Thе question presented in this appeal is whether Diversified Resources, the appellant, is liable for a debt in the amount of $20,000 for a loan made by the plaintiff-appellee John Buxton, or whether the action by Buxton is barred by the statute of limitations.
The Essential Facts
The predecessor companies to Diversified were U.S. Silver and Mining Corp., U.S. Copper Corp., and Mojave Uranium Corp. Buxton’s son, Rоbert J. Pinder, was president of Diversified and its predecessor companies for more than ten years prior to 1972. Pinder was also Chief Executive officer and managing agent of the companies. According to the testimony of Buxton, the loan was made to the company because of his son’s connection with it, and because of an emergency request. Buxton also testifiеd that a note was executed to secure repayment of the loan. However, the note has been lost, if one existed. Buxton was able to produce his cancelled check in the amount of $20,000.
Robert Pinder attested in an affidavit that the loan was made. Ray Jepperson, Controller for Diversified, attested to the fact that the debt in the amount of $20,000 was carried on the books of Diversified from May, 1970 through all of 1972. Jepperson also stated in his affidavit that the loan was not paid during the period mentioned. There was testimony given in a deposition by Rex Frazier, a Certified Public Accountant with Touch, Ross and Co., which company had been engaged to audit the financial statements of U.S. Silver and Mining Co. and Diversified from 1969 through 1976, that the corporation records rеvealed a $20,000 debt to Buxton from 1971 through 1975.
*1315 There was a series of audit letters which were introduced into evidence. These were mailed to Buxton by Diversified and they referred to a debt owed by Diversified to Buxton amounting to $20,000. Starting in 1971 the letters stated that the auditors were making an examination of the records, and that the records indicated that the company was indebted to Buxton on notes in thе aggregate amount of $20,000. The letters sought a confirmation of the accuracy of these statements. The earlier letters were signed by Ray Jepperson, Controller of the Corporation. In the years 1974 and 1975 the company’s audit letters stated that the auditors were making an examination of financial statements which indicated the following amount payable to Buxton on nоtes [$20,000 plus interest]. The letters sought a confirmation of the accuracy of the above information, the same to be communicated to, the auditors. The letters were signed by William Wallace, President of Diversified. It is the position of Buxton that the audit letters represented that the corporation acknowledged its debt to Buxton, and that because of his reliance on thosе representations Buxton withheld attempting to collect the debt.
Diversified’s basic assertion is that the applicable Utah statute of limitation bars this action by Buxton. Specifically it is contended that Section 12-44 of the Utah Judicial Code (78-12-44 U.C.A.) is applicable. This section provides:
Payment-Acknowledgment-Promise to pay extends period.-In any ease founded on contract, when any part of the principal or interest shаll have been paid or an acknowledgment of an existing liability, debt or claim or any promise to pay the same, shall have been made, an action may be brought within the period prescribed for the same after such payment, acknowledgment or promise; but such acknowledgment or promise must be in writing, signed by the party to be charged thereby .... (Emphasis added).
The district court held that the audit letters were indeed acknowledgments within the meaning of the statute and therefore they servе to toll the running of the Utah statute of limitations. The district court further ruled that communications signed by the corporation estopped it from asserting that the Utah statute of limitations operated as a bar to Buxton’s claim. The court also held that there was no genuine issue of material fact and that Buxton was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Accordingly a summary judgment for Buxton was awarded and entered.
The Contentions
Diversified has appealed the award of summary judgment on four grounds:
1. That neither Jepperson or Wallace had authority to bind the corporation by signing audit letters;
2. That the audit letters do not constitute acknowledgments within the meaning of U.C.A. section 78-12-44 quoted above;
3. That Diversified may not be estopped from asserting the statute of limitations as a defense to this action;
4. That a genuine issue of fact exists as to whether the alleged $20,000 loan by Buxton was repaid by the corporation.
I.
Did the President Have Authority to Sign Audit Letters Acknowledging the Debt?
