The Boca Mill Co. v. Curry

97 P. 1117, 154 Cal. 326, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 401
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1908
DocketS.F. No. 4997.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 97 P. 1117 (The Boca Mill Co. v. Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Boca Mill Co. v. Curry, 97 P. 1117, 154 Cal. 326, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 401 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an original proceeding instituted in this court by plaintiff, a California corporation, to obtain a writ of mandate requiring the defendant to file in his office a certified copy of a certificate of extension of its corporate existence.

The question presented by this proceeding is as to the constitutionality of an act of the legislature, approved March 18, 1907, purporting to amend section 401 of the Civil Code (Stats. 1907, p. 344), by the terms of which amendment “every corporation heretofore or hereafter formed, and existing under the laws of this state, may at any time prior to the expiration of the term of its corporate existence extend such term to a period not exceeding fifty years from the date of such extension.” Prior to the amendment, and ever since the year 1873, the section provided that any corporation formed for a period of less than fifty years, the maximum period under our statute for which a corporation may be originally organized, might extend its term of existence to a period not exceeding fifty years from its formation. The amended section provides, as did the original, that such extension may be made at any meeting of the stockholders or members called by the directors expressly for considering the subject if voted by stockholders representing two thirds of the capital stock, or by two thirds of the members, or upon the written assent of two thirds of the members or of stockholders representing two thirds of the capital stock. A certificate of the proceedings of the meeting upon such vote, or upon such assent, must be signed by the chairman and secretary of the meeting and a majority of the directors, and be filed in the office of the county clerk where the original articles of incorporation were filed, and a certified copy thereof in the office of the secretary of state, and thereupon the term of the corporation *328 is extended for the specified period. The plaintiff was incorporated on the fifth day of June, 1877, for the maximum term of fifty years. In October, 1907, it was resolved, in the manner provided by the amended section, to extend the term of its corporate existence for the further period of fifty years from the date of extension. All the proceedings were in accord with the provisions of said section. The secretary of state refused to file the certified copy of the certificate of extension upon the ground that section 401 as so amended is in violation of a provision of our constitution, and thereupon this proceeding was instituted.

It will be observed that the amendment to section 401 of the Civil Code made a radical change in the law. As the section stood before the amendment, only a corporation formed for a period of less than fifty years could extend its term of existence, and then only to a date not exceeding fifty years from the date of its original incorporation. Under the amendment, any corporation may extend its term of existence, although originally incorporated for the full term of fifty years, not exceeding fifty years from the date of such extension.

The claim of the defendant is that the amendatory act is invalid because it is prohibited by section 7 of article XII of our constitution, the article relating to corporations. That section is as follows: “The legislature shall not extend any franchise or charter, nor remit the forfeiture of any franchise or charter, of any corporation now existing, or which shall hereafter exist, under the laws of this state.” The question here is as to the meaning of this provision. The defendant contends that it prohibits the legislature not only from enacting any law, general or special, extending the term of existence of any or all corporations, but also from enacting any general law under which corporations may themselves extend such period. The claim of plaintiff is that the provision is intended simply either, to prohibit such an extension by legislation special in its character, or to prevent the legislature from passing any general law which, by the operation of the law itself, independent of action by any one else, will accomplish the extension of corporate charters; in other words that the constitutional restriction is upon the method of accomplishing such an extension, and is not directed against the substantive thing, the extension, and that it does not prohibit the enact *329 ment of a general law of a permissive character, open to all corporations alike on equal terms.

The constitutional provision under consideration is peculiar to our own state and the states of Washington and Idaho, which evidently copied it from our constitution. At the time of its adoption, the constitutions of Pennsylvania, Missouri, and Colorado contained provisions in terms prohibiting the passing by the legislature of special laws creating corporations or renewing or extending the charters thereof, and the constitutions of Illinois and Nebraska declared that no corporation, except those organized for charitable, educational, penal, or reformatory purposes and under the control of the state, shall be created by special laws or its charter extended, changed or amended, which was practically the same as the provision of Pennsylvania, Missouri, and Colorado. Since the adoption of our constitution of 1879, the states of Montana and Idaho have adopted constitutional provisions in terms prohibiting the granting, extension, or amendment of corporate charters by special law, and the state of Delaware one prohibiting the creation, amendment, renewal, or revival of any corporation by special act.

In view of all the circumstances proper to be considered in construing a constitutional provision, we are forced to the conclusion that section 7 of article XII is not susceptible of either of the constructions sought to be given it by learned counsel for the plaintiff, and that it was plainly the intent of the framers to prohibit any action by the legislative department, by virtue of which any corporate charter or any franchise (at least any franchise held by a corporation) might be extended, or the forfeiture of any such charter or franchise remitted.

So far as the extension of corporate charters is concerned, when we come to a consideration of the evils to be guarded against by constitutional provision in that behalf, it must be conceded that under our system that of special legislation was the one principally to be feared, and, therefore, to be prohibited. We would naturally expect, for this reason, to find more force in an argument that this was the real object of the provision, than in the other claim of plaintiff that its object was to simply prevent the legislature from directly extending the charters of corporations by general legislation, leaving that *330 body free to authorize all corporations to extend their own period of existence. We are unable to perceive any particular object to be subserved by a provision having the effect asserted in this latter claim of plaintiff. The only suggestion of its learned counsel in this regard is that it may have been the purpose in prohibiting direct extensions by the legislature by general law to guard against the special legislation that might be successfully cloaked thereunder. There is little force in this suggestion.

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Bluebook (online)
97 P. 1117, 154 Cal. 326, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-boca-mill-co-v-curry-cal-1908.