3 Colo. App. 559 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
Ham and Jones, partners in the feed business, sued The A. Gauthier Decorating Company, a corporation, before a justice, to recover the amount of two bills for horse feed, alleged to have been sold by them to the Decorating Company in February and March, 1892; and recovered judgment, from which the defendant appealed to the county court, where judgment was again given for the plaintiffs. The defendant brings the case here by writ of error.
In December, 1891, and again in January, 1892, Wright Gauthier, who was in the employ of the defendant, ordered from the plaintiffs a bill of feed for the defendant. The articles so ordered were furnished and delivered by the plaintiffs
Wright Gauthier had no authority from the defendant to order any of the goods which plaintiffs had furnished; he was not its agent for that purpose; the goods were, as it appears, used by A. Gauthier as feed for his horses. This A. Gauthier was in the service of the defendant, as superintendent of its business, under a written contract, by the terms of which he was to receive two hundred dollars per month for his services and the use of three of his horses and wagons ; the horses and wagons, however, to be kept at his expense. This arrangement with A. Gauthier was unknown to the plaintiffs, who supposed from the fact of the bills being paid by the defendant, that the goods were properly chargeable to it.
Counsel for defendant refer us to the well established doctrine that corporations are bound, and bound only, by the acts and contracts of their agent, done and made within the scope of their authority. This is unquestionable law; and in so far as a principal may be affected by the acts of an agent, or assumed agent, the application of the rule is not confined to corporations; it includes all principals; so that it may be said generally, that no principal is bound by the acts of an
The plaintiffs - were permitted, over the objection of the defendant, to prove its incorporation by parol. This was error. Such proof can be made only by an authenticated copy of its charter or certificate of incorporation. But the error was in no way prejudicial to the defendant. The defendant appeared and defended the suit in the justice court. The judgment there recites such appearance. It appealed from this judgment to the county court, and gave an appeal bond, executed in its behalf by its officers, apparently authorized for that purpose. It appeared in the county court, cross-examined witnesses and introduced evidence. It thus admitted its corporate existence, for if it had no existence it could not appear. It did more. The effect of its appeal bond was an affirmation of its incorporation, and it was in the county court by virtue of such affirmation. If a corporation appears to a suit, it cannot deny its own existence; and such appearance is conclusive evidence of its legal existence for the purposes of the pending case. R. R. Co. v. Shirley, 20 Kan. 660; Seaton v. R. R. Co., 55 Mo. 416.
Proof of its incorporation was therefore unnecessary, and it suffered no harm from the incompetent evidence admitted; but because of the deficiency, in the evidence, which we have mentioned, the judgment must be reversed.
Reversed.