The first argument presented by Diversified is that there is a material question of fact as to whether the President, Wallace, had authority to bind the corporation to an acknowledgment of the debt to Buxton by merely signing the audit statements. While in some cases there would be a question as to the extent of the President’s authority and as to whether that issue would constitute a triable issue of fact,
Knox v. First Security Bank of Utah,
It is true thаt in Utah the President has only the powers of a director or those powers directly conferred upon him by the Board of Directors.
Copper King Mining Co. v. Hanson,
In addition, if the parties are found to have acted with reference to the customs of a particular trade or the habits of dealings of a particular party, such customary exercise of a particular act by the agent and acquiescence by the principal may show that the agent was clothed with actual authority to act. Id. § 717, p. 506. Fletcher further comments that implied authority is “the authority which the principal intended that the agent exercise and includes all those things which are directly connected with and essential to the business at hand.” Fletcher, supra, § 438, p. 320. See also Fletcher, § 449, pp. 348-349 in which he says that:
A person who knows that the officer or agent of the corporation habitually transacts certain kinds of business for such corporation under circumstances which necessarily show knowledge on the part of those charged with the conduct of the corporate business assumes, as he has the right to assume, that such agent or officer is acting within the scope of his authority. The rule applied is that the authority of an agent to do certain acts in behalf of his principal may be inferred from thе continuance of the acts themselves over such a period of time and the doing of them in such a manner that the principal would naturally have been cognizant of them and would have forbidden them if unauthorized.
Id. § 449, pp. 348-9.
These rules apply fully to the facts at hand. Certainly Wallace had authority to sign the routine audit statements in the ordinary course of his conduct as President of the cоmpany and to render the corporation responsible for the audit statements. These were, after all, routine accounting statements, and certainly where he signed them as a matter of course and mailed them to others over a period of at least two years they are to be considered or to be received in evidence. Unquestionably the Board of Directors was familiar with this routine procedure. They certainly were familiar with the fact that these accounting statements were made at regular intervals. If the President did not have any authority to sign routine communications with the creditors, the Board would have surely made it clear that he did not have the authority to do so at the time.
*1317
Diversified relies on the decision in
Salt Lake Valley Loan and Trust Co. v. St. Joseph Land Co.,
We are of the opinion moreover that there is no disputable issue of fact regarding Wallace’s authority to sign the аudit statements. The question with which we are concerned is whether the audit statements constituted acknowledgement by Wallace, and thereby by Diversified, of the debt to Buxton in order to fall within the statute which would toll the statute of limitations. This is an evidentiary question and not a substantive one or a factual one. We agree with the district court that the audit statements did constitute an acknowledgmеnt very clearly.
Our decision in
Victory Investment Corp. v. Muskogee Electric Traction Co.,
It is not essential that the acknowledgment be expressly stated in such words as T acknowledge this as an existing debt,’ or T am liable on these bonds.’ It is enough if language is used from which the acknowledgment may be fairly inferred.
The suit in the Victory case was on corporate bonds. The defendant had submitted statements to the trustee acting for the bondholders and these contained the general trial balancе and the general balance sheet which reflected as a liability an item entitled “Matured Funded Debt Unpaid” and items entitled “Matured Interest Unpaid” and “Matured 2% Tax on Bonds”. The court said that the bonds were referred to in one place as a liability and in another place as a current liability. The court held that the statements constituted:
the equivalent of the defendant submitting to the trustеe a written statement signed by it saying ‘These bonds are my current liability.’ And we think [the statements] constituted a distinct, direct, and unequivocal acknowledgment of a present debt, within the meaning of the statute, and therefore [were] sufficient to interrupt the statute and start it running anew.
