79 Pa. 54 | Pa. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the court, May 24th 1875.
None of the cases cited by the defendant in error sustains his position. The Erie and Waterford Plankroad Company v. Brown, 1 Casey 156; and the Bedford Railroad Company v. Bowser, 12 Wright 29, were suits upon subscriptions to stock. The case of the Edinboro’ Academy v. Robinson was a subscription in aid of an academy. There is not the slightest analogy between either of these cases and the one under consideration. In Burton v. The Liverpool, Manchester and New Castle-upon-Tyne Junction Railway Company, 7 Eng. Law & Eq. Rep. 124, the contract was between the plaintiff and an organized company. This was a case where the projectors agreed to pay the complainant 5000Í. for the land to be taken for the railway and incidental damages, and the plaintiff thereupon assented that his land should be so taken. The agreement was in writing between the plaintiff and the executive directors of Lancashire and North Yorkshire Railway Company, which was afterwards united with another rival enterprise, under the name of the defendant corporation, and the two companies agreed to adopt the contract with the plaintiff. It is true the company had not yet obtained its charter, but it was still,
We do not desire to controvert the principle, established in England, and to some extent recognised in this country, that when the projectors of a company enter into contracts in behalf of a body not existing at'the time, but to be called into existence after-wards, then if the body for whom the projectors assumed to act does come into existence, it cannot take the benefit of the contract without performing that part of it which the projectors undertook that it should perform. Conceding to this principle its full force and effect, we are unable to see its application to the facts of this case. It may very well be that where a number of persons not incorporated are yet informally associated together in the pursuit of a common object, and with the intent to procure a charter in the furtherance of their design, they may authorize certain acts to be done by one or more of their number, with an understanding that compensation shall be made therefor by the company when fully formed. And if such acts are necessary to the organization and its objects, and are subsequently accepted by the company, and the benefits thereof enjoyed by them, they must take such benefits cum onere, and make compensation therefor. But the projectors or promoters of the enterprise within the meaning of the rule referred to, evidently must be a majority at least of such persons, and not one, two, or three, or a small minority thereof. Such minority can have no more authority to bind the association or corporation in its incipient or inchoate condition than they would have to bind it if fully organized. In this case the two or three persons who it is alleged promised the plaintiff to see him paid, bound no one but themselves. They had no authority to speak for any one else. In the absence of any such authority and of any satisfactory proof that the result of the plaintiff s labor and expenditures was accepted and enjoyed by the corporation, that it used
It is to be observed that in all the cases which were brought to the attention of the court, the services were either performed after the charter had been obtained, and there was therefore an inchoate corporation, or there was an informal organization, as in the case, cited in 7 Eng. Law & Eq. Rep., preparatory to obtaining a charter, and the employment was authorized by the organization as such, and was not the mere employment by individuals having no authority, express or implied, to contract for any one.
We think the court erred in their answer to the defendant’s third point. Under all the evidence in the cause it should have been affirmed. There was, also, error in not affirming the defendant’s fourth point. It appeared from the defendant’s own testimony that the road for which he had made the survey was a broad gauge road with a different terminus, being from Bell’s Mills to Erie, and was essentially a different route from that on which the Bell’s Gap Railroad was laid out and constructed.
This covers the third and fourth assignments of error. The remaining assignments need not be discussed.
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.