62 So. 287 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913
In the trial of this case by the court, sitting without .a jury, there was evidence tending to prove the following state of facts: In 1908 the appellees were associated with a number of other persons in the project for the establishment of a national bank in Birmingham, to be called the National City Bank. Subscriptions to the capital stock of the proposed bank to the amount of $300,000 were made and paid in, a board of directors was chosen, and a president and other officials were selected, and committees were appointed, among them one to arrange for stationery, fixtures, etc., for the proposed bank; the appel-lees being members of this committee. The purpose! was to incorporate under the national banking law, but this purpose was unexecuted. When the matter was in this situation, a traveling salesman of the appellant appeared on the scene and solicited an order for the stationery for the proposed bank. The appellees declined to give an order until they were authorized to do so by the board of directors. After such authority was conferred upon the committee by the board of directors, appellees gave to the appellant, through its traveling salesman, an order for the stationery for the proposed bank. The goods so ordered were shipped to the Na-lional City Bank, and were charged on the appellant’s books to the National City Bank. The appellant made some inquiries in regard to several of the persons who had been selected as directors and officers of the pro
On such a state of facts the appellees cannot be held' to liability, on the ground that the order purported to bind them personally, as plainly they did not agree or consent to be so bound, and the appellant did not ex-, tend the credit to them. They cannot be held on the theory of a breach of an implied warranty of authority to act for another, as they did not lack the only authority which they, either expressly or impliedly, professed to have. There is no claim that they are liable because of any misrepresentation or deceit. And they cannot be held liable as the agent of a nonexistent principal, as the nonexistence of the entity to which credit was extended, and from which alone payment was expected, was as fully known to the appellant as to themselves. In speaking.of one’s liability as agent on a contract which did not purport to bind him personally, it was said in the opinion in the case of Ware v. Morgan, 67 Ala. 461: “When he is guilty of no wrong or omission,
It was a permissible inference from the state of facts disclosed by the evidence that the case presented was that of a dealer who was so eager to make disposition of his wares, and so confident — from the impression made on him by the situation as it really existed — that the project for the establishment of a bank had progressed so far that it would be consummated as planned, that he undertook, on the mere approval of his offer by those who were expected to be in charge of the affairs of the bank when it should come into existence, to supply the stationery which it would need, and to look to it alone for the payment of the price, without suggesting or requiring that those who acted in behalf of the proposed bank, or any of them, should incur any personal liability for the articles to be furnished. If a; party merely speculates on the chance of being paid by. a corporation not yet in existence, and has no claim in contract or in tort against those with whom the dealing was had, the latter cannot be held to liability merely because the plan to organize a corporation was not carried out. In such case there is no contract- — Higgins v. Hopkins, 3 Exch. 163. If it was the understanding of both parties to the transaction that appellees were not to be personally liable for the price of the stationery,
Affirmed.