It is clear from the cases that the acknowledgment need not express the intention of acknowledging by use of the term. It is legally sufficient if the purported acknowledgment is in such terms as to communicate this concept or thought to the person receiving it. The audit statements signed by President Wallace said:
“Our auditors are making an examination of our financial statements which indicate the following amount payable to you on notes: ... Please confirm the accuracy of the above information. . .. ”
*1318 We are unable to see how the statement could have been more plain. The trial court regarded the statement as being unequivocal in acknowledging a present debt. We agree with the finding. It is in accordance with the holding of this court in Victory.
II.
Is Diversified Estopped From Asserting the Statute of Limitations as a Defense to this Action?
We must hold that it is.
The Supreme Court of Utah has set forth the standards which аre applicable to estoppel as the doctrine is now being considered. The Utah court said:
.. . The test is whether there is conduct by act or omission, by which one party knowingly leads another party, reasonably acting thereon, to take some course of action, which will result in his detriment or damage if the first party is permitted to repudiate or deny his conduct or representation.
J. P. Koch, Inc. v. J. C. Penney Co., Inc.,
We have examined the standards which are set forth by the Utah court in Koch and are of the opinion that it is a correct statement, and that it applies fully to the case before us.
Diversified argues that there is no showing that it represented to Buxton that the statute of limitations would not be used or that Buxton relied on the letters in failing to bring a suit. But this is not the test. It was not necessary for Diversified to have represented in express terms that it would not invoke the statute of limitations. The question is did Diversified knowingly represent to Buxton that the corporation owed a debt to Buxton. Obviously it did. Moreover, it was entirely logical for Buxton to conclude from the repeated acknowledging of the debt that agreement existed between him and Diversified that the debt was owed and that interest was running. It would quiet any apprehension that he might have had as to whether the debt was alive and well. The continued acknowledgment by Diversified conveyed to him that there was no need for him to seek to enforce the debt.
Contrary to the contention of Diversified it was not necessary to the creation of an estoppel for the audit letters to set forth a promise tо pay. Buxton testified that after receiving the letters for many years he believed that the company was aware of the debt, and intended to pay it when possible, i. e. when it was financially able to pay it. Since there was no dispute between the company and him, he felt it was unnecessary to bring a suit in order to establish that which the company admitted. Now the company takes the position that Buxton allowed the statute of limitations to run. He is justified in responding that he was lulled into a state of inaction. It is entirely logical to hold that Diversified is not to be allowed to now dispute either the existence or validity of the debt.
We have heretofore followed the principle that “estoppel arises where one by his conduct, lulls another into false security and into a position he would not take only because of such conduct.”
Mc Waters and Bartlett v. United States,
The decision of the Fifth Circuit in the case of
Ingalls v. Ingalls Iron Works Co.,
III.
Is There Evidence on the Issue of Repayment of the $20,000 Debt Which Would Justify Submission of This Issue to a Trier of Fact?
We are unable to find any substantial evidence in the record which would support a conclusion that the debt had been paid. It is true that Buxton received stock from U.S. Silver and Mining Co. in 1970. Buxton testified that the transfer of the stock to him occurred in connection with a distinct transaction. This was a ranching transaction between him and Bob Pinder. There was no evidence offered to show that this stock transfer had to do with the debt in question, and hence there would not be any justification for allowing the jury to speculate on this. An opinion was given by William Wallace, President of Diversified. It stated:
It is my opinion that certificate No. 11963 of U.S. Silver and Mining Corp. represents payment in full for any alleged loan made to U.S Silver and Mining Corp. by John Buxton. (Emphasis added).
An opinion is quite different from a fact. The trial court recognized this in its statement that if Mr. Wallace had “any conviction about (the stock being given as repayment for the debt) he’d state what the fact was. He didn’t. He says ‘it’s my opinion’ ”. The court found that the statement was not sufficient to create an issue of fact. We agree.
IV.
Was the Case an Appropriate One for the Grant of a Summary Judgment?
We hold that it was.
Rule 56(c) allows summary judgment where, as here, there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and (the law) entitles the moving party to judgment.
The ease presented is one in which the moving party was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The trial court ruled correctly.
The judgment is affirmed.
