Both the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railroad Company and the Ohio & Mississippi Railroad Company owed their corporate existence, in part at least, to the laws of the state of Ohio ,- and their consolidation was effected by means of another law of that state known as the “Consolidation Statute,” which provides, among other things, that; ...
“All of the rights of creditors, and all liens upon the property of either of such companies, shall be preserved unimpaired, and the respective companies may be deemed to be in existence to-preserve the same; and all debts, liabilities and duties of either of said companies shall henceforth .attach to the new company, and be enforced against it to the same extent as if. such debts, liabilities and duties had been contracted by it.” Bev.- Eft, Ohio, § 3384.
*113It is quite obvious, therefore, that whatever rights the plaintiff had, as a creditor or lienor of either of the former companies, have been expressly reserved to him by force of this statute. Compton v. Railway Co., 45 Ohio St. 592, 16 N. E. 110, and 18 N. E. 380. That the plaintiff is a creditor of the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railroad Company is not denied, and it is of no moment, so far as the present appeal is concerned, whether he can maintain his action or not. He has seen fit to bring it, and the sole question before us is, how may the court obtain jurisdiction of one of the parties defendant?
The Code of Civil Procedure (section 432, subd. 1) provides that personal service of a summons upon a defendant, being a foreign corporation, must be made by delivering a copy thereof within the state “to the president, treasurer, or secretary; or if the corporation lacks either of these officers, to the officer performing the corresponding functions, under another name.” Had this action been commenced prior to November 1, 1893, there could be no doubt that the defendant the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railroad Company would have been brought into court by service of process upon Mr. Bacon; for it is conceded that at that time the company had a corporate existence, and that Mr. Bacon was its president. It is contended, however, by the learned counsel for the appellant, that the consolidation not only worked a dissolution of both of the constituent companies, but that it likewise terminated the right of the respective officers thereof to represent their company in any manner whatever; and, with certain qualifications, we are disposed to assent to this proposition, for we entertain no doubt that for all purposes, save those specified in the statute, the prior companies were extinguished by the consolidation. Compton v. Railway Co., supra. To illustrate: We have no hesitation in declaring that upon the 1st day of November, 1893, the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern Railroad Company became so far extinct as to be unable thereafter to transact the business of a common carrier independently of the new company into which it was then merged. Neither can we doubt that the consolidation of the two companies terminated the rights of the officers of each of them to exercise the functions of their respective offices in respect of any new business; but, as we have seen, the legislature of the state of Ohio, in providing a way by which the consolidation of two or more corporations could be effected, was very careful to preserve unimpaired the rights of the creditors of the respective companies, and to that end to expressly declare that corporate existence should be deemed to continue; and, if it be true that there was no officer of either of the consolidated companies upon whom process could be served after the consolidation took effect, the plaintiff would find himself in the anomalous, not to say absurd, situation, of having certain legal rights preserved to him by express legislative enactment, without any power whatever to enforce them. We are not prepared to believe that this was either the design or the necessary effect of the statute from which we have quoted; for if the plaintiff has a legal claim against the Baltimore ,& Ohio Southwestern Railroad Company, and that company is an existing, going corporation for the purposes of an action brought thereon, it must have some official representative whose duty it would *114be to take- notice of any steps taken by the plaintiff' to enforce its claim. This is the prime object of all service of process for the commencement of a suit or other legal proceeding (Gibbs v. Insurance Co., 63 N. Y. 114; Pope v. Manufacturing Co., 87 N. Y. 137); and in this particular instance it seems to have been accomplished; for no sooner was the summons herein served upon the former president of the corporation than the corporation appeared by attorney, and moved to vacate the service. The record before us does not disclose for what term the appellant’s president was elected, but it is reasonable to assume that it was for the period of one year; and there is an old rule, which may be invoked to meet the present emergency, to the effect that, where officers of a corporation are elected annually or for a definite term, they continue in office until others are elected in their place. People v. Runkle, 9 Johns. 147; 1 Wat. Corp. p. 195; State v. Bonnell, 35 Ohio St. 10-17. And, when the consolidation statute is considered in connection with this rule, we think it permits the conclusion that the appellant’s president, who was in office when the consolidation took place, continued to represent the appellant, for the purpose of the service of process, down to the time this action was commenced; and, if so, then the order appealed from is right, and should be affirmed.
Order affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements. All concur.