Uhlmann v. Kin Daw

193 P. 435, 97 Or. 681, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 277
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 193 P. 435 (Uhlmann v. Kin Daw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Uhlmann v. Kin Daw, 193 P. 435, 97 Or. 681, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 277 (Or. 1920).

Opinion

HARRIS, J.

The papers which were executed on March 16, 1916, were signed and delivered in Portland, Multnomah County; while, as already stated, the hop farm is located in Marion County, and the partnership’s main office is in the City of New York. A certificate of the partnership’s assumed name was filed in Marion County on January 27, 1916; and on *684 March 8, 1918, subsequent to the execution of the agreement and mortgage, but prior to the commencement of this suit, a like certificate was filed in Multnomah County. The plea in abatement filed by Kin Daw was predicated on the theory that the failure to file a certificate in Multnomah County, where the papers were executed, prior to March 16, 1916, rendered the agreement and mortgage void under the provisions of Chapter 154, Laws of 1913.

The statute contains six sections. Sections 3 and 4 are not material here, for the reason that one relates to the filing of a certificate when a change occurs in ownership, and the other exempts from the operation of the statute corporations, limited partnerships and such partnerships as include in their business names the true names of all the parties conducting the business or having an interest in it. The other sections are as follows:

Section 1. True Name to be Filed When Business Under Assumed Name. — No person or persons shall hereafter carry on, conduct or transact business in this state under any assumed name or under any designation, name or style, corporate or otherwise, other than the real and true name or names of the person or persons conducting such business or having an' interest therein, unless such person or all of such persons conducting said business or having an interest therein, shall file a certificate in the office of the county clerk of the county or counties in which said business is to be conducted, which certificates shall set forth the designation, name or style under which said business is to be conducted, and the true .and real name or names of the party or parties conducting, or intending to conduct the same, or having an interest therein, together with the postoffice address or addresses of said person or persons. Such certificate shall be executed and acknowledged by the party or parties conducting’, or intending to conduct said busi *685 ness, or having an interest therein, before an officer authorized to take acknowledgment of deeds.
“Section 2. Certificate to be Filed Before Commencing Business. — Any person or persons now conducting any business under such assumed name, or under any designation, name or style other than the true and real name or names of all the parties having an interest therein, shall file and cause to be recorded and indexed in a book to be kept for that purpose, a certificate, as provided for in Section 1 of this act, within 30 days after this act shall take effect, and persons hereafter conducting or intending to conduct any business, as set forth in section 1, shall, before commencing business, file and record such certificate in the manner hereinbefore prescribed. * *
“Section 5. Compliance Condition Precedent to Bringing Suit. — No person or persons carrying on, conducting or transacting business as aforesaid, or having any interest therein, shall hereafter be entitled to maintain any suit or action in any of the courts of this state without alleging and proving that such person or persons have filed a certificate as provided for in section 1, and failure to file such certificate shall be prima facie evidence of fraud in securing credit.
“Section 6. Penalty Clause. — Any person violating any of the provisions of this act, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding $100.”

Statutes are to be found in many of the states regulating the conduct of business under an assumed name. Bach of these statutes which we have examined contains a section that is either identical with or substantially like Section 1 of our. statute. However, the expressed penalty for failure to observe the statute is not the same in all states. In some jurisdictions, as in California, Oklahoma, Colorado, Ohio, Montana, and South Dakota, for convenience referred to herein as the first group, a person or per *686 sons doing business under an assumed name cannot, in the language of the statute, “maintain” or “commence nor maintain” an action upon' any contracts made or transaction had in the assumed name “until” a certificate is filed or, as is sometimes required, filed and published. In some of these jurisdictions it is expressly provided by the statute that contracts made prior to the filing of the certificate may be sued upon and enforced after such filing; while in the remaining jurisdictions belonging to the first group the same result has been reached by judicial decision. In states having legislation like that of California, it is plain that it was not the intent of the lawmakers to taint the agreement or transaction so as to make it illegal and unenforceable, and that the only penalty intended is a conditional suspension rather than an absolute denial of legal remedies, even though in some of those states, as in Colorado, failure to file the certificate is declared to be a misdemeanor punishable by fine or imprisonment. Civil Code of California (Deering 1915) Section 2468; Roullard v. Gray, 38 Cal. App. 79 (175 Pac. 479); Compiled Laws of Oklahoma 1909, Sections 5023, 5025; Baker v. Van Ness, 25 Okl. 34 (105 Pac. 660); Bleecher v. Miller, 40 Okl. 374 (138 Pac. 809); Colorado Laws 1897, page 248, Chapter 65; Elgin Jewelry Co. v. Wilson, 42 Colo. 270 (93 Pac. 1107); Wallbrecht v. Blush, 43 Colo. 329 (95 Pac. 927); Bates’ Annotated Statutes of Ohio (6 ed.), Sections 3170-6 (Section 6); Cobble v. Farmers’ Bank, 63 Ohio St. 528 (59 N. E. 221); Revised Codes of Montana 1907, Sections 5504, 5509;- Reilly v. Hatheway, 46 Mont. 1 (125 Pac. 417); Revised Civil Code of South Dakota, Sections 1763, 1764; Heegaard v. Dakota Loan & *687 Trust Co., 3 S. D. 569 (54 N. W. 656); Bovee v. De Jong, 22 S. D. 163 (116 N. W. 83).

There is a second group of states in which the failure to file a certificate is declared to be a misdemeanor, and the only penalty in terms prescribed for such failure is fine or imprisonment. In this group of states there is no express declaration in the statute that any contract or transaction is prohibited or void, or that a suit or action cannot be “commenced” or “maintained,” or that suit or action cannot be commenced or maintained “until” a certificate is filed. In brief, in these states the sole penalty expressly named by the statute is fine or imprisonment. New York Statutes, 1900, Chapter 216, page 452; Boyle v. Shuttleworth, 41 Misc. Rep. 42 (83 N. Y. Supp. 609); Black v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 P. 435, 97 Or. 681, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uhlmann-v-kin-daw-or-1920.