Rice v. Sanger Brothers

229 P. 397, 27 Ariz. 15, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 104
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1924
DocketCivil No. 2137.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 229 P. 397 (Rice v. Sanger Brothers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rice v. Sanger Brothers, 229 P. 397, 27 Ariz. 15, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 104 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

CHAMBERS, Superior Judge.

— Appellee brought this action, upon an account for goods, wares, and merchandise in the amount of $4,360.22, against the appellants, Benjamin Rice and Rose Rice, copartners doing business under the firm name and style of The French Shop, Inc. The answer of the appellants denies a partnership, and alleges that The French Shop, Inc., was a corporation; that the account sued upon was between the appellee and The French Shop, Inc., a corporation, and that the goods were sold and delivered to The French Shop, Inc., a corporation. The appellee, in a sworn reply to the answer of the appellants, denies that The French Shop, Inc., was a corporation but alleges that the purported • attempted incorporation was part of a fraudulent scheme devised for the purpose of defrauding creditors, and that the alleged corporation was only a cloak or guise under which the appellants conducted a partnership business, in order to avoid personal liability. The cause was tri'ed to the court without a jury.

*17 The French Shop, Inc., was first a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Missouri, operating a store in the city of Phoenix, Arizona, during the year 1-919. The sole stockholders of the Missouri corporation were the appellants, Benjamin and Rose Rice. During the fall of 1919 the appellants determined to dissolve this corporation and to organize a new corporation under the laws of the state of Arizona. In October, 1919, the Missouri corporation was dissolved and a firm of Phoenix lawyers was employed by the appellants to incorporate the Arizona corporation. The articles were prepared and filed with the Arizona Corporation Commission, and a certified copy thereof was recorded in the office of the county recorder of Maricopa county. Publication of the articles was duly made and an affidavit of publication filed with the Corporation Commission. The incorporation fee was not paid, and no certificate of incorporation was ever issued. No appointment of a statutory agent was ever filed, as required by law. After the appellants had filed the articles of incorporation in the office of the Arizona Corporation Commission and had the articles published and recorded in Maricopa county, they apparently took no further steps to perfect the record of the incorporation until April, 1921.

The appellants, after filing and publishing their articles, bought a seal and stock book'and issued to themselves, 260 shares to Benjamin and 240 shares to Rose Rice, in stock of the purported corporation, capitalized at $50,000. These shares of stock were soon thereafter pledged to the National Bank of Arizona, in conjunction with Rice’s life insurance and the long-time lease on the store where the business was being conducted, to secure a loan of $18,200. This loan was carried in the name of the French Shop, Inc. The lease stood in the name of Benjamin *18 Eice. There is a dispute as to whether this lease, was ever transferred to The French Shop, Inc., but, at any rate, in June, 1921, this lease, valued in the financial statement of the preceding January at1 $15,000, was sold to a brother of the appellant,! Benjamin Eice, for $2,500, and the proceeds placed; in The French Shop funds. There does not appear, to have been any direct transfer of tangible assets' from the alleged incorporators to the so-called cor-1 poration. The books of The French Shop, Inc., were1 the same books under which the business started in Phoenix as a Missouri corporation. No balance was( struck, and there was nothing indicating a change of ownership from the Missouri corporation to the' Eices, nor from the Eices to an Arizona corpora-' tion. |

During the year 1920 The French Shop, Inc., branched out. It had one store on East Washington Street known as “The French Shop,” a store on Central Avenue known as “The Yogue,” and a store on Adams Street known as “The Parisienne.” These stores had separate books and carried separate bank accounts, checked against by Eice and his wife. There does not appear to have been anything indicating to the public that these last-named stores were the property of The French Shop, Inc.

In April, 1921, by-laws were drawn up and' adopted by Benjamin Eice and Eose Eice, acting as sole stockholders of' The French Shop, Inc. The minutes of meetings alleged to have been held at various times since 1919, including an alleged organization meeting of October, 1919, were written up and adopted; a notation appearing in the minute-book to the effect that the minutes were now for the first time reduced to writing and the by-laws adopted. We think that the record is sufficient to support a finding that no organization meeting was *19 ever held, no by-laws adopted, nor any minutes of meetings kept until some eighteen months after the alleged incorporation. It appears from the evidence that there was a lapse of from two weeks to thirty days from the time of the dissolution of the Missouri corporation until steps were taken toward the organization of an Arizona corporation.

During the course of the trial there was much testimony introduced on the subject Qf fraud. It is unnecessary to set forth the specific instances of fraud upon the part of the appellants during the year 1921. It is admitted that during the year 1921 gross frauds against the creditors of the alleged corporation were committed by the appellants. Their transactions during that year are honeycombed with fraud against the creditors of The French Shop.

Counsel for appellants seek to avoid liability upon the theory that the alleged corporation, notwithstanding the fact that no certificate of incorporation was issued, was a de facto corporation and that therefore parties dealing with the de facto corporation, believing that they were dealing with a corporation and not with a partnership, cannot after-wards repudiate the transaction with the corporation and recover against the stockholders as partners. Upon the other hand, appellee claims that this 'was not even a de facto corporation, and that, even though it was a de facto corporation, fraud was the purpose at its inception, and the appellants cannot avoid personal liability by taking the preliminary steps toward the organization of a corporation.

In the case of Sawyer v. Pabst Brewing Co., 22 Ariz. 384, 18 A. L. R. 277, 198 Pac. 118, this court quotes with approval from Alder Slope Ditch Co. v. Moonshine Ditch Co., 90 Or. 385, 176 Pac. 593, as follows:

*20 “As to ability to transact business, corporations may be divided into three classes: First, de 'jure corporations, or those where the organization is entirely and legally perfected; second de facto, .corporations, where there has been a bona fide attempt to organize a corporation and a user of corporate powers, but the organization is defective; third, corporations not sufficiently organized to come within the latter class.”

It is not the intention of this court to deviate from the doctrine laid down in the above case. It may be said, however, in defining a de facto corporation, that it is one where there has been a bona fide

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Bluebook (online)
229 P. 397, 27 Ariz. 15, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-sanger-brothers-ariz-1924.