61 Mass. 188 | Mass. | 1851
Upon the evidence introduced at the trial ol this case in the court below, the presiding judge ruled that-prior to November, 1848, there was no legal organization of the corporation called the West Boston Ron Company, and therefore no corporate acts were done prior to that time. The whole case was tried and submitted to the jury on this assumption. As this point was so ruled at the request of the plaintiffs, and as the verdict was in favor of the defendants, no exception was taken thereto, and we are not called upon to determine its correctness.
It seems to us, upon a careful consideration of the case, that these instructions were not warranted by the facts proved; and although they do not form the precise ground of the exceptions taken by the plaintiffs, yet we think them so erroneous, as to render it necessary to order the case to a new trial.
We are not aware of any authority, certainly none was cited at the argument, to warrant the instruction, that, in consequence of an omission to comply with the requisitions of law in the organization of a corporation, by which its proceedings were rendered void, persons who had subscribed for and taken stock in the company, thereby became copartners. The doctrine seems to us to be quite novel and somewhat startling. Surely it cannot be, in the absence of all fraudulent intent, (and none was proved or alleged in this case,) that such a legal result follows as to fasten on parties involuntarily, for such a cause, the enlarged liability of copartners ; a liability neither contemplated nor assented --to by them. The very statement of the proposition carries with it a sufficient refutation. No such result can follow, unless a principle of law be established, founded on no authority, and required by no public exigency. Corporations are known and recognized legal entities, with rights and powers clearly de
It follows, as a necessary consequence of what we have already said, that the records of the corporation were improperly admitted and submitted to the jury, as evidence of an agreement or understanding among the shareholders in the corporation, as to their own rights and liabilities as members of a copartnership, and of the extent of authority given to FuHer, as agent of such copartnership. They were not made or kept for any such purpose. They were only the records and by-laws of a corporation, not the agreements of individuals, in the nature of articles of copartnership; and they could have no legitimate tendency to prove the facts for which they were offered and used at the trial
Applying this principle to the case at bar, it is very clear, that Fuller was not the agent of a copartnership, for none existed; he was not the agent of individuals, as such, because he was not authorized so to act; he was not the agent of the West Boston Iron Company, because if the court were right in deciding that it had never organized, and that its proceedings were void, it never had the power to appoint him agent. Clearly, then, he acted without authority from any one. If he pm-chased, he purchased for himself. In him only did the property vest, and as against all but the vendors, he had the sole right to dispose of it to others. In this view, the question of copartnership, which was submitted to the jury, was wholly immaterial, and diverted their attention from the real point in issue. We are therefore of opinion that there was a mistrial, and that the verdict must be set aside, and a new trial had ah the bar of this court.