Klorfine v. Cole

BROWN, J.

In some jurisdictions in this country, estates by entirety have never been recognized, while in others such estates have been abolished by statute. An estate by the entirety is plainly a common-law estate, and is generally held to be based wholly on the common-law doctrine that the husband and wife are one; that a conveyance of real property to the husband and wife creates but one estate, each being the owner of the whole thereof, and that, upon the death of either, the survivor is the owner in fee simple: 13 R. C. L., pp. 1097, 1099; 30 C. J., pp. 564, 565; 15 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2 ed.), p. 847; 1 Bishop on the Law of Married Women, § 613. In this jurisdiction, a conveyance of real property to a husband and wife creates an estate by entirety. This doctrine has been uniformly upheld by our court throughout a long line of decisions: See Noblitt v. Beebe, 23 Or. 4 (35 Pac. 248); Howell v. Folsom, 38 Or. 184 (63 Pac. 116, 84 Am. St. Rep. 785); Hayes v. Horton, 46 Or. 597 (81 Pac. 386); Oliver v. Wright, 47 Or. 322 (83 Pac. 870); Chase v. McKenzie, 81 Or. 429 (159 Pac. 1025); Heacock v. Loder, 106 Or. 323 (211 Pac. 950); Stout v. Van Zante, 109 Or. 430 (219 Pac. 804, 220 Pac. 414); Twigger v. Twigger, 110 *80Or. 520 (223 Pac. 934); Dutton v. Buckley, 116 Or. 661 (242 Pac. 626); Dodd v. First Nat. Bank of Eugene, 117 Or. 691 (245 Pac. 504).

The trial court held that the interest of Ernest L. Wells was not subject to the lien of defendant Cole’s judgment, upon the theory that an estate by the entirety was exempt from execution against either spouse. The authorities are not in harmony upon this question. The decision of the trial court finds some support both from text-writers and' from courts. However, it is settled law in this state that the interest of a judgment debtor, as tenant by the entirety with his wife, may be sold on execution. This pronouncement of the law was made by Mr. Chief Justice Robert S. Bean, speaking for this court in the early case of Howell v. Folsom, supra. That case was a suit to foreclose a mortgage executed solely by a married woman who possessed an estate by entirety in the lands. Upon the hearing in the lower court, the mortgage was declared void because the husband had not joined in its execution. On appeal to this court the case was reversed, the court holding, in substance, that a married woman may convey or encumber her property in which she holds by entirety. In rendering its decision the court said, at page 187:

“We take the rule, therefore, to be abundantly established that a husband can convey an estate held by himself and wife as tenants by the entirety, and that such conveyance will vest the fee in the purchaser, if the husband survive the wife. And, as our statute has given the wife power and authority to sell and convey her property ‘to the same extent and in the same manner that her husband can property belonging to him ’ (Laws 1893, p. 170, amending § 2992, Hill’s Ann. Laws), we think it clear she may convey *81an estate by tbe entirety with like effect as-her husband.”

In Heacock v. Loder, supra, Mr. Chief Justice McBride stated the view of this court in language following :

“It is objected that, as the cross-complaint alleges that John W. Loder and his wife, Grace E. Loder, are the owners or reputed owners of the building, this shows that there is a tenancy therein by entirety, and that a lien cannot be enforced thereon against Loder, the husband. In this state it is settled by the elaborate opinion of Mr. Chief Justice Robert S. Bean in Howell v. Folsom, 38 Or. 184 (63 Pac. 116, 84 Am. St. Rep. 785), that a husband may encumber his interest held by himself and wife in entirety, and that a sale upon such encumbrance will convey to the purchaser the fee in such property in case the husband survives his wife.”

The plaintiff contends that the court erred in holding that the deed attempted to be made by defendants Ernest L.-and Vera B. Wells to the Ernest Wells Realty Company on March 29, 1924, was null and void and that it failed to convey to the corporation any interest in the real property therein described, and that the deed attempted to be made by that corporation to the plaintiff to secure the payment of various sums as set out in her third cause of suit, was likewise null and void. A study of the record clearly shows that plaintiff’s contention is untenable. It is stipulated that defendants Ernest L. Wells and Vera B. Wells were the sole stockholders of the Ernest Wells Realty Company, and that, at the time they attempted to convey the premises to the corporation, the corporation had been dissolved by proclamation of the Governor for failure to pay its license fee. This being true, when the husband and wife at*82tempted to convey to their corporation the land they possessed as tenants by the entirety, the corporation had ceased to exist except for the purposes specified by statute: Section 6897, Or. L. It is elementary that, in order to constitute a valid deed, there must be both a grantor and a grantee: 18 C. J., p. 158.

