon which it j grants the authority. They may be rigorous, but the power of the ¡ Legislature to give them that character is undoubted; and the foreign ; corporation in seeking only a license which the State is under no obli- ■ gation to allow, is in no position to complain of their severity. Its only alternative is to come within the conditions which the State has seen_ fit to impose. Taber v. Interstate B. & L. Assn., 91 Texas, 92.

. The manifest aim of this statute was to prevent the fictitious succession in this State of a foreign corporation which had been adjudged an offender against the anti-trust law, and whose permit to transact its business had been forfeited. The Legislature had the right to select and provide any test which it deemed a proper one for determining that question, or to exclude from the State any corporation sustaining a given relationship to the convicted corporation. It might have enacted the statute in such terms as would deny the privilege of coming within its *438 ■ borders for the transaction of their business, to only such corporations purchasing the property and business of a defaulting corporation, as were but its continuation, or to only such as had made the purchase prior to its conviction. But no such qualification can be imposed by construction upon this statute in the face of its plain provisions. The statute very clearly evinces a purpose on the part of the Legislature to reject any inquiry by the officials of the State as to whether the corporation seeking the permit has any identity with the convicted corporation, and to provide, as the test of its right, simply whether it has acquired the properties and business, or has assumed the obligations of a foreign corporation previously convicted under the anti-trust law and whose permit has been forfeited. The statute permits no inquiry beyond this. And no exemption from its operation can be predicated upon a condition which discloses the acquisition of the properties and business of such a defaulting corporation, or the assumption of its obligations, by the corporation seeking the permit, regardless of whatever else may be shown in respect to its relationship. Language could not be plainer, and there is no room for a different construction. With the policy or wisdom of the statute this court has nothing to do. It is our duty to give effect to its provisions.

It is furthermore evident that the Legislature intended to make immaterial when the acquisition of the defaulting corporation’s properties and business took place, whether before or after its conviction, since the statute is silent upon that question.

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Bluebook (online)
167 S.W. 808, 106 Tex. 435, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-oil-corporation-v-weinert-tex-1914.