21 Or. 353 | Or. | 1891
This is an action brought by the plaintiff against the defendants as partners, under the firm name of The Bay City Wharf and Dock Company, to recover damages for breaches of a contract made by said defendants as partners with the plaintiff.
In substance, the plaintiff alleges in his complaint that in July, 1888, the plaintiff contracted with the defendants that he would construct at or near Bay City a certain dock and elevated roadway of driven piling and plank to be about fourteen hundred feet in length; that he was to do
Two other causes of action are alleged for logs sold and delivered to the defendants, one amounting to the sum of seventy-two dollars and interest from the date specified, and the other for ninety-three dollars and sixty-eight cents and interest from the date alleged.
The answer of the defendants denied the allegations of the complaint. Upon the trial the plaintiff had a verdict for six hundred and sixty-six dollars and thirty-two cents against the defendants W. S. Cone, B. Baughman, and C. E. Wilson, partners under the firm name as alleged, upon which judgment was rendered against the defendants.
It appears by the bill of exceptions that the plaintiff testified in substance that the contract between himself and the defendant was in writing, and produced a copy, which was objected to on the ground that the same did not purport
The next assignment of error is in sustaining the objection of plaintiff to the introduction as evidence of the articles of incorporation of the Bay City Wharf and Dock
The recoi’d admits that “at the date of making the contract no part of the stock of the corporation had been subscribed, nor had the corporation been organized by the election of officers”; nor does it appear that anything was done other than the mere filing of the articles of incorpora
It is the facts admitted by the record, taken in connection with the articles, which render them nugatory for the
The third assignment of error, and upon which counsel say they chiefly rely, is the giving of the following instruction: “If you find from the evidence that in making the memorandum of the contract offered in evidence the plaintiff believed that he was contracting with the Bay City Wharf Company, and that the defendants were parties constituting the company, and W. S. Cone represented that defendants constituted such company, and that the defendants did constitute such company, then you can find a verdict against all the defendants. If you find that the contract was made with the Bay City Wharf and Dock Company, and part of the defendants represent themselves to constitute said company, then you can find a verdict against those defendants who represented themselves to constitute such company, and not against any defendant who was not a member of such company.” The pleadings and the evidence for the plaintiff tended to show that he contracted with the wharf company as a partnership and not as a corporation. It was as partners doing
The bill of exceptions discloses that the plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that the defendants Cone, Baughman, Wilson, and Hurst were partners interested in some manner in the construction of the wharf in question, and were interested in selling real estate adjacent, etc., near where the wharf and roadway were to be constructed, and that the defendant Baughman superintended the construction of the wharf and roadway, so far as built. In brief, the plaintiff had not only alleged but had introduced testimony tending to show that the defendants were partners under, the firm name of the company, already denominated, and that he had contracted with thém as such. The defendants sought to show that the contract was made with a corporation of that name and not with the defendants as partners, under such name. For this purpose the defendants sought to prove the existence of such corporation, but failed for the reason that the articles of incorporation, when offered, were accompanied with the admission that no part of the stock for such corporation had been subscribed, nor had it been organized by the election of any officers at the date at which the contract was made, as already fully explained.
There was no error, and the judgment must be affirmed.