CRANSON
v.
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
MACHINES CORP.
234 Md. 477, 200 A.2d 33
HORNEY, JUDGE. 'On the theory that the Real Estate Service Bureau was
neither a de jure nor a de facto
corporation and that Albion C. Cranson, Jr., was a partner in the
business conducted by the Bureau and as such was personally liable for its
debts, the International Business Machines Corporation brought this action
against Cranson for the balance due on electric typewriters purchased by the
Bureau. At the same time it moved for summary judgment and supported the motion
by affidavit. In due course, Cranson filed a general issue plea and an
affidavit in opposition to summary judgment in which he asserted in effect that
the Bureau was a de facto corporation and that he was not personally liable for
its debts.
The agreed statement of facts shows that in April 1961, Cranson was
asked to invest in a new business corporation which was about to be created.
Towards this purpose he met with other interested individuals and an attorney
and agreed to purchase stock and become an officer and director. Thereafter,
upon being advised by the attorney that the corporation had been formed under
the laws of Maryland, he paid for and received a stock certificate evidencing
ownership of shares in the corporation, and was shown the corporate seal and
minute book. The business of the new venture was conducted as if it were a
corporation, through corporate bank accounts, with auditors maintaining
corporate books and records, and under a lease entered into by the corporation
for the office from which it operated its business.
Cranson was elected president and all transactions
conducted by him for the corporation, including the dealings with I.B.M .' were made as an officer of the
corporation. At no time did he assume any personal obligation or pledge his
individual credit to I.B.M. Due to an oversight on the part of the attorney, of
which Cranson was not aware, the certificate-of incorporation, which had been
signed and acknowledged prior to May 1, 1961, was not filed until November 24,
1961. Between May 17 and November 8, the Bureau purchased eight typewriters
from I.B.M., on account of which partial payments were made, leaving a balance
due of $4,333.40, for which this suit was brought.
Although a question is raised as to the propriety of making use of a
motion for summary judgment as the
means of determining the issues presented by the pleadings, we think the
motion was appropriate. Since there was no general dispute as to the material
facts, the only question was whether I.B.M. was entitled to judgment as a
matter of law. The trial court found that it was, but we disagree.
The fundamental question presented by the appeal is whether an officer
of a defectively incorporated association may be subjected to personal
liability under the circumstances of this case. We think not.
Traditionally, two doctrines have been used by the courts to clothe an
officer of a defectively incorporated association with the corporate attribute
of limited liability. The first, often referred to as the doctrine of de facto
corporations, has been applied in those cases where there are elements showing:
(1) the existence of law authorizing incorporation; (2) an effort in good faith
to
incorporate under the existing law; and (3) actual user or exercise of
corporate powers. The second, the doctrine of estoppel to deny the corporate
existence, is generally employed where the person seeking to hold the officer
personally liable has contracted or otherwise dealt with the association in
such a manner as to recognize and in effect admit its existence as a corporate
body.
There is, as we see it, a wide difference between creating a corporation
by means of the de facto doctrine and estopping a party, due to his conduct in
a particular case, from setting up the claim of no incorporation.
Although some cases tend to assimilate the doctrines of incorporation de
facto and by estoppel, each is a distinct theory and they are not dependent on
one another in their application. Where there is a concurrence of the three
elements necessary for the application of the de facto corporation doctrine,
there exists an entity which is a corporation de jure against all persons but
the state.
On the other hand, the estoppel theory is applied only to the facts of
each particular case and may be invoked even where there is no corporation de facto.
Accordingly, even though one or more of the requisites of a de facto
corporation are absent. we think that this factor does not preclude the
application of the estoppel doctrine in a proper case, such as the one at bar.
I.B.M. contends that the failure of the Bureau to file its certificate
of incorporation debarred all corporate existence. But, in spite of the fact
that the omission might have prevented the Bureau from being either a
corporation de jure or de facto, Jones v. Linden Building Ass'n, we think that
I.B.M. having dealt with the Bureau as if it were a corporation and relied on
its credit rather than that of Cranson, is estopped to assert that the Bureau
was not incorporated at the time the typewriters were purchased. In 1 Clark and
Marshall, Private Corporations, 5 89, it is stated:
The doctrine in relation to estoppel is based upon the ground that it
would generally be inequitable to permit the corporate existence of an
association to be denied by persons who have represented it to be a
corporation, or held it out as a corporation, or by any persons who have
recognized it as a corporation by dealing with it as such; and by the
overwhelming weight of authority, therefore, a person may be estopped to deny
the legal incorporation of an association which is not even a corporation de facto.
In cases similar to the one at bar, involving a failure to file articles
of incorporation, the courts of other jurisdictions have held that where one
has recognized the corporate existence of an association, he is estopped to
assert the contrary with respect to a claim arising out of such dealings.
Since I.B.M. is estopped to deny the corporate existence of the Bureau,
we hold that Cranson was not liable for the balance due on account of the
typewriters.
Judgment reversed; the appellee to pay the costs.