People ex rel. Caton v. Ottawa Hydraulic Co.

Mr. Chief Justice Mulicey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The question presented for determination is, whether the court ruled properly in sustaining a demurrer to the information. It will be perceived the averments in the information, when stripped of all unnecessary verbiage, are, in substance and legal effect, that the company organized for the alleged purpose of establishing and carrying on a certain specified business, when, in truth and in fact, it intended to do nothing of the kind, but, on the contrary, intended to carry on altogether a different business, which it has alone pursued from the date of its organization to the present time, and that only a nominal portion of the capital stock, if any, has ever been paid in. In the case thus made, the company, as a corporate body, is assailed on three distinct grounds: First, that its organization was effected by false representations in its original statement; second, that it has failed to perform the duties which the law of its organization imposed upon it; and third, that it is and has been, from the date of its organization, engaged in a business not warranted by its articles of association,—or, more shortly expressed, the company is assailed on the grounds of fraud, mis-user and non-user. To this it is answered: First, that whatever cause of forfeiture of the company’s franchises may have originally existed, the State has subsequently waived it, both by legislative recognition and by acquiescence in its exercise of corporate functions for a period of over thirty years; second, that by the act of 1853, entitled “An act to amend the act incorporating the Ottawa Hydraulic Company, and the LaSalle County Manufacturing Company of Ottawa, both incorporated under the general law approved February 10, 1849,” the legislature not only recognized the legal existence of the defendant as a corporate body, hut that it expressly authorized it to do the very acts now relied on as a ground of forfeiture of the company’s franchises.

That the act referred to is an unequivocal recognition of the defendant’s corporate existence is too plain to admit of serious question. Such recognition distinctly appears both in the title and body of the act. We also think it equally clear that the leasing and sub-letting of water-power by the company, as charged in the information, are fully justified by the act in question. By the first section of the act it is authorized “to hold, lease, transfer, use and enjoy all of the property and privileges leased to it by the trustees of the •Illinois and Michigan Canal, and all such property'and privileges the use and enjoyment of which have been granted to it by the president and trustees of the said town of Ottawa, and all such property and privileges as may hereafter be granted to it by said canal trustees, president and trustees, or any other corporation, or by any person. ” By the second section the defendant and the LaSalle County Manufacturing Company, are authorized, jointly and severally, “to procure and hold all such real estate as may be deemed necessary or proper for the construction of races to conduct the water from the works of said companies, or either of them, of their or either of their leases or transfers, to the Illinois or Fox river, or both. ” By the third section the defendant is given an action of forcible detainer against any person .who shall withhold the possession of any property so leased to it by the canal trustees, or the use and enjoyment of which were granted to it by the president and trustees of the town of Ottawa, for the recovery of the same. Thus it substantially appears from the face of the act itself, that at the time of its adoption the defendant then held leases and water privileges from the canal trustees and the town of Ottawa, and the manifest purpose of the act was to confirm the defendant in the rights which it had assumed under said leases, and to protect it in the business in which it was then engaged.

We agree with counsel for the defendant that the act in question is, in legal effect, a new charter. It recognizes the corporate existence of the defendant, confirms its acquisitions under its articles of association, enlarges its powers, and confers on it new and independent powers. To this it is replied, first, that the act of 1853 is unconstitutional; and secondly, conceding it is not, that the defence which it affords can not be availed of by demurrer to the information, but should have been presented-by plea. We will consider these positions in the order stated.

The constitutionality of the act is assailed on the alleged ground that it is in conflict with so much of section 23, article 3, of the constitution of 1848, as declares: “No private or local law which may be passed by the General Assembly shall embrace more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in its title.” The defendant and the LaSalle County Manufacturing Company were both located at and doing business in the town of Ottawa, in 1853, when the above act was passed. They were severally incorporated under the general Incorporation law of 1849, and were alike interested in the water privileges afforded by the canal at that place. One of the purposes of the act, as is apparent upon its face, was to enable the two companies to procure and hold real estate for the purposes already stated, and to authorize them to acquire it by condemnation proceedings, if it could not be otherwise obtained. It was also desired by the legislature to relieve these two companies thus similarly circumstanced, from the burdens imposed by the 10th, 11th and 12th sections of the act of 1849, under which they were incorporated. These sections, among other things, made the stockholders individually liable to the company’s creditors to the amount of stock subscribed by them, respectively, until the whole of the stock was paid in, etc. Now all this could well be accomplished by amending the general law of 1849, so far as it affected these two companies, and the legislature having adopted this course, we see no impropriety in it. The general law, taken in connection with the several statements made by these companies for the purposes of incorporating, constituted their charter. The subject of the act of 1853 therefore was the amendment of the act of 1849, or of “the act incorporating” these two companies, and the additional powers conferred on the two companies were clearly germane to the amendment of the charter. It can hardly be that this objection is founded upon the fact that the legislature has, by a single act, conferred certain powers and privileges on two distinct corporate bodies. It would be just as reasonable to say that the legislature, by reason of the constitutional provision in question, could not make a joint grant to two separate persons, and no one, we presume, would contend for that for a moment. The provision of the constitution in question has often been before this court, and we have no hesitancy in saying there is no good reason for the claim that the act of 1853 is unconstitutional on the ground suggested. O’Leary v. Cook County, 28 Ill. 534; Prescott v. Chicago, 60 id. 121; City of Virden v. Allan, 107 id. 505; Potwin v. Johnson, 108 id. 70.

As to the claim that the act of 1853 should have been specially pleaded, little need be said. The question thus raised is so elementary in its character that it hardly admits of serious discussion. Where a number of individuals assume to act as a corporation, an information containing a general denial of their right to do so will be sufficient to put them to their plea of justification; but if the information attempts to set out their title, as was done here, and the facts disclosed for that purpose, when taken in connection with other facts appearing upon the face of a public statute, make the title good, the information will be necessarily bad. Such was the case here. It is a fundamental mistake to suppose that it is ever necessary to plead a public law; and there is no difference in this respect between a public law, strictly so called, and one merely declared to be so by the legislature. Sometimes such a law, as mere matter of composition, is specially pleaded, particularly in chancery proceedings; but there is no rule of law requiring it, and in proceedings at law it is regarded as violative of the principles of good pleading. The only charges contained in the information, affecting the original organization of the company or its subsequent right to act as a corporation, we regard as cured by the act of 1853, and this act is expressly declared to be a public act, hence there was no necessity, or even propriety, in pleading it specially. As to the failure of the stockholders to pay in the stock, we have already seen they are relieved from the performance of that duty by section 4 of the act of 1853.

This view of the case renders it unnecessary to discuss the defence of “lapse of time.”

The judgment will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Mr. Justice Sheldon, dissenting.