Smith v. Tallassee Branch of Central Plank-Road Co.

30 Ala. 650
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 30 Ala. 650 (Smith v. Tallassee Branch of Central Plank-Road Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Tallassee Branch of Central Plank-Road Co., 30 Ala. 650 (Ala. 1857).

Opinion

W ALKER, J.

In Stodder v. Grant & Nickels, 28 Ala. 416; Leaird v. Moore, 27 Ala. 326, and Friend v. Oliver, 27 Ala. 532, it is decided, that the circuit court cannot allow the amendment of a complaint, by striking out the only two parties plaintiffs, or a sole plaintiff on the record, and inserting another and distinct name as'plaintiff. These decisions are placed upon the ground, that when the name of the sole plaintiff, or the names of all the plaintiffs, are stricken out, there is no actor left, and then there is, in the language of those decisions, “no case,”— “the case is at an end.”

The question in this case is distinguishable from the question in those three cases, in this, that here the name of the plaintiff’was not stricken out, leaving the case in the anomalous condition of a suit without an actor ; but the words originally employed in the complaint, descriptive of the artificial personage suing, from their intrinsic import pointed to and designated the same corporation, the name of which remained after an erasure of some of those words;

In the Mayor and Burgesses of Stafford v. Bolton, 1 Bos. & Pul., it was held, that the declaring by a corporation, whose true name was, “the Mayor and Burgesses of the Borough of Stafford in the County of Stafford,” by the name of “The Mayor and Burgesses of the Borough of Stafford,” was a defect available by plea in abatement, and not by nonsuit, or plea in bar. - This case draws the distinction betweeir the mere misnomer of a corporation, and the suing by a person altogether different, or not in rerum natura. — See, also, Burnham v. Bank, 5 N. H. 446; Marine Bank of Balt. v. Biays, 4 Har. & J. (Md.) R. 338; Ang. & Am. on Cor. (5th edition,) 710, § 650.

In Doe v. Miller, 1 Barn. & Ald. 699, it was decided, that there was no variance, where an ejectment was brought upon the demise of “the Mayor, Aldermen, capital Burgesses, and Commonalty of the Borough [663]*663town of Malden”; the name of the corporation being “the Mayor, Aldermen, capital Burgesses, and Com-omnalty of Malden.” It is remarked in the Newport Mech. Man. Co. v. Starbird, 10 N. H. 128, that the name of a natural person is different from that of a corporation, in this, that the alteration or transposition of a word in the former usually makes an entirely different name, while the name of the latter frequently consists of several descriptive words, and the transposition of them, or an interpolation or omission or alteration of some of them, may make no essential difference in the case. In that case, a note, payable to “The President, Directors and Company of the Newport Mechanics’ Manufacturing Company,” was held recoverable in an action by the “Newport Manufacturing Company.”

While it must be conceded, that more strictness as to the name of the corporation is required in pleading, than in contracts and conveyances to which it is a party, (An-gelí & Ames on Corporations, 6th ed., §101,) and while we do not now commit ourselves to all the positions of the several cases cited above ; yet it is certain, that the authorities adduced establish the conclusion, that there is a well-marked distinction between a misnomer, which incorrectly nances a corporation, but correctly describes it, and the statement in’the pleading of an entirely different party. This conclusion being attained, the question of amendment in this case is stripped of embarrassment by the three decisions above quoted from 28th and 27th Ala. which we fully approve. Under our statute of amendments, wo think the amendment was properly allowed by the circuit court. — Code, § 2408; Crimm’s Adm’rs v. Crawford, 29 Ala. 623; Reid v. Scott, at the present term.

This opinion is fully sustained by the decisions in. the eases of Brittain v. Newland, 2 Dev. & Bat. (N. C.) 363; Bullard v. P. D. & C. of the Nan. Bk., 5 Mass. 99; Sherman v. P. of Conn. Riv. Bridge, 11 Mass. 338. In the first of those cases, it was decided, that the defect was amendable, where the suit was in the name of the President and Directors of the Buncombe Turnpike Company, instead of the Buncombe Turnpike Company. In the [664]*664other two cases, an amendment similar to the one in this case was allowed.

If the plaintiff have any corporate existence, it is derived from the 4th section of the act of 30th January, 1850, providing for the incorporation of the Central Plank-Road Company. — Pamphlet Acts ’49-50, p. 268. This act authorizes the incorporation of a company, for the construction of a plank-road from 'VYetumpkato G-unter’s Landing, or some other point on the Tennessee river. So much of the 4th section as it is necessary to copy in this opinion, is in the following words: “Any individual, or association, may establish branch plank-roads, running into, and connecting with said central plank-road, which branches may be governed by the respective stockholders thereof; and said stockholders for building branches to said central plank-road may become, and hereby are, incorporated under the provisions of this act.”

It is contended, that the bestowment of a name by the charter of a corporation is indispensable to its creation ; and that the plaintiff has no corporate existence, because no name is provided in the statute. Names are necessary to the existence of corporations. It is “the very being of the constitution”; “the knot of their combination, without which they could not do their corporate, acts; for it is nobody to plead and be impleaded, to take and give, until it hath gotten a name.” — 2 Bacon’s Abr., Corporation, (C). But the authorities clearly show, that although the name is usually given by the charter, it is not indispensable that it should be so given. It is said in Wilcock on Corporations, 34, that every corporation has at least one name by which it may be identified ; this may be either derived from usage, or conferred upon it by the statute or charter of creation. In an anonymous case in 1st Sal-keld, 191, we find the following: “My Lord Coke says, that a corporation must have a name ; but that must be understood to be either expressed in the patent, or implied in the nature of the thing; as if the king should incorporate the inhabitants of Bale, with power to choose a mayor annually, yet it is a good corporation by the name of mayor and commonalty. So the city of Norwich is incor[665]*665porated to be a mayor and sheriffs by the charter of Henry IV, and are called mayor, sheriffs, and commonalty.”

Where individuals are authorized to associate themselves together, and, organizing as a corporation under a general law, give themselves a name, the existence of the corporation has been maintained. — Falconer v. Campbell, 2 McLean, 195-198 ; see, also, Minot v. Curtis, 7 Mass. 447.

The charter provides for the establishment of branches to tbe Central plank-road, and so designates them in the 18th as well as the 4th section above copied. The charter also clearly contemplates the establishment of more branches than one; and thus arises the propriety of distinguishing the different branches by a variation in the names. A most appropriate mode of accomplishing the object is by reference to some noted point towards which the branch leads. Tallassee, or its vicinity, is one of the points had in view in the organization of this company. It is shown by the record of the proceedings of the corporation, copied into the bill of exceptions, that it has used from the commencement the name of the Tallassee Branch of the Central Plank-Road Company.

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30 Ala. 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-tallassee-branch-of-central-plank-road-co-ala-1857.