Interior Woodwork Co. v. Prasser

108 Wis. 557 | Wis. | 1901

Bardeen, J.

In order to fully understand the matter for ■decision, a brief statement of the facts and claims of the parties seems necessary. Mrs. Prasser was the owner of the property upon which a lien is claimed. On January 25,1899, her husband, for her, made a written contract with the defendant Soltman to erect a building thereon. One O. C. Uehling was the architect, and represented the owners in securing the contract. At the time the contract was made, Soltman presented to the architect a guaranty under, seal, attached to it, signed by John Eohde and the M. Hilty Lumber Compamy, per A. Stange, manager, to the effect that they guaranteed the faithful performance of the contract by Soltman, and would indemnify and save the other party harmless from judgments, mechanics’ liens, etc., against said premises. Soltman entered into the performance of said contract, and purchased from the Hilty Lumber Company building materials and lumber which were used in the erection of said building of the value of $1,448.91, of which amount $554.11 was still unpaid at the time of the trial. It is for this amount the appellant claims a lien. Upon the trial the Hilty Lumber Oompcmy claimed that said contract was ultra vires, and that Stange was not an officer or member of the company and had no authority to sign such guar.anty. To sustain the claim that the guaranty was ultra vires, the appellant introduced testimony showing that its business was the “carrying on of a wholesale lumber business, and all business incidental thereto,” and the manufacturing and sale of all kinds of lumber and building material. *560It also put its articles of incorporation in evidence, which, provided that all contracts, etc., should be signed by the president and secretary, and that it was not lawful for any other person or officer to sign such documents.

As regards the question of whether the contract was beyond the power of the corporation to make, we find no especial difficulty. As said in John V. Farwell Co. v. Wolf, 96 Wis. 10, “A corporation has only such powers as its organic act, charter, or articles of organization confer. This is elementary, but it includes such powers as are reasonably necessary to effect all the general purposes of the corporate creation, though not particularly specified in its charter, unless prohibited thereby or by some law of the state.” Its articles of organization contain no such prohibition. The purpose of the corporation was to wholesale and retail lumber and building materials. As a convenient, but not necessary, means of carrying out that purpose, it might agree to indemnify the owner against loss in cases where it was furnishing the contractor with materials for the building. The scheme was germane to the general purposes of the corporation, and was certainly not against public policy. A case closely parallel in its facts is Winterfield v. Cream City B. Co. 96 Wis. 239, and what is there said applies with much force to the case before us. It squarely settles the question against appellant’s contention. As noted in many of the cases, courts in recent times have been more liberal in construing the powers of corporations to accomplish the general scope and object of their creation, and the question of ultra vires has not been, of late years, construed with that strictness that existed in former times.

What has been said was based upon the assumption that the. corporation actually executed the guaranty. The fact that it was not executed by the proper officers of the corporation does not make it void, if in the conduct of its business it had clothed the person who in fact executed it with ap*561parent authority to do so. If a corporation or an individual so conduct their business, either through negligence or otherwise, as to lead the public to believe that the agent possesses authority to contract in the name of the principal,, they are bound. Every contract within the scope of the apparent authority of the agent will be enforced if the other party believed and had reason to believe that the agent possessed authority to make it. McDermott v. Jackson, 97 Wis. 64. See Thompson, Corp. §§ 4874-4884. The central principle governing this class of cases is whether the principal has allowed the agent, through negligence or otherwise, to possess, in the face of the public, the appearance of such power. If, by reason of such appearances, the making of a contract is induced, the principal will not be heard to say that such power did not in fact exist.

Stange, the person who executed the guaranty in suit on behalf of the corporation, was an employee, and had been such for a number of years. His business was to figure up estimates and make sales to contractors for building jobs. The active managing officer of the corporation was Rudolph A. Hilty, vice-president. Before the guaranty was executed, Soltman had asked for an estimate on the materials required for the Prasser job, and which had been entered on the company’s books. The officers of the company deny that they had any knowledge of the existence of the guaranty until some time after they had furnished the materials to Soltman. The proof shows, however, that at two different times prior to the execution of the guaranty in suit Stange had executed similar guaranties of other contracts, and delivered them to Mr. Uehling, the architect; one of which had been witnessed by the vice-president of the company. No question as to his authority had ever been raised, and the company seemed to have had the benefits arising therefrom. It is true that Mr. Hilty testifies that he did not know what he was signing, but the surrounding circum*562stances cry out so loudly against that statement that we entirely agree with the trial court in arriving at a contrary conclusion. He was the active manager in charge. Beyond question, the matter of sales to these different contractors, and the conditions under which the company could secure their trade, was considered and talked over. Every circumstance and every probability points in that direction so overwhelmingly that the court was fully warranted in reaching the conclusion stated. Having clothed their agent with apparent authority so to act, as a reasonably prudent man the architect had a right to assume that he had actual authority. To permit the company to dispute it now would be a fraud upon the respondent. See Ford v. Hill, 92 Wis. 188; Zinc Carbonate Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 103 Wis. 125; Hubbard v. Haley, 96 Wis. 578. Further, the contract having been performed, and the appellant having received the benefits thereof, it cannot now invoke the doctrine of ultra vires. McElroy v. Minn. P. H. Co. 96 Wis. 317.

The appellant, having become a surety for the contractor, cannot claim a lien for materials furnished him. Stephens v. Elver, 101 Wis. 392.

By the Court.— The judgment appealed from is affirmed.