26 Or. 152 | Or. | 1894
Opinion by
It appeared upon the trial that at the time the contract; was made the officers of the defendant corporation were Gideon Stolz, president; John Seal, vice-president and general manager; and Frank Sealy, secretary; and that these three persons composed the board of directors. The contract was entered into on behalf of the corporation by John Sealy, its vice-president and manager, and Frank Sealy,- its secretary, but without formal authority from the board of directors; or knowledge of the president. In pursuance of the contract plaintiff worked for the defendant until June, eighteen hundred and ninety-three, without objection from any one, although the president, Mr. Stolz,
Now, in this case, the defendant haying suffered the plaintiff to work for it under a contract made with its vice-president, for the period of eight months, without protest or objection, and without in any way signifying its dissent, the jury was justified in finding that it had ratified the act of its agent, and therefore could not be heard to impeach the validity of the contract on the pretense that it was made without authority. If it desired to disavow the contract, it was its duty to have been active in doing so as soon as the fact came to its knowledge. Two of the directors had notice of, and knew the terms of, the contract at the time it was made, and the other, as the jury could properly have found, more than four months before any attempt was made to disavow it; and. having remained silent during this time, their assent and ratification will be presumed: Kelsey v. National Bank, 69 Pa. St. 426; St. James Parish v. Newburyport Horse Railroad, 141 Mass. 500, 6 N. E. 749; Jourdan v. Long Island Railroad Company, 115 N. Y. 380, 22 N E. 153. We are of the opinion, therefore, that the evidence was competent, and the judgment must be affirmed;
Affirmed.