Van Etten v. Eaton

19 Mich. 187, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 43
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 19 Mich. 187 (Van Etten v. Eaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Etten v. Eaton, 19 Mich. 187, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 43 (Mich. 1869).

Opinion

Graves J.

Eaton brought assumpsit against Van Etten to recover a demand against a manufacturing corporation organized under the act of February 5, 1853, and of which Van Etten was a stockholder and director. The action was supposed to be authorized by that portion of section 23 of the act, which provides that if the directors of any such company shall intentionally neglect or refuse to comply with the provisions, and to perform the duties required of them by sections three, five, eighteen and nineteen of the act, they shall be jointly and severally liable in an action founded on such statute for all the debts of such corporation contracted during the period of such neglect or refusal. And the liability of Van Etten was claimed to have arisen, by reason of the failure of the directors of the company to report upon the condition of the company, as required by sections five and nineteen of the statute in question.

The assignments of error are quite numerous, but all of them which are now relied on, depend upon the construction to be given to the statutes, and do not require therefore to be separately noticed.

It appeared upon the trial that on the 21 st of March 1862, the plaintiff in error and two other persons, adopted [190]*190articles of association and formed a corporation for the manufacture of salt, and that the articles stated that the place in this State where the office of the company for the transaction of business was located, was in the city of East Saginaw, and that their business was to be carried on in the counties of Saginaw and Bay, and the adjoining counties if necessary.

Evidence was also given to show that from the winter of 1864, the company had carried on business in Bay County and had kept an office there, and that neither of the reports required by §§ 5 and 19 could be found in the office of the clerk of Bay County, or in the office of the company in that County.

On the part of the defendant evidence was given tending to show, that he was not aware that any law of the State required the making and filing of any reports of the kind mentioned, and was ignorant of any such law; and did not know whether or not the reports had been filed; and had not intentionally neglected or refused to conform to the requirements of the statute and indeed had no knowledge of such requirements and thought nothing about them.

Whether the reports in question had been filed in the office of the Auditor General or in that of the clerk of Saginaw County did not appear, nor was it shown whether the company carried on business in the latter County, unless the statement in the articles of association that at their date the office of the company was there situated, should be considered as evidence of that fact.

First. The plaintiff in error maintained that the requirement in section 19 That the reports should be filed in the office of the clerk of the County in which the business of the corporation should be carried on, had reference only to the County in which was situated the office of the company mentioned in the articles „ of association pursuant to [191]*191the provisions of section four, and therefore as this office of the company was fixed by the articles of association in the County of Saginaw the omission by the directors to file the report in question in the office of the clerk of Bay County was of no legal consequence whatever.

This construction is thought to be supported by the difference in phraseology discovered in sections 3, 4 and 19.

By section 3, before the corporation can commence business the articles of the association are required to be filed with the “ County Clerk of the county or counties” in which the corporation shall “ conduct ” its business ; and by § 4 the corporation are required to state in the articles, the “place in this State where their office for the transaction of business is located and the county or counties in which their business is to be carried on;” but § 19 requires the report therein specified to be filed in the “■ office of the clerk of the county in which the business of any such corporation is carried on.”

The plaintiff in error contends that this variation in phraseology 'marks the purpose of the Legislature, and shows that where an act was required to be done in more than one county, the phrase “ county or counties ” was used, while in directing any thing to be done in but one county the expression employed was “the county.”

It appears to us, however, that this difference in language was wholly accidental and was never intended to point to the distinction now insisted on.

Section 4 distinguishes between the county in which the business office may be situated, and other counties in which the corporation may carry on business, and thereby repels the inference that the statute in referring to the county in which the business is carried on, must be taken as meaning the same county in which the office is located.

The Legislature contemplated that the company office might be in one county and the-business operations, aside [192]*192from mere office work, entirely carried on in another county or counties more or less remote ; and it is not wholly unworthy of notice that the only passage in the act which in terms alludes to the company office, speaks of it as the “office for the transaction of business,” and not as the place where the corporation is to “ carry on business ” or “conduct the mining or manufacturing business.”

It is therefore seen that the language of the act which refers to the company office implies that the business spoken of in connection with it, is such as could be “ transacted” at the office, and not actual mining or manufacturing which could only be done elsewhere, and that while the language relating to the office and its business would exclude any operations consisting of the actual working of the mine or manufactory, the other portions of the act which speak of “ carrying on ” or “ conducting ” business are broad enough to include actual mining and manufacturing.

But, turning from this somewhat narrow view of the subject, it seems evident that a leading object of the Legislature, in requiring the reports in question to be made and filed, was to secure accessible means of information to those having business with the company respecting the financial condition of the corporation wherever it should be actually conducting its manufacturing operations. And as its nominal business office might be separated from the place, or places where its works should be fixed, and its material operations carried on, by great distance and many serious obstacles to the communication, there was quite as much reason for requiring the report mentioned in section 19 to be filed with the clerk of the county in which the manufacturing should be done, as in that of the county in which the office for “transacting” business should be situated, if a different one, and upon consideration we think that the Legislature intended by the section last cited, to require the report there specified to be filed in the office of the [193]*193clerk of every county in which the material business of manufacturing should be done.

Second.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Mich. 187, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-etten-v-eaton-mich-1869.