State v. Granville Alexandrian Society

11 Ohio St. 1
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by185 cases

This text of 11 Ohio St. 1 (State v. Granville Alexandrian Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Granville Alexandrian Society, 11 Ohio St. 1 (Ohio 1841).

Opinion

Judge Hitchcock

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case has been very fully and ably argued by the counsel, as well for the state as for the defendants. It is a case of importance, and presents several questions requiring the grave consideration of the court. These questions have been fully considered, and will now be noted, so far as is necessary for the disposition of the case.

Several objections are made to the information, the first of which is, that it is filed against the defendants by the name of the Gran-ville Alexandrian Society, without averring that said society is a corporate body.

The law under which this information is filed, authorizes proceedings of this kind against natural persons and against corporations.

Against natural persons:

“ 1. When any person shall usurp, intrude into, or unlawfully hold or exercise any public office, civil or military, or any franchise within this state, or any office in any corporation, created by the authority of this state.
“2. When any public officer, civil or military, shall havo done or suffered any act, which, by the provisions of this act, shall work a forfeiture of his office.
“3. When any association of persons shall act as a corporation, within this state, without being legally incorporated.”
Against any corporate body, when any such corporation shall have:
“ 1. Offended against any of the provisions of the acts creating, altering, amending, or renewing such corporation.
“ 2. Whenever it shall have forfeited its privileges and franchises by non-user.
“ 3. Whenever it shall have done or committed any acts which [8]*8amount to a surrender of its corporate rights, privileges, and franchises.

*“4. Whenever it shall have misused any franchise or privilege conferred, or exercise any franchise or privilege not conferred upon it by law.” Swan’s Stat. 770, 771.

The complaint in this case being, in fact, against a corporate body, for exercising a franchise not conferred upon it by law, it would have seemed to be more consistent with correct pleadings to have averred that the Granville Alexandrian Society was a body corporate, in law. There is not, perhaps, the same necessity of so doing in this state, where the private as well as the public acts of the legislature are printed in the statute book, and sent forth to the people, and where the court takes notice of them without pleading, as there would be in those states where a different course of practice prevails. But still, had there been no precedent to the contrary, we might have been inclined to the opinion, that, for this omission, this information was defective. But this information is framed after the precedent in the case of the People of New York v. Utica Insurance Company, 15 Johns. 381. It is like the information in the case of the State of Ohio v. Commercial Bank of Cincinnati, decided at the present term, and which was held to bo sufficient.

Another objection made to the information is,.that, although the venue, in the margin of the information, is laid in Licking county, yet it is nowhere stated that the principal office, or placo of business, of the defendants, was in that county.

We all concur in the opinion that it should appear that the .violation of the law complained of must havo taken place in the county where the information is filed, and that it is equally necessary that it should so appear upon the face of the information; as it would be that it should appear in an indictment, that the offense complained of had been committed in the county where the indictment is found. The jurisdiction of this court, upon quo warranto, is confined to the county where the defendants have their office, or place of business. It is so expressly declared with respect to natural persons, and the same reason applies with respect to corporations. As to the question, whether this place of business is sufficiently ^alleged in the information, we do not entirely concur. The information, after stating (without any venue) that the society had used the franchises of becoming pro[9]*9prietor of a bank, and of issuing notes, etc., concludes as follows: “And so the said prosecuting attorney, for the said State of Ohio, avers that the said Granville Alexandrian Society, during all of the time aforesaid, at Licking county aforesaid, bath, and still doth exercise, a franchise and privilege not conferred upon it by law, contrary to the form of the statute,” etc. Some of the members of tho court believe that this is sufficient, and that, although tho venue is not technically, it is substantially, laid. And, as this is rather a technical objection, we should be unwilling to dispose of tho case, upon this point, without further consideration.

Holding, for present purposes, that the information is sufficient, we will proceed to the examination of the further pleadings.

The defense relied upon in the first plea is, that by tho act of incorporation, banking powers wore conferred upon the Granville Alexandrian Society. If such be a fact, there is an end to the case.

This act of incorporation was passed on January 26, 1807.

It must be admitted, that the purposes for which this act was passed, do not appear in the act itself. It is very short, and expressed in general terms. But the title is, “an act for incorporating a library society in the town of Granville, in the county of Fairfield.” 5 Ohio Stat. 72. True, the title to an act does not constitute any part of the act, but it may be referred to, in order to explain what is doubtful in the act itself; And well may it be referred to in this case, whore, without the title, it would be impossible to conjecture what object tho legislature could have had in view. By reference to the title, we find the object to have been to incorporate a library association ; and, in giving a construction to the act, this must be borne in mind. Tho powers granted were intended to be such as were necessary to effect this object. It is not *reasonable to suppose that it was intended to grant any other. If, however, others have been granted, it is not in the power of this court to restrain them, although it is in tho power of the legislature to do it, for reasons which will be hereafter stated.

In section 1 of this act, it is enacted that certain individuals therein named, together with such others as shall be hereafter associated with them, shall be a body corporate, by the name of the “ Granville Alexandrian Society,” with tho usual powers of contracting and being contracted with, of suing and being sued, of making by-laws, ordinances, etc.; “ provided, said by-laws, ordi[10]*10nances, and regulations are not incompatible with the constitution and laws of the state ; subject, however, to such rules and regulations, as the legislature, from time to time, may think proper to make."

That part of the law relied upon as conferring tho banking power is section 2. It provides, “ that the corporation be, and they are hereby, made capable in law to hold any estate, real or personal, and the same to grant, sell, or dispose of; or to bind, by mortgage, or in such other manner as they shall deem most proper for the best interests of the corporation; provided, that the express purpose'of any gift or grant be answered.”

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio St. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-granville-alexandrian-society-ohio-1841.