Terrell v. Industrial Commission

508 P.2d 355, 19 Ariz. App. 468, 1973 Ariz. App. LEXIS 566
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedApril 3, 1973
Docket1 CA-IC 649
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 508 P.2d 355 (Terrell v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terrell v. Industrial Commission, 508 P.2d 355, 19 Ariz. App. 468, 1973 Ariz. App. LEXIS 566 (Ark. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

HAIRE, Judge.

In this review by certiorari of an Industrial Commission award, the petitioning workman seeks to overturn the Commission’s refusal to hold a major stockholder of an uninsured corporate employer liable to the injured workman for workmen’s compensation benefits. 1 Petitioner advances several theories as to why the stockholder should be held liable for the *470 corporate employer’s dereliction, the principal theory being based upon the failure of the corporation to file a certified copy of its articles of incorporation with the Maricopa County Recorder as required by statute. 2

The facts pertinent to this review as found by the Commission's hearing officer (and supported by our examination of the record) show that petitioner was injured on February 25, 1969 while employed by A C & C Building Wreckers, Inc. (A C & C). At the time of the injury A C & C had three or more persons in its employment and was subject to the workmen’s compensation laws of the State of Arizona, but had not complied with them. Prior to the timé of the injury, A C & C had, on August 30, 1968, filed its articles of incorporation with the Arizona Corporation Commission, but had neglected to file a certified copy of the articles with the Maricopa County Recorder as required by A. R.S. § 10-123, or to publish the articles as .required by A.R.S. § 10-124. 3 The hearing officer expressly concluded, and we find this conclusion amply supported by the record, that a bona fide attempt was made to validly organize the corporation, and, that the corporation was operated in good faith and with the belief that it was validly organized and existing under the laws of the State of Arizona; that the corporation had kept corporate minutes, had assets of its own, its own telephone, and conducted its business as a corporation. From the foregoing the hearing officer concluded that A C & C was a de facto corporation within the doctrine recognized by the Arizona Supreme Court in Rice v. Sanger Brothers, 27 Ariz. 15, 229 P. 397 (1924), and that therefore the stockholders would not be liable for corporate obligations.

Our research reveals only three decisions dealing with this facet of Arizona law. In Sawyer v. Pabst Brewing Co., 22 Ariz. 384, 198 P. 118 (1921), while finding that a de jure corporation did exist under the facts of that case, the Arizona Supreme Court first recognized that a defective bona fide attempt at corporate organization coupled with the user of the corporate powers might result in the creation of a de facto corporation, and that if a de facto corporation did result, the stockholders would not be held liable for corporate obligations as a result of the defective organization. As stated by the court:

“ ‘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.’ Alder Slope Ditch Co. v. Moonshine Ditch Co., 90 Or. 385, 176 P. 593.
“In cases where parties associated together to carry on a business have been sought to be held as partners, notwithstanding they have thought themselves to be a corporation, the decisive question is always as to whether what they have done, or caused to be done, toward organization is sufficient to constitute them a corporation de facto or de jure. The courts are not agreed as to what acts will constitute a de facto corpora *471 tion, largely, we think, because the incorporating laws of the states differ, but they unite in agreeing when the acts done, although falling short of constituting a de jure corporation, are sufficient to constitute a de facto corporation, the associates are not individually liable on contracts entered into by the corporation.” 22 Ariz. at 388-389, 198 P. at 120.

Three years later in Rice v. Sanger Brothers, supra, the Arizona Supreme Court reiterated the principles laid down in Sawyer, supra, but declined to exempt the stockholders under the particular facts of that case because of the stockholders’ fraud in the organization and use of the corporate organization involved. Some thirty-nine years later the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals applied the de facto doctrine to an Arizona fact situation involving a defective attempted merger of two Arizona corporations. Notwithstanding the corporations’ failure to comply with the filing requirements of A.R.S. § 10-345, subsec. A, the court found a de facto merger applying the Rice and Sawyer principles. Provident Security Life Insurance Co. v. Gorsuch, 323 F.2d 839 (9th Cir. 1963).

There is substantial agreement among the authorities that a de facto corporation can result even in the absence of compliance with all of the technical statutory incorporation provisions. The reason generally given for holding such a corporation to have achieved a de facto existence is that if rights and franchises have been usurped, they are the rights and franchises of the state, which alone can object. As stated in Westlake Park Investment Co. v. Jordan, 198 Cal. 609, 246 P. 807, 810 (1926) :

“The philosophy upon which the courts of practically every state and of the United States have gone far toward upholding the existence de facto of corporations which have colorably attempted to organize under statutes permitting incorporation for the general purposes which the persons forming the same seek to incorporate, and which have thereafter in good faith proceeded to function as such corporations, is that the law encourages and shares in the universal desire for the stability of business transactions, and that, where such an organization has thus attempted to be created and has in fact organized and entered upon the transaction of business in good faith, the validity of its existence ought not to be inquired into collaterally.”

See also, 18 Am.Jur.2d, Corporations § 49 et seq. (1965).

The authorities are also in agreement that once it has been determined that de facto existence has been achieved, then the stockholders cannot be held liable to third persons who deal with the corporation merely on account of the technical defect in the formation of the corporation. See Sawyer v. Pabst Brewing Co., supra; Demarest v. Grant, 128 N.Y. 205, 28 N.E. 645 (1891); Refsnes v. Myers, 164 Wash.

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508 P.2d 355, 19 Ariz. App. 468, 1973 Ariz. App. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terrell-v-industrial-commission-arizctapp-1973.