22 P.2d 320 | Or. | 1933
Action by Iner Mortensen against Dayton Sand Gravel Company, in which defendant filed a counter-claim. From a judgment for plaintiff, defendant appeals.
AFFIRMED. This is an action on an account stated. It is alleged in the complaint:
The defendant, in its answer, denied that any settlement was had, but admitted that the plaintiff had performed labor and services for it between October 1, 1927, and December 16, 1931, and that, on account thereof, there was due to the plaintiff the sum of $900. Defendant, in a further and separate answer and by way of counter-claim, alleged that it had been damaged in the sum of $2,500 through the negligence of plaintiff in the operation of a scow and digger in the Willamette river. Judgment was demanded against the plaintiff for this amount less the sum of $900 admitted to be due on account of labor and services rendered. The cause was submitted to a jury and a verdict returned in favor of the plaintiff. From a judgment entered thereon the defendant appeals.
It is urged here for the first time that the complaint fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. We see no merit in this contention. It was held in Foste v.Standard Insurance Company,
The principal assignment of error is based on the ruling of the court permitting Ernest Demarey to testify relative to the account stated as alleged by the plaintiff. Demarey testified, without objection, that he was the manager, secretary-treasurer of the corporation and that he was in active charge of the business of the corporation, exercising the right to hire and discharge employees. He further testified that he went over the account book of the plaintiff and agreed with him upon the balance alleged to be due. There was entered in this account book in the handwriting of Demarey the following words: "Balance due January 1, 1932, $974.64". Assuming this testimony to be true, it is clear that Demarey in making the settlement was acting within the real or apparent scope of his authority: 14a C.J. 359; Fletcher Ency. Corporations (Permanent Edition), § 665. The fact that he was not formally authorized so to act by the board of directors is immaterial. No meeting of the board had been held in several years. Yet the corporation continued to transact business.
The real controversy in this case was with reference to the counterclaim which was, on the facts, decided adversely to defendant.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
BEAN, J., sitting for RAND, C.J.
BEAN, ROSSMAN, and KELLY, JJ., concur. *276