42 Cal. 465 | Cal. | 1871
The plaintiff was a Director of the corporation defendant, and alleges that he was employed by defendant, while holding that position, to go to Hew York and there engage in
It was not pretended at the trial that the defendant had, by proceedings at any corporate meeting, directly employed the plaintiff as its agent to proceed to New York upon this business; but it appeared that the plaintiff" and one Glad-ding had already agreed with each other to go to New York from California, in the prosecution of a joint enterprise of their own, into which they had entered for the sale of certain mines and mining interests in the New York market, and that it was in contemplation to sell one of these mines to Randall, the same person who was about to contract to build the defendant’s road. Under these circumstances, Barstow had a conversation with the President of the defendant, Dr. Rowell, in which he remarked that he thought of going to New York; that he had some “ contingent busi.ness” there. Rowell replied: “Then you must go for the City Railroad Company and complete the contract with Randall, or get somebody else to build this road,” adding that Barstow should be compensated for his services and expenses. This was in October, 1865, and on the eighteenth day of that month Barstow left San Francisco by the steamer, and arrived in the City of New York on the eighth day of November following. On the' twenty-eighth of November—twenty days after Barstow had arrived in New York— a corporate resolution was passed by the defendant, authorizing Barstow and Gladding (then also in the Eastern States)
It is claimed that the circumstances are such as that the law would imply a promise upon the part of the corporation to pay him his claim. It was held in Pixley v. W. P. R. R. Co., 33 Cal. 83, that a quantum meruit would lie against a corporation for services rendered, and would be supported by proof of circumstances from which a promise to pay might ordinarily be inferred against a natural person.
Even if the cause of action set forth in the complaint here is to be considered to be in this respect altogether of the same character as was that in the case just referred to (a point upon which I am not to be understood to be expressing an opinion now), it is clear enough'that the defendant was entitled at the trial to put in evidence all the facts which could be reasonably supposed to throw light upon the question as to whether the plaintiff had really been employed as alleged by him. It was supposed that the conversation already referred to, had between the plaintiff and the President of the defendant, previous to the departure of the former' from California in October, 1865, coupled with the corporate resolution of November twenty-eighth following, were circumstances tending to prove the employment alleged—and they were admitted in evidence upon that view. It is evident, however, that the weight and value of such circumstances, when proven, must be affected by a consideration of other and co-existent facts surrounding the transaction. For instance, it appears in this case that the
I think that the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial had; and it is so ordered.