delivered the opinion of the court.
Appeals from a judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ suit instituted for the purpose of securing an injunction, and from an order dissolving a temporary restraining order issued upon the filing of the complaint.
In brief, the complaint alleges: That the plaintiff Montana Amusement Securities Company, a Montana corporation, “is engaged in operating motion picture theaters in the city of Butte, county of Silver Bow, State of Montana; that the plaintiff Amer
The contract, made a part of the complaint as Exhibit “A,” shows the parties to it to be the ‘ ‘ Goldwyn Distributing Corporation, hereinafter referred to as the ‘Exchange,’ and American Theater owner, lessee of and operating the American Theater, at No.-street, in the city of Butte * * * hereinafter referred to as the ‘Exhibitor.’ ” It was signed by the New York corporation through its manager, and by the “American Theater, Exhibitor, by F. T. Bailey. ’ ’ The name of the Montana Amusement Securities Company, one of plaintiffs, does not anywhere appear in it.
The district court issued a temporary restraining order on December 30, 1918. The defendants, on January 4 following, interposed a demurrer on the grounds that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in favor of the plaintiffs or either of them, and that plaintiff American Theater had no legal capacity to sue, “in that it does not appear that it is a natural or artificial person recognized by the law or a legal entity recognized by the law.” It also moved to quash the order to show cause why an injunction should not issue and to dissolve the temporary restraining order for the reason, among others, that the Montana Amusement Securities Company was not a party to the contract, has no interest in the controversy, and therefore no right to maintain the action. On January 28 the demurrer and motion were sustained, and the action was dismissed. Hence the appeals.
The position of counsel for appellant, as disclosed by their brief, is that “Exhibit ‘A’ to the complaint discloses that the paper was signed, ‘American Theater, by F. T. Bailey,’ and was executed on behalf of respondent Goldwyn Distributing Corporation. The first matter to be determined is whether the writing thus signed became a contract capable of enforcement. If it did, the next question for determination is whether appellant, by its complaint, exhibited a right in itself to enforce the contract.
The logic of this contention must be tested by the language of
Appellant’s contention is that the action can be maintained
Equally untenable is the claim that the contract can be
The cases cited in appellant’s brief holding parties signing contracts for legal nonentities personally liable are not in point, for the reason that, if the complaint was framed upon that theory, it has since been abandoned, for neither the American Theater nor F. T. Bailey are parties to this appeal, and no rights are asserted in their behalf. The case of Blakely v. Bennecke, 59 Mo. 193, holds that, where the defendant signed a note under the designation of “Captain of Company I of Missouri Volunteers,” he was personally liable, for the reason that “Company I” possessed none of the elements of a legal entity, and it was upon that point the case turned. The court said: “But in this case there was no principal, either responsible or otherwise, to disclose. ‘Company I’ was incapable of suing or being sued, pleading or being impleaded, contracting or being contracted with. In short, it possessed none of the elements or attributes of a legal entity.”
The case of Brooks v. Harris, 12 Ala. 555, is in point. That was an action in assumpsit upon the following instrument:
“Mobile, Oct. 11, 1841.
“Due Charles A. Kelly, or bearer, three hundred and thirty dollars, 29-100, for work and labor done, on Steamboat ‘Jewess.’
“ [Signed] For Steamboat ‘Jewess’ and owners,
“Alphonso Brooks.”
The court said: “There is no allegation that Brooks had authority, as agent of Wilson, to bind him by the execution of a
Section 6532, Revised Codes, requires a complaint to contain
For these reasons the judgment and order are affirmed.
Affirmed.