50 Iowa 607 | Iowa | 1879
I. At the June Term, 1878, of this court an opinion was filed in this cause reversing the judgment of the court below. A petition for rehearing was filed within the proper time, upon an examination of which a rehearing was ordered, a reargument was had, and the cause has-again been submitted for our consideration.
Upon a careful re-examination of the original abstracts and arguments, in connection with the arguments upon re
In our opinion, however, the limit imposed by the amended articles upon the company’s power to contract indebtedness would not necessarily have the effect to exempt the company from liability for indebtedness assumed to be contracted in excess of the limit. It lias been held, it is true, that a municipal corporation is not liable for indebtedness assumed to be contracted in excess of the limit fixed by the constitution. Carter v. City of Dubuque, 35 Iowa, 416. But we know of no case where a private corporation has not been held, at least to the extent of the consideration received, for indebtedness assumed to be contracted in excess of the limit imposed by the articles of incorporation. There is good reason for mak
If a municipal corporation has occasion to contract indebtedness, other than by way of current expenses to be met by current revenue (see Grant v. City of Davenport, 36 Iowa, 396), it is something exceptional. It is not only a matter of local public interest, but a matter of local public notoriety-Besides, the indebtedness must be contracted through prescribed formalities, and the action of the municipal officers should be made, and, it may be presumed, ordinarily is made, a matter of public record. A private corporation incurs indebtedness daily, and that, too, which is not to be offset by prospective current income, but which helps swell the indebtedness to which the limitation applies. It incurs the indebtedness in the transaction of its ordinary business, and through its various agents. No specific formal action of its directors in advance would ordinarily be practicable. Its records, therefore, so far as they may be presumed to be accessible to creditors, would not ordinarily show, even if well kept, more than an approximation at a given time to the corporate indebtedness ; nor has it any officer charged by law with the duty of keeping a record of the indebtedness, or of any action through which the indebtedness was contracted. Unless, therefore, the corporation is estopped from setting up the limit where the consideration has been received, it would properly be without credit, the very thing for which private corporations largely are organized. This result is to be avoided, if it can be consistently with the protection which the limitation is designed to afford to stockholders, and we think it can be. The stockholders must be regarded as at least partially protected by the receipt of consideration, and if not fully so in every ease, they may doubtless have an action (or the corporation may, which
In this connection it is proper that we should say, for the purpose of guarding our decision, that if the defendant’s indebtedness for goods had been contracted before the amended articles had been adopted, and while the article was in force providing that the business of the company should be conducted upon a cash basis, a different question would be presented.
That such indebtedness would be invalid there would be far more reason to contend, because the presumption would be that the creditors knew that the defendant was not authorized to do business upon credit. Whether indebtedness in such a case should be held invalid there appears to be some conflict of authority, and we are not called upon to determine it. By the amended articles the prohibition was removed. The limit of indebtedness was fixed at two thousand dollars. Within that limit it was authorized to do business upon credit, and although the limit, as appears, was exceeded, yet we are of the opinion, in view of the importance of upholding corporate credit and protecting creditors who have parted with their property in ignorance of the fact that the limit had been exceeded, that the corporation should be estopped from setting up such fact. We conclude, then, that the defendant was liable for the goods bought; and the money advanced by the plaintiff, so far as it was used in paying for the goods, was used in paying obligations which the defendant could not have escaped.
It is contended, however, that even if this is so the plaintiff should not recover, because it appears that he was a guilty agent who contracted the excessive indebtedness. But we do not think that the defendant can complain of the plaintiff’s unauthorized acts unless it was damaged, and ho claim of that kind is made.
“4. In this country it is now settled that all duties imposed on corporations aggregate by law, and all benefits conferred at their request, raise implied promises, for the enforcement of which an action may well lie. Hence, if you shall find from the evidence that the directory, while they were assembled together as such, did not contract with the plaintiff, as claimed, but that they had adjourned to the bank to give their individual notes to it for the debts of the defendant; and'while on their way plaintiff suggested to them that he could raise for the defendant the one thousand dollars he claims to have advanced, and they consented thereto; yet, inasmuch as the whole benefit of the contract resulted to the corporation, and it has been known by it and accepted by it, then you may legally infer an adoption of the contract, and. such an acceptance as would make the defendant liable herein for the sum so advanced or borrowed by plaintiff for the use of defendant in paying its debts, if you find from the evidence the corporation used the money knowingly, and accepted said sum with such knowledge. Promises may as well be implied from the acts of the agents of a corporation as if it had been an individual. ”
The ground upon which it was held in the former opinion that the foregoing instruction was erroneous was that no contract of any kind is averred in the petition, except that which is expressed in the promissory note given by the plaintiff to the party of- whom he borrowed the one thousand dollars; and that, plaintiff claims what is due him is due him on the note, and as the note calls for ten per cent interest, there was no evidence that any of the directors authorized the plaintiff to borrow money at that rate of interest.
It appears from the evidence that a meeting of all of the directors of the defendant was held on the day the plaintiff gave his note to the bank for the one thousand dollars. As to this meeting the plaintiff testifies:
“I told them (the directors) I would become responsible for one thousand dollars, if they would take six hundred dollars. They said they would do it, and so we went over to the bank. Farmington, Carpenter, Farnsworth, Gardner, Washburn, (directors) and myself went over. Mr. Leavitt (the banker) said if we wanted money we must give our personal notes. He let us have the money and took our notes there and then. I said to Leavitt that I was to become responsible for one thousand dollars for the use of the company, and the others would be responsible for six hundred dolllars. Both notes were executed in the presence of us all. * * * * * * I checked out the one thousand six hundred dollars borrowed in payments of debts of defendant in three days after it was borrowed. I paid its indebtedness as far as their funds would go.”
' All the evidence tends to show that this meeting of the directors was called for the very purpose of devising some
Now we do not understand from the testimony of the directors, who gave their note for six hundred dollars, that they were ignorant of the fact that the plaintiff also gave his note for one thousand dollars. That he was to raise one thousand dollars to relieve the defendant of its debts seems to be conceded. No one claims that this was to be a gift to the defendant. It appears to us that there was sufficient in the evidence to warrant the court in not only instructing the jury that they might infer an adoption of the contract from the acts of the parties, as set out in the instruction, but that such act constituted an express contract, authorizing the plaintiff to borrow money to pay defendant’s debts, and for which defendant was liable. The statement to the jury that a contract might be inferred, if certain facts were found to be established by the evidence, when such facts amounted to a contract, was not error prejudicial to the defendant.
The fact that plaintiff in his petition claims ten per cent interest does not affect the contract or obligation to pay the one thousand dollars. The contract between the plaintiff and defendant not being in writing, the legal rate of interest would be six per cent per annum. Code, § 2077. But the plaintiff, in his petition, claimed ten per cent. The defendant, in its answer, did not specially aver that the interest claimed was unauthorized.
The court, in its sixth instruction to the jury, directed that, if plaintiff was entitled to recover, interest should be computed at ten per cent. No exception was taken to this instruction, and no assignment of error is made thereon. Under these circumstances we must affirm the judgment as it stands. The plaintiff asks that judgment be rendered m this court against the sureties in the supersedeas. This is uniformly done, when asked in proper time, and judgment will be so entered.
Affirmed.