These two appeals present the question whether the president of the Boston Athletic Association (BAA), William T. Cloney, was authorized to enter into a certain contract with the defendant International Marathons', Inc. (IMI), by its president Marshall Medoff. This contract purported to designate IMI as the exclusive promoter of the Boston Marathon (Marathon).
Two rulings are before us: an interlocutory order granting the BAA’s request for a preliminary injunction, and a partial summary judgment in favor of BAA declaring the contract be *358 tween the BAA and IMI void ab initio. 2 We affirm both the interlocutory order and the partial summary judgment.
In granting the BAA’s motion for partial summary judgment, the judge found the following facts. The BAA is a nonprofit corporation incorporated by c. 287 of the Acts of 1887, and under c. 180 of the General Laws. 3 The principal activity of the BAA is the presentation of an annual road race, the Boston Marathon. IMI is a Massachusetts business corporation organized on May 1, 1981, and headed by Medoff. Its purpose is to carry on the business of sales and sports promotions.
Discussion between Cloney and Medoff began in late 1980 about the possibility of commercial promotion of the Marathon by a corporation that Medoff would organize. In March, 1981, Cloney, who was president and a member of the board of governors of the BAA (board), and Medoff met with two other members of the board. A proposal prepared by Medoff for his becoming a promoter of the Marathon was discussed, but several objections were raised and no agreement was reached. The term of this proposed agreement was for a minimum of five years and a maximum of twenty years.
On April 27, 1981, a meeting of the board was held after due notice. There was general agreement at the meeting that a sharp increase in sponsorship revenues was needed to sustain the prestige of the race. A motion was presented to grant to Cloney authority to negotiate and execute agreements for the presentation and underwriting of the Marathon. Some of the *359 members expressed concern about the breadth of the authorization and possible implications as to the future conduct of the Marathon. After expressions of confidence in Cloney’s judgment and discretion in the exercise of such a broad authorization, the following proposal was approved by the board: “That William T. Cloney, as President of the Association, be and hereby is authorized and directed to negotiate and to execute in the name of and in behalf of this Association such agreements as he deems in the best interest of the Association for the perpetuation, sponsorship or underwriting of the Boston A. A. Marathon.”
There was no mention at this meeting of the possibility of hiring an exclusive promoter to whom major responsibility for sponsorship of the Marathon would be delegated. In the past, all sponsorship and broadcast coverage contracts had been negotiated between Cloney and the individual sponsor. None of the prior contracts had resulted in annual revenues to the BAA in excess of $25,000. At no time in the past had the BAA engaged an independent promoter for the Marathon.
After the April 27 meeting, and without the knowledge of the other members of the board, Cloney continued to negotiate with Medoff toward an agreement that would designate Medoff as the exclusive promoter of the Marathon. Cloney informed Medoff of the specific language of the April 27 vote. On September 23, 1981, the agreement now in dispute was executed by Cloney on behalf of the BAA and by Medoff on behalf of IMI. Cloney and Medoff subsequently executed an amendment to that agreement on January 13, 1982.
The agreement designates IMI as the exclusive promoter of the Marathon. IMI can make five “major” and five “minor” sponsorship contracts as well as agreements with an unlimited number of companies which would supply services to the BAA. The contract gives IMI the right to represent that the Marathon is “presented by” IMI or its assignee. With the exception of the Japanese market, all radio, television, and movie rights in the Marathon are assigned to IMI.
The exclusive promoter arrangement is accomplished through the transfer by the BAA to IMI of “all right, title and interest *360 to the exclusive use of the Boston Marathon and BAA Marathon logo(s)” and name, reserving to the BAA the right to use the name and logos only in so far as such use is “not inconsistent with” the agreement.
The agreement also governs the conduct of the parties in carrying out their contractual responsibilities. The agreement requires the BAA to “execute sponsorship agreements consistent with the terms and conditions stated herein, when IMI presents a sponsor ready, willing and able to execute and carry out the obligations of a sponsorship agreement.” The BAA is bound to “cooperate fully with IMI’s efforts to negotiate with sponsors” and is required to “do all things reasonably necessary as may be requested by IMI to effectuate consummation of agreements with the sponsors.” The BAA reserves the right to decline to accept “any or all sponsors,” but “approval of a sponsor shall not be unreasonably withheld.” Certain sponsors, however, are approved by the amendment to the contract and, as to these sponsors, IMI itself “may execute on behalf of the BAA the sponsorship agreement, if the form of the sponsorship agreement is consistent with a form approved by prior BAA use.” The BAA is solely responsible for the actual production and the expenses of the Marathon and “shall lend its cooperation and support to IMI and the sponsors to make the event successful.” The agreement further provides that the BAA will not make any independent sponsorship arrangements “without the written consent of IMI.”
