Provident Bank & Trust Co. v. Saxon

48 So. 922, 123 La. 243, 1909 La. LEXIS 701
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1909
DocketNo. 17,290
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 So. 922 (Provident Bank & Trust Co. v. Saxon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Provident Bank & Trust Co. v. Saxon, 48 So. 922, 123 La. 243, 1909 La. LEXIS 701 (La. 1909).

Opinion

NICHOLLS, J.

These two cases were-consolidated in the lower court. They were before the court separately in 1906, each appealing from a judgment of the district court sustaining an exception “of no cause-of action” and dismissing their suits. The judgments were reversed, and the cases were remanded to the lower court for further proceedings according to law. See Louisiana National Bank v. Henderson et al. (No. 15,873) 116 La. 414, 40 South. 779, and Provident Bank & Trust Company v. Saxon et al. (No. 15,874) 116 La. 408, 40 South. 778. and where the pleadings in each will be found. As the court stated in its opinion in the former case that the allegations therein were -more far-reaching than those in the one last mentioned, we will transcribe at length the allegations of the -petition in No. 15,873, noting later the differences between them and the petition in 15,874, if deemed necessary. The plaintiff in No. 15,873 alleged that:

“The parties hereinafter named are each one in solido indebted to petitioner in the sum of six thousand eight hundred and twenty-six and 21/ioo dollars, besides interest and costs of suit, for this, to wit: That the parties hereinafter named have in law and in fact been engaged in the buying and selling of mineral waters, personal property, and for and in the prosecution of said business have been associated in the commercial partnership, and as to-the same are and have been commercial partners; that the said business or commercial partnership has been carried on by the parties hereinafter named, under the name and style of the ‘Vossburg Mineral Springs Company, Limited,’ under the pretense that the same was a corporation, whereas, in law and in fact, the said Vossburg Mineral Springs Company, Limited, and the said parties hereinafter named, were not and did not form a corporation; that the said contract between the parties was one of partnership, commercial in its character, and in which each one of the said parties was and is liable as a commercial partner; that in the attempted organization of the said so-called corporation the law was violated or not complied with in many particulars, especially in the following, to wit:
[245]*245“That while the pretended charter of said so-called corporation evidenced by authentic act passed before Fergus Kernan, notary public, in this city on August 27, 1902, was recorded in the mortgage office for the parish of Orleans, in book 723, folio 629, there was not recorded then or at any other time in said mortgage office the original subscriptions made for the purpose of organizing said pretended corporation, in which respect there was a total failure to comply with the law prescribed for the validity of such a corporation or the valid creation of such a corporation, in consequence of which no corporation was created, and all members engaged in the prosecution of said business, under the color of said pretended incorporation, became and remained liable as commercial partners, and are liable as such in solido, for and upon all contracts and for any doings of the said pretended corporation; that although the said authentic act of incorporation aforesaid was recorded in the office of the recorder of mortgages for the parish of Orleans, besides the fact that the original subscriptions for the purpose of organizing the same was not therein recorded, it is, and was also, a fact, that there was an entire failure or omission to publish the said pretended charter in a newspaper at the domicile of said pretended corporation, in accordance with law; that said publication was made in a religious paper published weekly, known as the ‘Southwestern Presbyterian,’ which is a religious paper of special and limited circulation, and such was not in compliance with the requirements of law touching such publication.'
“That, under the statutes in such cases made and provided in the law, the publication of a charter of any corporation to be valid and effective must have been in a secular paper published daily and of general circulation. That the following named parties all residing in this city were those who, as commercial partners, engaged in the business aforesaid, under the name and style of the ‘Vossburg Mineral Springs Company, Limited,’ a pretended corporation, the creation and organization of which was not in accordance with law, as aforesaid, and who, by noneompliance with the requisites of law as aforesaid, made themselves liable and responsible, in solido, for all of the contracts and doings of the pretended corporation in the same manner and to the same extent as commercial partners, engaged in such commercial business, to wit: Thomas J. Henderson, Jamas B. Sinnott, Edward Aarons, Peter F. Pescud, John H. Kamlade, Robert W. Wilmot, Henry A. Testard, Walter J. Saxon, Charles L. Dudley, Claude M. Smith, Edward J. Maunsell, and Luther Sexton.
“That all of said parties falsely claiming to be a corporation, as petitioner then and there erroneously believed, and acting under and by virtue of the said attempted incorporation of the said Vossburg Mineral Springs Company, Limited, the incorporation of which was invalid for the reasons hereinbefore set out, and assuming without authority to act as such corporation, then and there maintained in its name, with petitioner, and as incidental to said commercial business, a deposit account; that under said assumed corporate name the said parties discounted with petitioner its drafts against the several persons named, and for the amounts set out in the statement filed herewith as part hereof; that the proceeds or the avails of said discount of the said drafts, drawn ostensibly by said pretended corporation, but in reality drawn by said parties, were to and with their full knowledge and consent, passed to the credit of the said so-called corporation, said Vossburg Mineral Springs Company, Limited, to and upon the said deposit account kept by said parties in the name of said pretended corporation, and by petitioner paid out in due course on the cheeks of the said pretended corporation under the name of which said defendants operated and did business; that all of the aforesaid acts and doings of the said Vossburg Mineral Springs Company, Limited, were, in reality, the acts and doings of the said parties defendant aforesaid, acting together as commercial partners in the business aforesaid, but pretending to act as such corporation; that the discounts of said drafts aforesaid, and the proceeds or avails thereof, were received, realized, and reduced to possession by said parties defendant, unlawfully under the acts of the pretended corporation aforesaid, in violation of law, of which facts they had then and there full knowledge, but of which petitioners were then and there ignorant.
“That all of this was done by and through Henry Mordecai, the agent and representative of said so-called corporation, and the aforesaid partners pretending to act as such corporation, and the said proceeds of the said drafts were duly received, used, and employed in said business by said parties, pretending to act as the corporation aforesaid, and in violation of law.
“That the aforesaid business incidental to which the said drafts were discounted by petitioner and passed to the credit as aforesaid, and used by the said parties pretending to act as such corporation, was the buying and selling of mineral springs water, personal property, and the business by reason of the character which said parties became bound and liable in solido as commercial partners in any contract, matter, or thing relating to the same.

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Related

Miller v. St. Marks Baptist Church
104 So. 121 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1925)
Taylor v. Vossburg Mineral Springs Co.
54 So. 907 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 So. 922, 123 La. 243, 1909 La. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provident-bank-trust-co-v-saxon-la-1909.