Plaintiff is a Wisconsin corporation which formerly brewed and sold beer. Defendant Missouri Poultry & Game Company is a Missouri corporation. In August, 1905, F. W. Brockman'went to Milwaukee and orally agreed with plaintiff to purchase beer from it; that he would form a corporation for that purpose; that he would go into the business and finance it, furnish a bond signed by himself and August Gehner, and in due time notify plaintiff when to commence shipping its product. On August 26, 1905, the bond was signed. August 29,1905, Brockman wrote plaintiff ordering beer, and saying: “You can bill this to me if you prefer until the bond is accomplished or make any other arrangement to please yourself, but the new company *404 will take hold of the business at once.” On August 31, 1905, Brockman wrote:
“The bond is already signed by Mr. August Gehner, a capitalist of this city and President of the German-American Bank, and myself as surety for the Missouri Poultry & Game Company, and will be forwarded to you as soon as we obtain the charter from the State, which we have applied for, and the only reason that I am not sending it along is because I do not wish to have it returned .here or charged, in case the Secretary of State should have some reason or other to make any request for alteration of any of the articles or possibly in the name. At any rate, I stand guod for the two cars of beer ordered and for all which will be forwarded by you, and you can take this as your surety. ’ ’
The bond was sent to plaintiff on September 2,1905. It reads as follows:
“Know All Men by These Present, That we, Missouri Poultry and Game, Company, a corporation, organized under the laws of the State of Missouri, of St. Louis, as principal, and F. W. Brockman and August Gehner, of St. Louis, Missouri, as sureties, are held and firmly bound unto the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Company, a corporation of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in the sum of twenty thousand dollars, good and lawful money of the United States, to be paid to the said Jos. Schlitz Brewing Company, its successors or assigns, to which payment well and truly to be made, we do bind ourselves, jointly and severally, our heirs, executors and administrators, firmly by these presents.
“Sealed with our seals and dated this 26th day of August, 1905.
“Whereas, the above bounden principal has agreed to purchase for and during the next ten years from the date hereof, beer brewed by the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Company (a corporation engaged in the manufacture of beer at Milwaukee, Wisconsin), to the exclusion of all other malt beverages, in consideration whereof, said Jos. Schlitz Brewing Company has consented to sell and ship, *405 upon the order of said principal, from time to time as needed in his business, its various brands of beer in conformity to the by-laws, rules and regulations established in that behalf and printed on the back hereof, and at the following prices, to-wit: As per special agreement, and to extend to said principal on such purchases a running credit not exceeding $10,000, as long as all purchases in excess of said credit are promptly paid, and the above bounden purchaser, complies with all of his obligations in the premises, the above named obligee having reserved the right to change any or all of the prices aforesaid, from time to time, without notice, to the principal or the sureties; also the right of terminating the aforesaid agreement to sell beer to said principal, without notice, at any time prior to the termination of said period of ten years, and whereupon all amounts then owing from said principal to said obligee shall become due and payable forthwith; and further, reserving the privilege of extending to said principal a running credit in excess of said sum of $10,000 dollars and of extending at any time or times to said principal, credit in excess of said sum, all without releasing or discharging thereby the above named sureties from the obligations of this bond:
“Now, Therefore, the condition of this obligation is such that if the above bounden principal, his heirs, executors or administrators shall faithfully comply with said agreement and shall well and truly pay or cause to be paid to the above named Jos. Schlitz Brewing Company, its successors or assigns all sums of money which may or shall be owing to said Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co., at the time or times when the same shall become payable, according to the agreement aforesaid, and the regulations endorsed on the back hereof, without fraud or delay, then this obligation to be void, otherwise to be and remain in full force and virtue; it being expressly understood that the above named sureties shall, under all circumstances, be liable to the obligee for so much of the indebtedness of the principal as is not in excess of the amount of this obligation, but no more, and that the discharge of *406 this obligation shall not release the principal from the payment of any indebtedness due from him to the obligee in excess of such amount.”
The by-laws, rules, etc., referred to in the bond stated the authority of agents, provided that no order or agreement for the purchase of beer would be binding until received and accepted by plaintiff at Milwaukee; prescribed credits for returned containers and certain terms of sale, other than prices. The “special agreement” referred to in the bond fixed the prices to be charged and paid for beer. These prices were proved orally. Beginning with the order referred to, the Poultry & Game Company, of which Brockman became the president, ordered from plaintiff large quantities of beer which it received and sold. The business was continued on a large scale for nearly six years and was terminated by plaintiff by a notice of which no complaint is made. At the time of the termination of the arrangement there was due plaintiff, according to the agreed price, the amount for which it recovered judgment, $9472.50.
