State ex rel. Denman v. National Cash Register Co.

13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 73, 1910 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 215
CourtFranklin Circuit Court
DecidedApril 2, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 73 (State ex rel. Denman v. National Cash Register Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Franklin Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Denman v. National Cash Register Co., 13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 73, 1910 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 215 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

By'the Court.

(Taggart, Donahue and Voorhees, JJ., sitting in place of the Franklin Circuit Judges.)

This case is submitted to the court upon a motion to strike out parts >of the petition and to make the petition definite and certain.

While we have given full consideration to all the questions raised by this motion, we do not think it necessary or advisable at this time to dismiss them in detail in this memorandum.

The plaintiff insists that no motion will lie to the petition either to strike redundant or irrelevant matter therefrom, or to make the petition definite and certain. Section 6760 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio designates a proceeding in quo warranto as a civil action, to be brought in the name of the state. Section 6772 provides what pleadings are to be filed after the petition, and these pleadings= are the same as are authorized by the civil code. It would, therefore, appear that this motion is properly filed in this case.

The motion seeks to strike from the petition certain allegations therein contained, as being redundant and irrelevant. It is claimed, in support of this motion, that if all these matters and •things sought to be stricken out were fully proven in the trial of the case, it would not entitle the state to a decree as prayed for in its petition. In the case of State v. Canal Co., 23 O. S., 121, the Supreme Court says:

[75]*75‘ ‘ The office of an information in the nature of a quo warranto is not to tender an issue of fact, but simply to call upon the defendant to show its warrant or charter for exercising the privileges and franchises named.'”

It would appear from this, as well as from many other authorities in this and other states, that whenever the state calls upon a defendant to show by what authority it exercises corporate franchises, the allegations in the petition of the Attorney-General may be of the most general character. But the Attorney-General in the case at bar has seen fit not only to set-forth the powers granted by the state, and to aver that the defendant is proceeding to abuse and misuse these corporate franchises and privileges so granted, and is assuming and exercising rights, privileges- and franchises not granted by its charter and especially inhibited by law, but has álso specified in detail the particulars in which the state claims that this defendant has violated its corporate franchises, and the particulars in which it has misused the same and wherein it is assuming to exercise rights, privileges and franchises especially inhibited by law.

It is perhaps true that the petition would have been sufficient for the purposes of this case if it had closed with the last paragraph on page 5 of the printed copy of the petition, followed by an appropriate prayer for -the relief des-ired. Yet it can not be prejudicial to the defendant that the Attorney-General in this petition, or information, has set out in detail the matters and things complained of. So that the only question is as toi whether these matters and things so set out -are pertinent to the inquiry, and, if proven, whether they would amount to such] misuse and abuse of its franchises, or to an exercise of unlawful | powers, authorizing the courts to revoke its charter.

This petition sets forth in detail the organization of prior and successive corporations in this state and in New Jersey for the purpose of conducting the business and property to which this defendant has, in its turn, succeeded; and also charges these former corporations with being parties to the original' conspiracy which has been maintained through all the life of each of said corporations, and is still being maintained by the corporation, now defendant herein. The defendant asks that all of that be [76]*76stricken out for the reason that it can not be responsible for the acts of other corporations, committed before it was in existence. This, perhaps, as an abstract proposition of law, is correct; but the charge here is that this present corporation is composed of the same stockholders, having the same officers and agents as each of the former corporations, and that it is, in fact, identical in body and mind with each of the original corporations, and that this identity has been maintained at all times since the original conspiracy, .as charged, was formed. It is true that each corporation is a separate legal entity, but, as stated by the Supreme Court of Ohio, in the first paragraph of the syllabus in the case of State, ex rel, v. Standard Oil Co., 49 O. S., 137, this “legal entity, apart from the natural persons who compose it, is a mere fiction, introduced for convenience in the transaction of its business .and of those who do business with it; but when urged to an intent and purpose not within its reason and policy, may be disregarded.”

It would be absurd to say that certain individuals could organize themselves into a body politic and corporate, which fictitious entity might become a party to a conspiracy to violate the laws of the land in the creation of a trust and monoply and in the destruction of competition, that when it had contributed by its efforts and its capital largely to this end, that these same individuals might abandon that corporation lest they and it be punished for the wrong and its charter revoked, organize a new and independent corporation to take its place in the conspiracy so that the business might go on uninterrupted and unchallenged by the state and this new corporation, <or new conspirator, joining the conspirators in the furtherance of the common design, and accepting all the property, benefits and advantages already acquired for it by the united efforts of the former corporation and its co-conspirators, and yet be exempt because it had no part in the original conspiracy.

The Supreme Court of Illinois, in the case of Cooks v. People, 231 Ill., page 9, has declared that “every person who enters a conspiracy already formed is deemed, in law, a party to all acts done by any of the other parties before or afterwards in furtherance of the common design; and the entry of such person into [77]*77a conspiracy already formed does not make a new and distinct conspiracy. ’ ’

We are, therefore, of the opinion that the state may inquire, and the court may be advised, as to all acts done or committed by any party to this conspiracy from the time it is charged that the same was formed; and that the state can not be restricted to the few acts and things that may have happened since the joining of a new member to the conspiracy.

True, it is this new member whose conduct is to be inquired of, and it is hot to be punished for the acts and wrongs of others unless it has become a party to the wrongs complained of and has taken its place in the conspiracy charged, and is doing and is performing the things charged against it. But, in order that its conduct may be understood, and that the court may be fully advised in relation thereto, it is perfectly proper to show not only what is being done, but what has been done by others in the furtherance of this conspiracy from the moment of its inception down to the present time; and the motion in that respect will be overruled.

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Related

Standard Oil Co. v. State
100 S.W. 705 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 73, 1910 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-denman-v-national-cash-register-co-ohcirctfranklin-1910.