According to the financial terms of the agreement, the “annual sponsorship fee” due the BAA is $400,000. 4 All sponsorship revenues in excess of $400,000 are payable directly to IMI. The BAA can agree to accept less than $400,000 in a particular year if sponsorship agreements for that year total less than that amount. Every five years the sponsorship fee shall be increased by an amount equal to the average change of the Consumer Price'Index for the preceding five-year term. *361 The agreement does not require that the annual fee be paid to the BAA from revenues actually received from a sponsor.
The agreement has the following renewal provision: It “shall extend and renew itself automatically and shall continue year to year so long as the annual sponsorship fee ... is paid.”
Pursuant to this agreement, in the ensuing months Medoff negotiated and Cloney executed sponsorship contracts on behalf of the BAA. The existence of these contracts was not brought to the attention of the board. The sponsors that IMI secured paid their fees directly to IMI. A majority of the members of the board did not learn of the existence of the disputed agreement until late February, 1982. The board, by a vote taken on September 9, 1982, declared the agreement of September 23, 1981, to be beyond the authorization vested in Cloney by the board’s vote of April 27, 1981. 5
On September 9, 1982, the director of the division of public charities in the Department of the Attorney General examined the agreement between IMI and the BAA, pursuant to G. L. c. 68, § 21, and determined that the compensation paid to IMI under the agreement was likely to exceed fifteen percent of the total moneys, pledges, or other property raised or received as a result of the contract. As a result, the director disapproved the contract. 6
On September 27, 1982, the BAA commenced an action seeking a preliminary injunction and to have the agreement set aside. Two of its arguments were that the contract had been disapproved as violative of G. L. c. 68, § 21, and that its terms and conditions exceeded the authority delegated to Cloney.
*362 On September 29,1982, a Superior Court judge preliminarily enjoined IMI from using or in any way alienating any of the funds received from sponsors of the Marathon. On August 29, 1983, a second judge of the Superior Court granted the BAA’s motion for a partial summary judgment declaring the agreement of September 23, 1981, void and unenforceable.
1.
The preliminary injunction.
The judge did not abuse his discretion in granting the BAA’s request for preliminary relief.
7
He made a reasonable assessment of the risk of irreparable harm to either party as a result of the issuance or denial of the injunction and the likelihood of the moving party’s success on the merits.
Packaging Indus. Group, Inc.
v.
Cheney,
2. The validity of the contract. For the reasons developed below, we hold the contract between the BAA and IMI to be void and unenforceable. The defendant is, however, entitled to recovery in quantum meruit for the services it rendered in obtaining sponsorship contracts for the running of the Marathon in 1982.
a.
Improper delegation of authority.
Whether the board intended by its vote of April 27, 1981, to confer upon Cloney the authority to enter into the sponsorship agreement with IMI, that contract is void. The board of directors of a corporation cannot delegate total control of the corporation to an individual officer.
Stoneman
v.
Fox Film Corp.,
The contract seriously encumbers the manner in which the BAA may conduct the Marathon. The BAA is obliged to produce the race in its traditional form and to pay the entire bill. But it is not entitled to “present” the race. That right, as well as the right to use the name and logo of the BAA, belongs to IMI or its assignee. The BAA may not use its own logo in any way “inconsistent” with IMI’s rights pursuant to the contract. The right to enter into sponsorship agreements belongs exclusively to IMI, although the BAA can reasonably withhold its approval. 8 The BAA may not make independent agreements without written permission from IMI. Finally, the contract between IMI and the BAA is automatically renewable at the *364 option of IMI. Under the plain language of the agreement, there is no way for the BAA to end the relationship. 9
In return for carrying out its obligations under the contract, the BAA is to be paid a $400,000 fee. Any revenues in excess of $400,000 are directly payable to IMI, and there is no limit to the number of sponsors who may be solicited or to the amount of money which may be raised. 10 The annual fee is to be paid prior to the actual running of the race, but if the Marathon should not be run for some reason, the fee is to be returned to IMI.
According to the traditional principles of corporate governance, the board of governors of the BAA does not have the power to delegate to an individual officer authority to enter into a contract which so totally encumbers the most significant purpose of the BAA, the presentation of the Marathon. The by-laws of the BAA indicate that its organization and operation are, in all material respects, the same as those of a Massachusetts business corporation.
11
Principles of corporate governance with respect to the power of the board of governors to delegate authority to individual officers are applicable to profit and nonprofit corporations alike.
Massachusets Charitable Mechanic Ass’n
v.
Beede,
In
Kanavos
v.
Hancock Bank & Trust Co.,
The power of officers to bind charitable corporations is even more narrowly construed. In
Peoples Nat’l Bank
v.
New England Home for Deaf Mutes, Aged, Blind & Infirm,
In light of these principles, it is clear that if the delegation to Cloney was so broad as to enable him to commit the BAA to an extraordinary contract which encumbered substantially all its assets, the board would have delegated away control of the very essence of the BAA’s corporate existence. Cf.
Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Ass’n
v.
Beede,
Furthermore, the contract between IMI and the BAA is especially vulnerable because it is antithetical to the BAA’s nature as a nonprofit corporation inasmuch as this agreement turns the solicitation of sponsors from a way to support the Marathon to a way for IMI to make a profit. It is entirely inconsistent with the nonprofit nature of the organization to permit such a substantial segment of the revenue earning capacity of the Marathon to be used as a vehicle for personal gain.