In the light of the above principle, the following succinct statement by, an eminent text-writer is especially pertinent to the issue:

“When a corporation is dissolved, it is dead, and, in the absence of a statute to the contrary, it no longer exists for any purpose.” Clark on Corporations (3 ed.), p. 313.

In the case of Los Angeles & Arizona Co. v. Marr, 187 Cal. 126 (200 Pac. 1051), the Supreme Court of California said:

“Where a corporation has failed to pay its license tax and a forfeiture of the charter has been declared, it thereupon ceases to be a corporation, and has no right to dispose of its property (citing Newhall v. Western Zinc Mining Co., 164 Cal. 380 (128 Pac. 1040); Aalwyn’s Law Institute v. Martin, 173 Cal. 21 (159 Pac. 158).”

In the case of Rossi v. Caire, 186 Cal. 544 (199 Pac. 1042, 1045), the court went fully into the question of the status of a corporation which has suffered the forfeiture of its charter, and in a forceful and convincing opinion said:

“The status of a corporation whose charter is forfeited under the License Tax Act referred to is well settled by decisions of this court. • The penalty imposed by the act for nonpayment of the license tax prescribed was exceedingly severe, and the consequence doubtless often disastrous. But, in view of our constitutional provisions, the absolute power of the state over corporation charters was such, and the *83intention of the act to accomplish this end was so clearly and unambiguously shown thereby, that there could not be any well-founded difference of opinion as to the result. The governor’s proclamation having been duly made, and the corporation having failed to pay within the specified time thereafter, the corporation simply ceased to exist, just exactly as in the case of a forfeiture for cause by judicial decree, without any existing provision of law for rehabilitation as a corporation.”

Note, also, the case of Ransome-Crummey Co. v. Superior Court, 188 Cal. 393 (205 Pac. 446), where the court significantly says:

“During the time its taxes were unpaid, petitioner was shorn of all rights save those expressly reserved by the statutes.”

See, also, Van Landingham v. United Tuna Packers, 189 Cal. 353 (208 Pac. 973).

In Houston v. Utah Lake Land, Water & Power Co., 55 Utah, 393 (187 Pac. 174), the court, in treating the subject of a defunct corporation, thus announces its views:

“It is utterly fallacious to say that a corporation by its corporate death is given everlasting corporate life; * * the civilly dead corporation could not ratify those things thát it had no authority and no power to do. It was neither a de jure nor a de facto corporation after the forfeiture of its charter. In 8 Fletcher’s Cyc. Corp., § 5572, it is said: ‘It is hardly necessary to state that a corporation which has been dissolved cannot continue business as a going concern. This is so, even though a statute continues its existence for a definite or indefinite time to wind up the business.’ Bef erring to a statute providing that a corporation may, after its dissolution, continue for the purpose of winding up its business, the same author, at section 5636, says: ‘But such a statute does not authorize it to engage in any new business trans*84actions.’ * * The proclamation of the 'governor of this state forfeiting the charter of the Utah1 Lake Land, Water & Power Company in 1915 was notice to all of the world that thereafter, unless reinstated within the time by law provided, that corporation had no right and no power to engage in any business whatever except such as would be necessary for. the purpose of winding up its affairs.”
M. B. Meacham, for the petition. No appearance contra.

As to transfers by or to a corporation after its dissolution, 8 Fletcher Cyclopedia, Corporations, p. 9194, makesUthe following concise statement:

..“Of course a corporation cannot take or make a conveyance of property after its dissolution.”

In the case at bar, it'is not pretended that the transfer of the property was'made to or from the corporation for the purpose of winding up its business.

A consideration of the facts and the law of this case unquestionably establishes that the judgment of the defendant and appellant Ernest Cole against defendant Ernest L. Wells is a lien on all the title and interest which Ernest L. Wells owned or had in the land involved herein on June 28, 1924. The decree of the lower court will be modified in accordance with this opinion. Modified.