273 F. 465 | 8th Cir. | 1921
The parties will be referred to as in the trial, court. The plaintiff brought this action against defendants to recover a balance of $5,120, claimed to be due and owing from them as copartners under the firm name and style of E. C. Moore Company for goods, wares, and merchandise sold to them as such copartners. At the trial both parties at the close of all the evidence moved for a directed verdict. The defendants also requested what is called a declaration of law. The court directed a verdict for the plaintiff and refused the so-called declaration of law. Defendants have brought the case here, assigning as error the granting of the motion of plaintiff for a directed verdict, the refusal to direct a verdict for defendants, and the refusal to declare the law as requested.
It will not be necessary to consider whether the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for defendants as the consideration of tire assignment that the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff necessarily determines the former, and we have no authority to direct the entry of judgment. Slocum v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co., 228 U. S. 364, 33 Sup. Ct. 523, 57 L. Ed. 879, Ann. Cas. 1914D, 1029.
Wright met Alexander at the Hotel Utah, and talked over terms, prices of tires, discounts, and territory. At the end of the conversation, Alexander told Wright to make up an order not exceeding $5,000, and that to insure prompt payment, and show the reliability of the company, Alexander and the other members of the company would sign the order.
Pursuant to this conversation, the trade acceptances were made out on which this suit is brought. They were accepted by L. C. Moore Company, by L. C. Moore, Manager. In September, 1918, Wright was again in Salt Lake City, saw Moore, and told him plaintiff was not satisfied with the account; that plaintiff required indorsements of the acceptances. Later Wright went with" Moore to Alexander’s office. Alexander said that, owing to Jacobson’s continued illness, all the signatures could not be obtained, and that he (Alexander) did not want to sign without the others. After leaving Alexander’s office, Moore indorsed the acceptances individually. Terzopoulos, called by plaintiff, testified that he was a member of the L. C. Moore Company, associated with Alexander, Moore, and Jacobson; that they were all acting together. Moore testified that Terzopoulos, Jacobson, Alexander, and himself met at Alexander’s office and discussed the idea of going into a deal with plaintiff. This was prior to the making of the first order above mentioned. The evidence thus detailed, standing alone, would support the verdict beyond question, as the trial court had the right to draw the same inferences from the facts proven as a jury would.
On the part of the defendants, evidence was introduced tending to show that on July 11, 1916, a corporation under the name of New Process Double Tread Tire Company, with a capital stock of $5,000, was incorporated under the laws of the state of Utah. The capital stock was divided into 5,000 shares, of $1 per share, of which stock the defendant S. Jacobson owned 1,000 shares, Daniel Alexander 550
It is claimed, however, that the defendants, in whatever business was transacted with the plaintiff, were acting as directors or managing agents of the U. Built Tire Company, and that the indebtedness to recover for which the present suit was brought, is due and owing by that corporation, and not by the defendants individually. This is not a case alone where persons have in good faith acted as a corporation, or in the name of a corporation, which for some reason was not legally organized, or the name was not legally changed; but there is additional evidence that they acted as individuals associated together, regardless of incorporation. It is not claimed that the B. C. Moore Company was ever incorporated, and it is, to say the least, somewhat unusual for a corporation to have a trade-name. We have no doubt but that there was evidence which clearly supported the verdict, and that is as far as we need go on this proposition.
“The rule that a corporation has but one legal name, and that that name is the name formally conferred upon it by the state, does not mean that a corporation can never act under a different name. While it may be desirable that a corporation act only by its legal name, still a corporation may, in good faith, do business under a name other than its legal name, and may assume a name for the purpose of its business. If, in good faith, a contract is executed by a corporation under an assumed name, or if a corporation does business under an assumed name, the corporation is just as much bound as if it had used its legal name, and a contract entered into by or with a corporation, in. good faith, under an assumed name, by the respective parties to the contract, and without fraud, may be enforced by either party, if the identity of the corporation acting under the assumed name is established by the proof, and if you find from the evidence that the U. Built Tire Company was a corporation of the state of Utah, and that this corporation was acting and doing business under the name of L. C. Moore Company, and that the account sued upon was an account with the Ü. Built Tire Company, doing business under the name of L. C. Moore Company, then you are instructed to bring in a verdict for' the defendants and each of them of no cause of action.”
The judgment is affirmed.