State Ex Inf. Atty-Gen. v. Long-Bell Lumber Co.

12 S.W.2d 64, 321 Mo. 461, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 478
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 64 (State Ex Inf. Atty-Gen. v. Long-Bell Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Inf. Atty-Gen. v. Long-Bell Lumber Co., 12 S.W.2d 64, 321 Mo. 461, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 478 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*471 PEE CUEIAM:

This is an original proceeding in quo warranto brought by the Attorney-General, as informant, to oust respondent, a Missouri corporation, of its corporate franchise. The pith of the numerous grounds alleged is that respondent has engaged in activities beyond its corporate powers, particularly in its development of the townsite now known as the city of Longview, in the State of 'Washington.

Respondent’s defense, elaborately pleaded in its answer and return, is that the activities and business operations complained of are well within its charter powers.

After the issues were thus joined informant filed a motion asking for the appointment of a commissioner to take evidence in the cause and report his findings to the court. This motion was sustained and Honorable FRED L. Williams, a former member of this court, was appointed as special commissioner to take testimony and report his conclusions on the facts and the law. Thereupon Judge Williams duly qualified as such, took the testimony, and on June 15, 1928, filed his report in this court embracing a very comprehensive finding of facts and statement of his conclusions of law, and recommending that all relief sought by informant be denied and that judgment be entered in favor of respondent. Informant filed no exceptions to this report, but on the seventh day of November, 1928, Honorable Stratton Sliartel, Attorney-General of the State of Missouri and successor to informant herein, filed written consent that judgment be entered in this cause in conformity with said report of the special commissioner.

The testimony covers such a wide range, the exhibits are so numerous, and some of the questions of law and of fact are so complicated, unusual and far-reaching that a summarization made within the usual length of our written opinions would not render a proper understanding of the case possible. The commissioner’s finding of facts and conclusions of law are so complete and apposite, and they so admirably express the opinion of the court that we adopt them, as follows:

FINDING OP FACTS.

“The respondent was incorporated under the laws of Missouri relating to manufacturing and business corporations in 1884. Starting then with a capital of $300,000 as a retail dealer in lumber, the business prospered and expanded until in the year 1920 it had become one of the largest manufacturers of lumber under one name in the world; its lumber sales that year were: wholesale, $25,332,236.21; retail, $18,276,653.13; total, $43,608,889.34, and the sales of its mercantile stores which it operated at different plants were that year *472 in excess' of six million dollars. Its authorized capital stock in 1922 was $30,000,000. In addition to its manufacturing operations hereinafter described, it operates 118 retail lumber yards in Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, California, Oregon and Washington, and now has about 12,000 employees. Its total resources, as shown on its books November 30, 1926, were in round numbers $104,242,000, and its total net worth was in round numbers $57,-246,000.

“The purposes expressed in respondent’s original charter were:

“ ‘The purposes for which this association is formed are for the buying and selling of all kinds of lumber and other building material and the buying and selling of coal.’

“These purposes were in 1907 amended to read as follows:

“ ‘The purposes of this corporation are to manufacture, buy, sell and otherwise acquire and dispose of lumber and all kinds of building material; to mine, buy, sell and otherwise acquire and dispose of coal, wood and all kinds of fuel; to buy, sell, lease and otherwise acquire and deal with and in real.estate, timber lands, coal lands, mills and machinery, of every kind and character, necessary and incident to the carrying out of the purposes of this corporation; to build, construct, buy, sell, lease and otherwise acquire railroads and tram roads of all kinds, necessary or incident to the purposes of this corporation, and to buy or otherwise acquire all other means of conveying or distributing any of the aforesaid materials, which may be necessary or incident to the purposes of this corporation. To obtain, acquire or control railroads and other means of conveyance and all necessary timber, lands, coal lands and supplies of lumber, coal and fuels of all kinds, and all leases, property rights and interests sufficient to carry out the purposes herein recited, and to this end and for this purpose to acquire, own or control certificates of stock and other securities in lumber companies, timber companies, coal companies and similar companies or corporations, foreign or domestic, engaged in the business of manufacturing, buying, selling and otherwise dealing with and in lumber and all kinds of building material, coal and all kinds of fuel, and in the transportation thereof, and to sell, assign, transfer, convey, pledge, mortgage or otherwise dispose of such land, mills, machinery, leases, certificates of stock, bonds, property rights and interests, and generally to do all things necessary or proper which may be incident to any of the purposes herein recited or in any way connected therewith and generally to purchase, hold, mortgage or otherwise convey such real and personal property as the purposes of the corporation shall require, and to have and to exercise all the franchises, powers, rights, privileges and immunities conferred by law upon corporations created and organized for the purposes aforesaid.’

*473 “Later, and on July 10, 1922, the purpose clause of its charter was amended to read as follows:

“ ‘The purposes for which this association is formed are as follows: 1. To purchase, lease or otherwise acquire, and to hold, use, operate and develop, or to sell or otherwise dispose of, timber and cut-over lands, including the minerals in such lands. 2. To erect, purchase or otherwise acquire, own and operate, or sell or otherwise dispose of sawmills, sash, door and blind factories, box factories, woodworking plants, turpentine refineries or other wood-product manufacturing plants, or plants for the further treatment of byproducts of wood-produet plants; and in connection with said sawmills, factories or other plants to conduct merchandise stores, buying and selling the goods, wares and merchandise for said stores either at wholesale or retail. 3. To manufacture, purchase or otherwise acquire, and to sell or otherwise- dispose of, lumber, lath, logs or shingles, sash, doors or blinds, or other wood products or by-products of any of said manufacturing operations, and to purchase, sell and otherwise deal in building material of every kind and description, selling at either wholesale or retail. 4. To purchase, construct or otherwise acquire, and to operate ships, boats, ferries, docks, engines, cars, tram roads, railroads or other means for transporting lumber, lath, logs or shingles or other wood products or the by-products of any of said manufacturing operations, or for transporting other freight or transporting passengers, except that the company will not maintain or operate any railroad in the State of Missouri. 5.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 64, 321 Mo. 461, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-atty-gen-v-long-bell-lumber-co-mo-1928.