Several grounds are relied upon for reversal.
I. The total amount of*beer sold to the Poultry & Game Company was very large. The gross amount billed during one month which, it seems, is illustrative of the business done, was over $14,000. The net price was over $6300. The balance sued for probably represents the net due for the last few weeks before the notice of termination was given by plaintiff. It is not contended the sale of beer was illegal at that time, nor that it ran counter to the then public policy. It is argued the contract to purchase was ultra vires of the Poultry & Game Company. The charter of that company, as incorporated in 1893, disclosed it was then incorporated to deal in dressed poultry, game and country produce. The representation as to the formation of a corporation in 1905 seems to have been untrue. The charter does not expressly invalidate transactions outside the charter powers, [St. Louis Drug Co. v. Robinson, 81 Mo. l. c. 26.] *407 Tlie contract lias been fully executed by plaintiff. The Poultry & Game Company bas received and had full benefit of the shipments of beer represented by the sued for balance.
The Missouri cases cited as supporting a contrary view involved questions concerning the enforcement of executory ultra vires agreements and are thereby dis *408 tinguished from the instant ease. [See, Fishing & Hunting Club v. Kessler, 252 Mo. l. c. 437; Bowman Dairy Co. v. Mooney, 41 Mo. App. l. c. 676.] In Anglo-American Land, M. & A. Co. v. Lombard, 132 Fed. l. c. 741 et seq., the United States Circuit Court of Appeals was considering an executory feature of the contract before it when it discussed the rule in this State. The court said: “Of course, the present question is whether thfe Missouri Company’s acquisition of stock of the Kansas Company and the incurrence of the stockholders’ liability which is inseparable from ownership of the stock — a liability which has not been discharged and remains an executory obligation — was void in toto or only voidable; in other words, whether the act of a corporation which is not within the scope of its corporate powers, and is therefore prohibited (citations) can have or be given the effect of placing upon the corporation an enforceable executory obligation.” (l. c. 742). It is clear this was understood in the case of Millinery Co. v. Trust Co., supra, and that the case was not given approval as authority for the broad doctrine it is here contended it announced. In fact, in the Millinery Co. case, the exact contrary was expressly stated to be the rule in this State.
In National Bank v. Matthews, 98 U. S. l. c. 627, the record under review was that of this court in Matthews v. Skinker,
In Michigan a statute provided that the articles of association should state “the purpose or purposes for which the corporation is formed, and it shall be unlawful for said corporation to divert its operations or appropriate its funds to any other purpose, except as herein-before provided.” It was held (Butterworth & Lowe v. Milling Co., 115 Mich. l. c. 3) that a transgression of this prohibition might subject the offending corporation to action by the State ‘ ‘ or other appropriate proceeding; ’ ’ but did not prevent the application of the doctrine of estoppel to contracts ultra vires of the corporation.
In Texas a statute provided: “No corporation created under the provisions of this title shall employ its stock, means, or other property, directly or indirectly, for any other purpose than to accomplish the legitimate purpose of its creation.” A corporation organized to manufacture and vend cotton and woolen goods loaned money to one Bond and took his note. When sued, Bond pleaded
ultra vires.
After approving the general rule that the execution by one party to an
ultra vires
contract estops the other to plead
ultra vires
as a defense, the court (Bond v. Mfg. Co., 82 Tex. l. c. 313) dealt with the question of the effect of the quoted statute as follows: “It is true that a distinction is made between the act of a corporation which is merely without authority and one which is illegal. In the one case, it is a question of authority; in the other, of legality. A corporate act becomes illegal when committed in .violation of an express statute on a specific subject, or when it is
malum in se
or
malum■ prohibitum,
or when it is against public policy. [Beach on Priv. Corp. sec. 438; Taylor on Priv. Corp. secs. 293, 295.] If, therefore, the transaction here engaged in by appellee was
*411
not merely beyond its powers bnt was also illegal, in the sense stated, the contention of appellants should prevail. It will be noted that Article 589 . . . is a general statute. It is merely declaratory of the common law by which corporations are strictly confined in their powers to the limits and fixed purposes for which they were created. The language of the statute at most emphasizes the doctrine of the common law. To such ‘general prohibitions against the doing by corporations of acts beyond the scope of the corporate powers, courts appear to give little effect.’ [Taylor on Corps. sec. 295; Curtis v. Leavitt,
It is argued the decision in Orpheum Theatre Co. v. Brokerage Co.,
For the reasons given the judgment is affirmed.
