22 Kan. 232 | Kan. | 1879
This was an action to recover money claimed-to be due on a contract for the sale of land. That a contract-was entered into, is undisputed; but the defendant denies-that it was its contract — that it ever authorized such a contract in the first instance, or ratified it after it was made.. The contract, which was in writing, purported to sell a certain quarter-section of land to defendant for $7,500, to be paid as follows: $500 cash, $500 in sixty days, $1,500 in six months, $2,500 in eighteen, and $2,500 in thirty months from date. By the terms of the contract, the possession of said premises was given to the defendant; but, in consideration that the defendant should not be required to pay interest on the deferred payments, defendant agreed that one LeRoy D. Stone, the tenant (and son-in-law) of the plaintiff,, should continue to occupy, for farming purposes only, so much of said premises as he then cultivated, until March 1, 1877, the defendant “reserving to itself at all times the right to enter-said land for the purpose of mining the same.” The parties to said contract were named therein as Jeremiah B. Durham-on the one part, and the Carbon Coal and Mining Company on the other part, and the contract closed and was signed in. the following form, to wit:
“ In witness whereof, the said parties to these presents have hereunto set their hands and seals. . Dated the day and year first above written.
J. B. Durham. [Seal.]
Carbon Coal and Mining Company,
By T). F. Blandin, President„
By T. J. Peter.”
This contract was acknowledged before H. C. Williams, a notary public of Shawnee county.
The contention of the defendant is, that the president could not bind the company by a contract of purchase; that if he could, he could not delegate the power to a third party; and that the company never ratified this unauthorized contract.
Conceding that the mere execution of this instrument did not make a binding contract through want of authority in Peter to bind the defendant, still we think upon all the facts the court should have found that the defendant was liable. The agreement was one which the defendant could unquestionably have enforced against the plaintiff. Even though made on the part of the defendant by an entire stranger, the defendant could at once have accepted the benefit of the contract, and the plaintiff could not then have pleaded the original want of authority in the stranger; and any conduct which as against an individual would establish acceptance, will also as against the corporation. The old idea that a corporation would be bound only by a contract under seal, has long since been done away with. The vast amount of business now being transacted by such organizations, has compelled the application of more liberal rules. And now, no corporation any more than an individual can experiment with a contract, take possession of the property contracted for, test its value, and then repudiate on the ground that no separate agent acting in the premises had full power to bind the corporation by the purchase.
In Green’s Brice’s Ultra Vires, 463, will be found the following language:
“It must also be remembered that the tendency of modern judicial interpretation and legislation has been to waive needless formalities, and that consequently at the present many agreements are held binding on corporate bodies, even without, ratification, which a few years since would, from technical reasons, not have been so.”
And on page 379, is this:
“Within certain limits, it would also seem that corporations by acting upon, without expressly ‘ratifying’ a contract — not necessarily relating to a subject essential to their existence — which does not bind them for want of sealing,*245 may so far adopt it as to reader themselves liable to an action either for use and enjoyment or upon the common counts,the nature and extent of their liability being estimated by a reference to the terms of the invalid agreement. It may, perhaps, be considered that the corporation has thereby actually ratified the agreement in question, but it would probably be the simpler and more reasonable explanation to say that the corporation by so acting is estopped from subsequently repudiating and denying the transaction.”
Now it appears in this case that Peter was largely interested as a stockholder in the defendant corporation; that he had been instrumental in securing other lands for the defendant'; that Blandin was president and a director, (the board of directors consisting of five members, two of whom were non-residents of the state, and seldom present); that Peter and Blandin consulted together, and decided that it was advisable for the corporation to purchase this land, and in pursuance thereof Peter sought the plaintiff and persuaded him to enter into the contract; that the negotiations therefor were had in the office of the defendant; that the contract was made in the name of the defendant, and was executed by one assuming to have authority to bind the defendant; that the sum of $500, the cash payment, was at the time made by Peter, by giving his individual check, and that this sum thus advanced was returned to him by the check of the treasurer, also a director, under instructions from the president, and the amount allowed by the board in their settlement with the treasurer; that the defendant took possession of the land, and sent employés thereon to prospect for coal, sinking several prospect-holes therefor; that the vein not proving as thick as was expected, about a month thereafter Peter sent to plaintiff an open letter, by the hands of the president, in which he, admitting the purchase, states that it was made on account of representations as to the coal which had proved untrue, and that therefore the land was not wanted, and urges an arrangement of the matter in a Christian spirit; that after the sending of this letter, the company continued for a short time its work on the farm, and that there never
Again, take the matter of possession. Delivery of pos•session has been said to be sufficient part performance to take a parol contract for the sale of lands out of the statute of frauds. (Edwards v. Fry, 9 Kas. 423.) And this is upon the •ground that the entry into possessipn is, unless supported by the contract, a trespass subjecting the party entering to an action for damages. In like manner the entry into posses•sion and sinking of prospect-holes is consistent only with an acceptance of the contract. In any other light, it was a flagrant trespass. It implied an intent to commit a gross invasion upon the righ'ts of Durham; an invasion which unless withstood, might ripen into a title by the mere lapse of time. It either entered under the contract or committed a trespass. 'The inference from the act is, that it intended the former Tather than the latter. Just as when a lease is prepared and
Again, take the failure to disaffirm the contract. It was-made in the name of the corporation, and knowledge of its-
We might extend this opinion, noticing other matters in the conduct of the corporation, but they would be simply in the same line of thought. We are clearly of the opinion that the testimony shows an acceptance of the contract, and that therefore the district court erred in its findings for the defendant. See further, upon the questions in this case, Howe v. Keeler, 27 Conn. 538; Krider v. Western College, 31 Iowa, 547; Ins. Co. v. De Wolf, 8 Pick. 56; E. Rld. Co. v. Benedict, 5 Gray, 561; Olcott v. Tioga Rld. Co., 27 N. Y. 546; Phosphate of Lime Co. v. Green, L. R. 7 C. P. 43; Moss v. Rossie Lead Co., 5 Hill, 137; Green’s Brice’s Ultra Vires, chapters 3 and 6.
The judgment of the district court will be reversed, and the case remanded with instructions to grant a new trial.