43 A. 623 | N.H. | 1898
There was competent evidence before the jury from which they might properly have found that Pike was authorized by the plaintiffs to sell the goods named in the specification to the defendant, upon the terms alleged by him. One of the purposes of the corporation's existence was to manufacture plumbers' supplies, and it had authority to acquire real estate for its uses. Pike was one of its three directors, and was also its president, treasurer, and apparently general manager. January 17, 1897, its stockholders unanimously voted to sell all the stock and assets of the corporation to the new Paphro D. Pike Company, organized under the laws of this state, for $10,000 of the stock of the new company and an assumption by it of all the corporation's liabilities. The new corporation referred to was organized on or about December 29, 1896, by Pike, Rounds, O'Brien, one Troy, and the defendant, for the same purposes as the plaintiffs were organized, but with a capital of $100,000. Rounds was another of the three directors of the plaintiff corporation, and O'Brien succeeded Pike as its treasurer. The evidence tended to show that the defendant's connection with the new corporation was for Pike's accommodation, and was understood to be merely nominal. Some three weeks prior to that time Pike, as trustee, had secured an option giving him the right to purchase the Amsden property at any time within sixty days upon certain terms. In the following March and April, after Pike had ceased to be treasurer, the plaintiffs, in their correspondence with the defendant as to the claims in suit, used letter-heads bearing an engraved card designating the corporation as "Manufacturers of Plumbers' Specialties," and a picture of the Amsden buildings under the words, "Factory at Penacook N.H." It would be a natural inference from all this testimony that at some *457
time prior to January 17 the corporation formed the purpose to engage in the manufacture of plumbers' supplies, and that the organization of the new corporation and the acquisition of the Amsden property were steps taken in executing that purpose. The corporation would necessarily act through its officers or agents, and the jury might think that no one would be more likely to be clothed with authority for the purpose than the person who occupied the fourfold relation to it of director, president, treasurer, and general manager, and whose influence at the organization of the corporation had been such as to cause it to take his name. This testimony tended to corroborate the statements made by Pike to the assignee of the Amsden estate while negotiating for the purchase of the manufacturing plant, and to the defendant when he was employed to make repairs upon the same. If the jury found, as they reasonably might, that the plaintiffs authorized Pike to act for them in these matters, the representations made by him in connection with his acts would be competent; for example his representation to the assignee of the Amsden estate when he took the agreement in his own name as trustee that he represented the plaintiffs, but wanted the agreement in that form for a special reason. Moreover, Pike's testimony that he had the general management of the plaintiffs' business was competent. Caldwell v. Wentworth,
Judgment for the defendant.
PARSONS, J., did not sit: the others concurred.