195 Iowa 147 | Iowa | 1923
-Plaintiff seeks to recover $1,530.32 as attorney’s fees and expenses incidental to the incorporation of the defendant company. The petition alleges the contract in suit with the promoters of the defendant corporation, the performance of the work contemplated by the contract, an adoption or 'ratification by the board of directors of said corporation, and the failure to pay. The answer denies liability; denies adoption or ratification by the corporation; denies the authority of the promoters to bind the ■ corporation in any manner, and alleges that if anyone is indebted to the plaintiff upon the contract and account, the promoters are individually liable.
Three persons, J. L. Adams, Mrs. J. W. Adams, and ~W. D. Jamieson, were engaged in the business of operating and promoting theaters in the state of Iowa. They first incorporated the Adams Theatres Company and for services, connected therewith the plaintiff was employed and compensated. Subsequently 'they proposed to incorporate another company and the plaintiff wás informed that his services would be required, and he was instructed to investigate and determine in what state it was deemed advisable to incorporate. He proceeded to investigate and his plan was finally adopted by the promoters and the company was duly incorporated March 10, 1920 in the state of Delaware with its principal place of business in Des Moines, Iowa. The three promoters became its only directors.
It is undisputed that the services were performed and the
The doctrine of agency is bottomed on the fiction of identity of principal and agent. There was no principal at the time that the contract in suit was made and consequently there was no agency. Principal and agent are correlative and coexistent terms. Promoters are individually liable on their contracts, and this is true whether or not their efforts and initiative result in a corporation being called into existence. The answer to the first question must be in the negative. See, Wall v. Niagara Min. & Smelt. Co. 20 Utah 474 (59 Pac. 399); Jones v. Smith, (Tex. Civ. App.) 87 S. W. 210.
In logical sequence, the next question to be answered is whether the user per se of the charter and by-laws by the defendant is an adoption or ratification of the promoters ’ contract ?
To answer this question in the affirmative it would be necessary to hold that a corporation under such circumstances is inherently obligated to pay for services incident to its organization and for which services its promoters have agreed to pay. Does a corporation on coming into existence adopt by acquiescence the contract of its promoters to pay for legal services and expenses in its creation? Does its obligation to pay under the terms of the promoters’ original contract come into being at the time the corporation has its birth without any act on its part through its board of directors or its duly constituted official?
We answer again in the negative. This is not a case in which the corporation can accept or refuse the benefits of a contract. Under the instant record it had no choice. Like a child at its birth it must be bom in the manner provided. There is no volition on its part. When a corporation accepts the benefits of a contract made by its promoters it takes cum onere, but it is important to understand definitely and distinctly what is meant by that statement.
In Weatherford, M. W. & N. R. Co. v. Granger, 86 Tex. 350 (40 Am. St. Rep. 837) it is said*: “There is, so far as this-
We now pass to the pertinent and vital question in this case. Did the corporation subsequently to the date of its creation adopt or ratify, expressly or impliedly, the contract of its promoters in relation to the payment of the plaintiff for services rendered by him ?
Unless an affirmative answer can be made to this question there can be no recovery in this case. The trial court sitting as a jury, with.consent of the parties to this action, ruled that “the promoters could contract and bind the corporation only for the fair and reasonable value of services rendered by plaintiff.” An appellate court is hot necessarily concerned with the basis of a trial court’s ruling or the reason given therefor. It is concerned 'with the record before it, and the legal justification or warrant found therein to support the judgment entered. The trial court in- the instant case determined the reasonable value of the services performed. If this was error it was error without
The adoption or ratification of a contract by a corporation is nothing more nor less than the making of an original contract. The theory of corporate ratification is predicated on the right, of a corporation to contract, and any ratification or adoption is equivalent to a grant of prior authority. Horrabin & Co. v. McCallum, 191 Iowa 441; Bobzin v. Gould Bal. Valve Co., 140 Iowa 744; Pratt v. Oshkosh Match Co. 89 Wis. 406 (62 N. W. 84); Smith v. New Hartford Water Co., 73 Conn. 626 (48 Atl. 754).
The adoption or ratification of a contract by a corporation need not be shown by express acts, but it may be established by implication, as any other original contract. Van Noy v. Central Union Fire Ins. Co. 168 Mo. App. 287 (153 S. W. 1090).
In the instant case.the plaintiff does not sue on quantum memit. He seeks to recover on a specific contract with the promoters, which contract, it is alleged, was adopted or ratified by the corporation after its creation through its board of directors. What is the record in this particular ?
The plaintiff subsequently to the incorporation of the defendant attended the first meeting' of the board of directors. At that meeting there was some conversation in regard to getting a permit to sell the stock in the state of Iowa. Plaintiff’s undisputed testimony is as follows: “Adams [one of the directors] said, ‘Well, you go ahead now and get that permit just as soon as you can, because we want to sell some stock; and we will pay you just as quick as we can sell some stock with which to pay you.’ ”
This was sáid at a time when the question of the fee and expenses of the plaintiff was under discussion. It was an express authorization of the plaintiff to act as attorney for the corporation in securing the permit, and a recognition on the part of the board that the plaintiff should be paid for past services in the organization of the corporation and for services which he was to perform and which he did perform.
It is not necessary that a board of directors employ an attorney by a formal act or resolution. Ney v. Eastern Iowa Tel. Co. 185 Iowa 610. Furthermore the ratification or adoption of
In the instant case the trial court applied the rule of implied contract. ¥e would go further and apply the rule of express ratification or adoption.
In Morgan v. Bon Bon Co. 222 N. Y. 22 (118 N. E. 205) it is shown that a part of the services was performed before the incorporation and a part afterwards with the knowledge of the promoters who were then the officers of the corporation. The opinion reads: “With the knowledge and approval of the men who organized the corporation, and then became its stockholders and officers, the appellant was permitted to perform the services which had been contracted for, and the corporation, chargeable through its officers with full knowledge of the contract under which these services were being rendered, received the benefit thereof. It is .well established that a corporation which under
Defendant in its motion at the close of all the testimony in this cause moved the court for a finding of fact in favor of the defendant, and in the fifth ground thereof stated: “There is no competent evidence, as a matter of law, of .any ratification of any contract, express or implied, as claimed by the plaintiff in this case.” With this proposition the trial court did not agree, nor does this court. Wherefore the judgment entered is — -Affirmed.