67 F. 464 | 2d Cir. | 1895
This action was brought by Cornelius V. Sidell, as assignee of Simmons & Sidell and of the Occidental Construction Company, to recover a balance due under a contract with the Missouri Pacific Railway Company for work done and materials furnished in building an extension of the Interstate Railroad from the westerly line of Coffey county, in the state of Kansas, to the town of Madison, in Greenwood county, in said state, a distance of 10.87 miles, at an agreed price. The complaint also* includes a claim for extra work, and the answer of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, while denying the making of such contract, or any liability thereunder, sets up a counterclaim. There is no question raised as to the amount of the judgment if plaintiff be entitled to recover at all. The contract was made with Jay Gould, the president of the Missouri Pacific, and it was insisted upon the trial that, the proof failed to show a contract with the defendant railway company. That point was reserved by exceptions and assignment of errors, but before this case came on for argument the opinion of this court in Railroad Co. v. Sidell, 66 Fed. 27, was filed. The evidence in that case touching authority of the president and ratification of his acts was substantially the same as in the case at bar, and counsel for plaintiff in error has therefore not argued this assignment of error. It need not be further discussed.
There is, therefore, but a single question left in the case. The contract was enter (id into July 13, 1887. By its terms the contractors were to build the 10 miles as an extension of the Interstate Railroad owned by the Interstate Railroad Company, a Kansas corporation, whose stock was held by the Missouri Pacific, which agreed, through its president, to pay the contractors for building such extension. The defendant insists that “such a contract was wholly ultra vires as to the Missouri Pacific Railway; that under the laws of the state of Kansas, under which the Missouri Pacific Railway Company was incorporated, and within which state the extension was built, it did not have the power to enter into a contract for the construction of a road belonging to the Interstate Railroad Company, and that such contract, under the authorities, was null and void.” The trial judge took this view of the case, and the verdict was rendered on the theory that a corporation which receives the benefit of a full performance of a contract not contrary to its charter or the statute cannot deny that it was within its power to make such contract to the prejudice of the party who has performed the contract. We are satisfied, however, that under the extremely broad language of the statute of Kansas such a contract was not ultra vires. Authority was given to railroads to make contracts for the purchase or lease of other roads by chapter 92, § 2, Laws 1870. Such grant of power being evidently not broad enough, the legislature of Kansas, in 1886, amended the section so as to" read as set forth below. And the very next year it still fur
Act of 1870, as Amended by Act of February 18, 1886 (chapter 134).
Sec. 2. Any railroad company of this state may sell or lease its road &c. &c., and any railroad company in this state existing under general or special laws, may buy or lease the road, with all the rights, privileges and franchises thereto pertaining or buy the stock and bonds or guarantee the bonds of any railroad company incorporated and organized within or without this state whenever the roads of such companies shall form in the operation thereof ft continuous line or lines &c., &c.
Act of 1870, as further Amended by Act of March 4, 1887 (chapter 186).
Sec. 2. Any railroad company of this state may sell or lease the whole or any part of its railroad branches &c. &c., * * *; and any railroad company organized under the laws of this state, or any state or territory of the United States may aid any railroad company of this state in the construction of its road and branches by purchase of its stock and bonds, or any portion thereof, or by guaranteeing its bonds, or the interest thei’eon, or othex-wise. Such pux-chase, sale or lease may be made or guax-anty entei’ed into, or aid furnished, upon such tex-ms and conditions as shall be agreed upon by the directors of the respective companies; but the same shall be approved or ratified by pex’sons holding or representing two-thirds in amount of the capital stock of each of such companies respectively, at an annual stockholdex-s’ meeting, or at a special meeting of the stockholders called for that purpose, or by the appx-oval in writing of two-tlxirds in intex-est of the stockholders of each company respectively. Px’ovided, howevex-, that no pux’chase, lease or guaranty under this act shall be entered into unless the line of railx’oad so purchased or leased, or whose stock or bonds are purchased, or the bonds of which are guaranteed, shall when constructed foi-m a continuous line with the road of the company purchasing, leasing or guaranteeing, either by direct connection therewith, or through an intermediate line or lines constructed or to be constructed, which such company shall have the right by contract or otherwise when completed to use or operate or the principal or interest of whose bonds it has guax-anteed, or a majority of whose stocks it has purchased, [here follow other provisos which are immaterial.]
These amendments are most suggestive. If it were desired to secure legislative authority for the making of such a contract as the one at bar, it is difficult.to see how the proposer of the amendment could have, better expressed himself than by adding to the enumeration of powers already conferred, to buy, to lease, to buy the stock, to buy the bonds, and to guaranty the bonds, the further power to "otherwise aid.” The words are broad enough to cover a loan of money made directly to the aided company, or an agreement to pay for the extensions or betterments added to its road. Nor is such construction obnoxious to any objection that such a grant of power is not appropriate to the original purposes for which the aiding road was chartered. The qualification limiting the power to otherwise aid (and it may fairly be construed as limiting that power as well as the power to guaranty) to cases where the aided road connects
This brings the case within the principle of law approved by the supreme court in Hitchcock v. Galveston, 96 U. S. 351, that—
“Although there may be a defect of power in a corporation to make a contract, yet, if a contract made by it is not in violation of its charter, or of any statute prohibiting it, and the corporation has by its promise induced a party relying on the promise and in execution of the contract to expend money and*469 perform his part thereof, the corporation is liable on the contract. * * * Having received the benefit at the expense of the other contracting party, it cannot object that it was not empowered to perform what it promised in return, in the mode in which it promised to perform.”
See. also, Arms Co. v. Barlow, 63 N. Y. 70; Railway Co. v. McCarthy, 96 U. S. 267. And, as to inference of ratification, when the corporation has received the benefit of a contract made by its agents for a purpose authorized by its charter, Bank v. Patterson’s Adm’rs, 7 Cranch, 299; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Keokuk & H. Bridge Co., 331 U. S. 371, 9 Sup. Ct. 770.
There is no force in the suggestion that the remedy of plaintiff is not upon the contract, but, if at all, upon a quantum meruit; nor do the cases cited in support of that proposition apply here. Davis v. Railroad Co., 131 Mass. 275; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Keokuk & H. Bridge Co., 131 U. S. 389, 9 Sup. Ct. 770; Louisiana v. Wood, 102 U. S. 294; Parkersburg v. Brown, 106 U. S. 487,1 Sup. Ct. 442; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. St. Louis, A. & T. H. R. Co., 118 U. S. 316, 6 Sup. Ct. 1094. In all of them there was a total want of power, not a mere failure to comply with prescribed requirements or conditions; and, as was said in Davis v. Railroad Co., supra:
“There Is a clear distinction * * * between the exercise by a corporation of a power not conferred upon it, varying from the objects of its creation as declared in the law of its organization, of which all persons dealing with it are hound to take notice, and the abuse of a general power, or the failure to comply with prescribed formalities or regulations in a particular instance, when such abuse or failure is not known to the other contracting party.”
In the case at bar, power to make contracts in aid of other roads had been conferred by statute upon the defendant; but in making the contract sued upon, which was within the range of its authority, it failed to comply with a requirement as to ratification, which it should not have neglected, but which it chose to disregard. Zabriskie v. Railroad Co., 23 How. 398. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.