127 Va. 223 | Va. | 1920
delivered the opinion of the court.
The pertinent facts in this case may be stated as follows r K. C. Corhan and M. Numair were the owners of a building, a lease of two lots in the city of Hopewell upon which.
Shortly prior to November 29, 1916, F. Carle, acting for himself and Will Mon jot, entered into negotiations with Corhan, acting for himself and Numair, looking to the purchase of this property. Corhan testified that he then thought the purchase was to be made by Carle and Mon jot as individuals, but the clear preponderance of the evidence is to the effect, and the subsequent written contracts conclusively show that all of the parties understood that Carle and Mon jot contemplated the formation of a corporation for the benefit of which they were making this purchase.
On November 29, 1916, Corhan and Numair entered into a written contract whereby as “partners trading under the firm name of The American Theatre,” parties of the first part, they agreed to sell the above mentioned property to “The American Theatre, Inc., a corporation in process of. formation,” party of the second párt. The consideration was $3,897.58, of which $800 was paid in cash, and the residue was to be paid in monthly installments. The contract referred to both the partnership and the proposed corporation as being “of the city of Hopewell,” but this reference was merely descriptive and evidently not intended as a part of either name. To this contract were affixed the individual signatures of Corhan and Numair, and the ttame of “American Theatre Co., Inc., by F. Carle.”
On December 6, 1916, a paper was executed purporting to be a deed of trust “between The American Theatre of Hopewell, Inc., of the city of Hopewell, Va., party of the first part, and K. C. Sidbury, trustee for K. C. Corhan, agent, of the city of Hopewell, Va., party of the second part,” conveying to the trustee the aforesaid property to secure the unpaid purchase money thereon, represented
“Witness the following signatures and seals:
“AMERICAN THEATRE CO., INC. (Seal),
“F. CARLE, Pres. (Seal),
“WILL MONJOT, Sec. (Seal).”
There was no corporate seal attached to the deed, but the certificate of acknowledgment described the grantor as “The American Theatre, Inc.,” was in due form for an acknowledgment by a corporation, and was dated December 6, 1916.
The notes mentioned in the deed of trust are not in the record, but are shown by the evidence to have been signed “American Theatre Co., Inc., F. Carle, president; Will Monjot, secretary.”
On the 6th of December, the day on which the deed of trust and the notes were executed and delivered, F. Carle, Bell Carle and Will Monjot signed and acknowledged a certificate in due form for the incorporation of “The American Theatre, Incorporated,” designating Hopewell as the place for the principal office, and this certificate was duly perfected as a charter of incorporation and lodged with the Secretary of the Commonwealth on December 15, 1916.
The theatre company thus incorporated took over the property, and the evidence leaves no room for doubt that Corhan and Numair knew of this fact.
Default was made in the payment of the notes above recited, and thereupon Corhan and Numair brought a suit in equity seeking to hold Carle and Monjot personally and individually liable on the notes, and the sole ground upon which they rely for jurisdiction in equity and for the relief prayed for is that Corhan and Mon jot falsely and
In the original bill only Carle, Monjot and Sidbury, trustee, were made, parties defendant, but subsequently by a petition in the nature of an amendment the complainant alleged “that since said bill has been filed * * it has developed that the said property, building, leases and license have been under the control of the American Theatre, Incorporated, a corporation under the laws of the State of Virginia, who have been using the same and running therein a moving picture theatre, etc.” The prayer of the petition, or amended bill, was “that the said American Thea-* tre, Incorporated, a corporation under the laws of the State of Virginia, be made a party defendant to said bill and required to answer the allegations and prayers of said bill, as though the same were. herein specifically set out, but an answer under oath is expressly waived, that the said American Theatre, Incorporated, be required to disclose under oath what interest they have in said property and it be ascertained whether they are in any way liable for the payment of the indebtedness set out in said bill.” There was also added to the foregoing a prayer for general relief. The corporation thus named in the amendment filed its answer, in which, among other things, it stated that “the buying of the said lease was duly authorized by the board of directors of the said corporation, and that the said directors have duly confirmed and accepted the premises according to the agreement made with the plaintiffs on the 29th day of November, 1916, and that it is ready and willing to live up to the terms of said agreement, etc.” This answer was accompanied by the affidavit of F. Carle, Stating “that he is the president of the American Theatre, Incorporated, and that as such he has read the foregoing answer to the bill herein filed, and that the foregoing facts stated are true except those matters therein stated on in
Carle and Mon jot also filed an answer to the bill in which they denied ever having had any individual interest in the matter in controversy, or having assumed any personal liability whatever in regard thereto.
When the case first came on to be heard, a commissioner was appointed and directed among other things to report:
“2. An account showing who are the makers of the notes set out in the bill and proceedings in this cause, and who is liable therefor and who is entitled to the proceeds thereof.”
“4. An account showing to whom under the agreement of K. C. Corhan and M. Numair, dated November 29, 1916, the property set out therein was sold and who executed the deed of trust dated December 6, 1916, to K. C. Sidbury, trustee, and who is bound by the terms thereof.”
“6. Ah account showing how much is due upon the notes secured under paid deed of trust and who is liable thereunder and who is entitled thereto.”
Under this decree the commissioner reported “that the said F. Carle and Will Monjot, as individuals, are the true makers of said notes and are liable for the payment of same.” As a reason for this conclusion, the commissioner ■ emphasizes the various names by which the proposed corporation is designated in the several contracts, notes and other writings executed by the parties, and the fact that •the charter of the American Theatre, Inc., was not perfected until the 15th day of December, 1916.
The commissioner further reported “that under said agreement (of November 29, 1916) the said property was to be sold to the American Theatre, Inc., a corporation in process of formation, but that this corporation had not been chartered when the property was delivered, and that it appeared from the evidence to have been delivered to Carle and Monjot, and that Carle and Mon jot as individuals executed the deed of trust and were bound by its terms.”
' Reduced 'to its essence, the right of the complainants to a personal decree against Carle and Monjot depends upon the fact that the notes and the deed of trust were sighed “American Theatre Co., Inc.,” instead of “American Theatre, Inc.”
It is perfectly clear that Corhan and Numair undertook to contract with a corporation-which was to take its name from the property they were selling. This name was used loosely by all of the’ parties, including Corhan himself (the only witness for defendant), who was unable on his cross-examination to say whether, when the notes and deed of trust were signed, the corporation was called “American Theatre Co., Inc.,” or “American Theatre, Incorporated.”
It is true that the corporation had not been actually perfected when the notes were signed, and that Corhan testified that he was assured by Sidbury that the charter had already been granted. But Carle and Monjot were understood to be acting only for a corporation, as is con
Reversed. ■