See Milton Frank Allen Publications, Inc.
v.
Georgia Ass’ n of Petroleum Retailers, Inc.,
For the foregoing reasons, the board of governors of the BAA was not empowered to delegate to Cloney the right to make this contract with IMI.
b.
Apparent authority.
IMI argues that the April 27, 1981, vote of the board conferred upon Cloney the apparent authority to enter into the disputed agreement. This argument is not persuasive. “Persons dealing with a corporation are presumed to know the extent of its powers.”
Wiley & Foss, Inc.
v.
Saxony Theatres, Inc.,
3.
Quantum meruit.
Although the promotion contract between IMI and the BAA is unenforceable, nevertheless as the
*368
BAA concedes IMI is entitled to recover the fair value of its services.
Guenard
v.
Burke,
There are numerous factors for the fact finder to consider in making this assessment. Cf.
Cummings
v.
National Shawmut Bank,
The interlocutory order granting BAA’s motion for a preliminary injunction is affirmed. The partial summary judgment declaring the agreement of September 23, 1981, to be void and *369 unenforceable is also affirmed. The case is remanded to the Superior Court for a determination of the fair value of the services rendered by International Marathons, Inc.
So ordered.
Notes
Both appeals were originally filed in the Appeals Court. This court granted the petition for direct appellate review of the partial summary judgment, took the review of the preliminary injunction on its own motion, and consolidated the two appeals for the purpose of argument.
Chapter 287 of the Acts of 1887 provides that the purposes of the BAA are those of “maintaining a club-house for social purposes and for the encouragement of athletic exercises, and maintaining a reading room.” The BAA was dissolved in 1972 for failure to file annual reports, and was revived pursuant to G. L. c. 180, § 10A, by petition approved on June 23, 1978. The purposes of the association were amended in 1982 to include the encouragement of sports and the promotion of physical exercise “with particular emphasis on the sponsorship of long distance running events (especially the traditional annual Boston Athletic Association Marathon) and of track and field teams and meets.”
If the Marathon is produced on a Sunday (rather than the traditional Monday, Patriots’ Day), and can be televised by a national commercial network, the fee becomes $600,000.
The record indicates that on July 16, 1982, IMI tendered to BAA a check in the amount of $400,000 upon the condition that indorsement of the check would acknowledge that it was “[i]n full payment of the obligations for 1982 of International Marathons, Inc. under Agreement of September 23, 1981, as amended, which Agreement is ratified and confirmed by acceptance hereof.” The BAA returned the check to IMI stating that the condition thus imposed was unacceptable.
IMI challenged this disapproval and a hearing was held before the division of public charities. The decision of the hearing examiner, which affirmed the director’s disapproval of the contract, was appealed by IMI. International Marathons v. Attorney Gen., post 376 (1984).
In reviewing an interlocutory order granting injunctive relief we must “focus on the same factors” as the judge in the Superior Court and “determine whether the judge applied the proper legal standard in granting ... the requested relief.” Commonwealth v. Mass. CRINC, ante 79, 87 (1984).
The natural interpretation of a reasonable objection is one based on a conclusion that a sponsor’s product is inconsistent with the principles espoused by the BAA, for instance, alcohol or cigarettes.
IMI suggests that the BAA could exercise its option to decline all sponsors on the reasonable basis that it had “decided to change its policy and not have sponsors” at all. This interpretation leaves the BAA in the unreasonable position of having to choose between sponsorship through IMI or no sponsorship at all.
Although the original agreement provided for a maximum of five “major” sponsors and five “minor” sponsors with on-site recognition (the number of minor sponsors without on-site recognition is unlimited), the January 13, 1982, amendment to the contract did away with these restrictions.
Section 4.2 of the by-laws provides that the property and affairs of the association be managed by a board of governors. Section 12 provides that all contracts “shall be authorized by the board of governors.” These provisions are consistent with the general principle expressed in G. L. c. 156B, § 47, as appearing in St. 1974, c. 350, § 1, that “[ejxcept as reserved to the stockholders ... the business of every corporation shall be managed by a board of directors.”
In another case decided today, Attorney General v. International Marathons, Inc., post 370 (1984), we hold that the sponsorship fees paid to IMI on behalf of the BAA are not charitable contributions within the meaning of G. L. c. 68, §§ 18, 21, and 23. That holding has no effect on our decision here, which concerns the power of the board to delegate broad authority to an individual officer. The heightened scrutiny of the management of nonprofit corporations does not turn on whether the objectionable activity involves the solicitation of charitable contributions.
We do not today decide the constitutionality of G. L. c. 68, § 21, the statute which limits a professional solicitor’s commission to fifteen percent of the total amount raised as a result of that solicitation. It should be noted, however, that the parties themselves set the commission at fifteen percent if total revenues were less than $400,000.
