United States v. Village Corporation, Pine Corporation, Chapel Corporation, and River Corporation

298 F.2d 816, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 6290
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1962
Docket8296
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 298 F.2d 816 (United States v. Village Corporation, Pine Corporation, Chapel Corporation, and River Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Village Corporation, Pine Corporation, Chapel Corporation, and River Corporation, 298 F.2d 816, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 6290 (4th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

HAYNSWORTH, Circuit Judge.

The District Court held that a Virginia statute permitting the institu *817 tion at any time of suits against Virginia corporations in the process of liquidation did not apply to suits against corporations the charters of which had been revoked prior to the enactment of the statute. We think it does.

These consolidated actions were commenced by the United States against four Virginia corporations, which had constructed and operated housing projects, to recover substantial deficiencies remaining unpaid on the mortgage debts after foreclosure of the federally guaranteed mortgages. The charters of the four corporations had been revoked by Virginia on July 1, 1954 because of nonpayment of certain registration fees and franchise taxes. More than three years later, in April 1960, these actions were commenced against the corporations in their corporate names. 1

After the revocation of these corporate charters in 1954 but prior to the commencement of these actions in 1960, Virginia completely revised her laws relating to business corporations. The Act of March 30, 1956, 2 which effectuated the revision, included a new Title 13.1 designed to replace entirely old Title 13 of the Code of Virginia 1950. For certain purposes, however, the Act provided for a period of transition, commencing January 1, 1957 and ending July 1, 1958, during which designated sections of old Title 13 would have continued, though limited, application. 3 The old statutes providing and defining the remedies of creditors of dissolved corporations were not among those continued in effect, for limited purposes, through the period of transition, and the repeal of old Title 13 was final and absolute as of July 1, 1958, the end of the transition period.

Nevertheless, the corporations contend that the right of the United States to maintain these actions against them is governed by the provisions of old Title 13 rather than those of new Title 13.1. 4 They point to the declaration of the General Assembly that the new Title 13.1 should apply to all “existing” corporations, and they deny their existence in 1956, some twenty-one months after their dissolution.

This contention can be better understood, perhaps, if we first note the relevant differences in the two sets of statutes and then consider the language of the Act of 1956 in which these defendants find comfort.

Under old Title 13, corporate existence was continued after dissolution, for the purposes of liquidation, for a period of three years, and during that period actions could be instituted by or against it in its corporate name. 5 Dissolution did not abate pending actions. 6 The directors, as trustees, were required to proceed with the liquidation of the corporation. 7 Upon application of a creditor or stockholder, an appropriate court of Virginia was authorized to continue the authority of the directors as trustees or to appoint a receiver, the trustees or the receiver being authorized, in the name of the corporation, to defend the suit brought by the applying creditor or stockholder. 8

*818 For this somewhat cumbersome procedure, new Title 13.1 substituted a simplified remedy. It authorized actions by or against the corporation, and in its corporate name, after dissolution without a limitation of time. 9 Under the new statute, passage of time after the date of dissolution is without significance. 10 A court order continuing the authority of directors or appointing a receiver is no longer a prerequisite to the institution of an action against a corporation in dissolution at any time.

The defendants concede there is no constitutional question. They do not deny that Virginia had the power, which she could exercise constitutionally, to make the new remedy applicable to actions against them. 11 When the new statutes were enacted, less than three years after the revocation of their charters, these causes of action had not been extinguished or abated. They were then enforceable by actions against the corporations in their corporate names. When Virginia revoked their charters for nonpayment of fees and taxes, she did not confer upon them or their directors any vested immunity to suit, effective three years thereafter, or relinquish her right to simplify the remedies she provided and to facilitate, without impairment, the enforcement of existing causes of action.

Instead they resort to a narrow construction of the language of § 13.1-128, the provisions of which relate primarily to the transition from the old statutes to the new, 12 in which the General Assembly declared the new Act applicable to all “existing” corporations and its provisions “a part of the charter of every corporation heretofore or hereafter organized in this State.” They read into the words, “existing,” and, “organized,” an intention to limit application of the Act to those corporations which, on its effective date, had an unqualified existence and were lawfully authorized to do business in Virginia. They bolster their interpretation by reference to the subsequent provision of the section which requires “each such corporation” to establish a registered office, appoint a registered agent and file a statement with the Commission containing prescribed information. They point also to the penalty of charter revocation if the requisite statement is not filed by July 1, 1969. “Such corporations,” they say, refers to those existing corporations to which the section makes the Act applicable, and it is inconceivable to them that the General Assembly could have intended to require a corporation, the charter of which had been revoked, to establish a registered office, appoint a registered agent or file a new statement. They say it would be senseless to require the revocation of the charter of a corporation for failure to file a statement when its charter had been revoked earlier for other reason. 13

If some of the provisions of § 13.1-128 be wholly or partially inapplicable to these corporations, however, it does not follow that they were not “existing” corporations within the meaning of the Act. They had, at least, a qualified existence. 14 *819 They had the power to remove the qualification and regain their authority to continue the conduct of their businesses upon payment of the fees and taxes in compliance with § 13.1-92. They had the capacity to achieve their complete rejuvenation without any new grant from the state. Until they paid their fees and taxes, they were limited in what they could lawfully do, but they had a de jure existence for the purpose of winding up their affairs and a

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 F.2d 816, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 6290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-village-corporation-pine-corporation-chapel-corporation-ca4-1962.