298 Mass. 170 | Mass. | 1937
The defendant Nash as chairman, together with one Thompson, one Benkert and one Diefenbach, constituted a so called committee which in 1933 solicited the deposit with a named depositary of debenture bonds of Associated Gas & Electric Company, in order that united action might be taken by the committee on behalf of debenture holders against a plan for the rearrangement of the capital of that company advanced by it. Service was made on the defendant Nash only, and the plaintiff discontinued its action as against the other members of the committee, who were residents of New York.
The plaintiff is a New York corporation which operates an advertising agency. The claim of the plaintiff is for $3,835.61, of which $1,000 had been paid, leaving a balance of $2,835.61 with interest from September 1, 1933, for the preparation and publication of an advertisement in various newspapers between July 5 and July 22, 1933, soliciting the deposit of debenture bonds so as to bring them within the control of the committee, and refuting attacks upon the committee made by the company. The members of the committee expected to profit from a fee paid by each depositing debenture holder. The committee, if not a partnership, was a joint enterprise or adventure.
The plaintiff was employed by an attorney named Clark in New York, who was active in the formation of the committee and was its actual though not its nominal counsel. The principal question is whether he was authorized to pledge the credit of the defendant Nash. It is true, that the defendant Nash had sought to have the advertising written at and distributed from Boston, but he had yielded to the argument of Clark that “a certain advertising agency here [in New York, meaning the plaintiff] has done all
The agreement under which bonds were deposited provided that "neither any member of the Committee nor the depositary or its agents shall be liable for any indebtedness, obligations or liabilities incurred by, or at the instance of the Committee, but any and all indebtedness, obligations or liabilities incurred by, or at the instance of, the Committee shall be binding solely upon the deposited Debentures . . . .” But the plaintiff was not informed of this provision, and did not agree to look to the assets exclusively.
The judge, sitting without a jury, found "that in entering into the contract with the plaintiff Clark acted for and within his apparent authority as agent for the defendant [Nash]; and that the plaintiff had no knowledge of any limitation on the authority of Clark.” He found generally for the plaintiff.
Clark was not a mere special agent for a particular occasion involving no continuity of service, like the agent in Marquandt v. Boston Young Women’s Christian Association, 282 Mass. 28, 30. The whole matter of advertising was left to him, throughout a considerable period. Advertising was at that time the principal business of the committee, for it was the chief means of inducing bondholders
Although the plaintiff knew that there existed a deposit agreement, it was not bound to investigate its provisions and to discover the one which declared that there should be no personal liability on the part of members of the committee. The defendant and other members of the committee could escape personal obligations upon their contracts, made by their agent within his ostensible powers, only to those creditors who expressly or impliedly agreed to look solely to the property held by the committee, as the plaintiff did not. McCarthy v. Parker, 243 Mass. 465, 467. Larson v. Sylvester, 282 Mass. 352, 359. Dolben v. Gleason, 292 Mass. 511. Downey Co. v. 282 Beacon Street Trust, 292 Mass. 175.
The testimony of an officer of the plaintiff as to its contract with Clark, and what the plaintiff did under it, was properly admitted. As the judge said, “If I find that he [Clark] didn’t have any authority, then whatever he did would be of no effect.” Grace v. Monroe, 280 Mass. 184,
The requests for rulings require no discussion. The defendant makes one contention which is not founded on any request or specific exception. He points out that the declaration set out a joint promise by all four members of the committee, and that the judge found merely that the defendant Nash promised through Clark as agent. He contends that recovery can be had under the declaration only upon a joint promise. In the first place, the point is only one of variance, and it is. settled, that an exception to the
Exceptions overruled