Appellant assigns as error failure of the court to admit evidence adduced as to one defendant to be considered against all defendants, on the theory that defendants were engaged in a joint adventure so as to constitute each defendant a principal and the agent of the others.
Each member of a joint adventure is both an agent for his co-adventurer and a principal for himself.
Summers v. Hoffman,
“The terms joint adventure and joint venture are synonymous. 48 C.J.S. Joint Adventure § 1, p. 803.”
Bradbury v. Nagelhus,
In re Simpson,
“ ‘A joint venture is an association of persons with intent, by way of contract, express or implied, to engage in and carry out a single business adventure for joint profit, for which purpose they combine their efforts, property, money, skill, and knowledge, but without creating a partnership in the legal or technical sense of the term.
*9 “'Facts showing the joining of funds, property, or labor, in a common purpose to attain a result for the benefit of the parties in which each has a right in some measure to direct the conduct of the other through a necessary fiduciary relation, will justify a finding that a joint adventure exists.’
“ ‘To constitute a joint adventure, the parties must combine their property, money, efforts, skill, or knowledge in some common undertaking. The contributions of the respective parties need not be equal or of the same character, but there must be some contribution by each coadventurer of something pro-motive of the enterprise.’ ”
Á joint adventure is in the nature of a kind of partnership, and although a partnership and a joint adventure are distinct relationships, they are governed by substantially the same rules.
Wiley v. Wirbelauer,
It is stated in 48 C.J.S., Joint Adventures § 1, p. 806:
“A joint adventure is distinguishable from joint ownership and tenancy in common in that the latter lacks the feature of adventure. So the mere purchase of property by two persons each of whom contributes a portion of the purchase price makes them joint owners of the property, but does not establish between them the relation of joint adventurers, . . . However, the nature of the agreement between parties purchasing land jointly in a transaction for profit may constitute it a joint adventure. A sale of jointly owned property is in no sense a joint adventure.” (Emphasis ours.)
In the case of
Johnson v. Watland,
. . The property sold was jointly owned by appellants under the lease, and the sale, though advertised in the name of “Watland and Rasmussen,” was merely a sale of their joint property for the purpose of converting it into money in closing up the tenancy. It was in no sense a venture.”
We find these definitions in Black’s Law Dictionary, Fourth Edition: Venture: “An undertaking attended with risk, especially one aiming at making money; business speculation.” Adventure: “A hazardous and striking enterprise, a bold undertaking in which hazards are to be met and issue hangs upon unforeseen events.” Joint Adventure:". . . A special combination of two or more persons, where, in some specific adventure, a profit is jointly sought, without any actual partnership or corporate designation.”
A one-half undivided interest in the property constituting the subject matter of the alleged joint adventure was administered by defendant Wachovia Bank and Trust Company as trustee of the estate of Dio Clayton Lewis, an incompetent, by virtue of appointment by the Clerk of Superior Court of Surry County. The title to the property was in the ward of defendant bank,
Cross v. Craven,
The relationship of joint adventure did not exist among defendants, since each could not direct the conduct of the others. Neither was there an undertaking attended with risk by which defendants jointly sought a profit. The joint acts of defendants were merely an attempted sale by owners of undivided interests in real property for the purpose of converting a depreciating asset into money. The element of adventure was not present.
Thus evidence admissible against only one defendant was correctly held inadmissible against other defendants; neither was an *11 agency relationship created among defendants so as to constitute each a principal and the agent of the others.
Absent the relationship of joint adventure, it is clear that the entry of judgment of nonsuit as to defendants R. J. Lovill, Jr., Henry B. Rowe, Jr., Gladys W. Lovill, J. Walter Lovill, Jr., Edward F. Lovill and Margaret Lovill Martin, was correctly entered.
We must therefore consider whether the trial court erred in allowing motion for nonsuit as to defendant Wachovia Bank and Trust Company, Trustee for Dio Clayton Lewis.
Plaintiff relied on breach of alleged contract embodied in a letter dated May 5, 1965, from W. P. Sandridge, Jr., attorney for defendant Wachovia Bank and Trust Company. Plaintiff contends that this letter affording him an opportunity to bid at a resale of the property became a bilateral contract when he signed and returned same to Mr. Sandridge.
The heart of a contract is the intention of the parties, which is ascertained by the subject matter of the contract, the language used, the purpose sought, and the situation of the parties at the time. 2 N. C. Index 2d, Contracts § 12, p. 315;
Sell v. Hotchkiss,
The power of a guardian (sometimes, as here, designated trustee by authority of G.S. 33-1 when referring to the keeper of an adult) to make disposition of his ward's estate is very carefully regulated, and the sale is not allowed except by order of court, which order must have the supervision, approval and confirmation of the resident judge of the district or the judge regularly holding the courts of the district.
Morton v. Lumber Co.,
Plaintiff could not have been afforded the opportunity to bid without an upset bid and an order of resale by the court.
“An upset bid is an advanced, increased or raised bid whereby a person offers to purchase real property theretofore sold, for an amount exceeding the reported sale price by ten percent *12 (10%) of the first $1000 thereof plus five percent (5%) of any excess above $1000, but in any event with a minimum increase of $25, such increase being deposited in cash, or by certified check or cashier’s check satisfactory to the said clerk, with the clerk of the superior court, with whom the report of the sale was filed, within ten days after the filing of such report: . . .” G.S. 1-339.25(a), and “When an upset bid is submitted to the clerk of the superior court, together with a compliance bond if one is required, a resale shall be ordered.” G.S. 1-339.27(a).
However, when a guardian of an incompetent person sells real property under order of court, he is merely an agent of the court and the sale is not consummated until it is confirmed by the resident judge or the judge regularly holding courts in the district. (When the sale is originally ordered by the clerk, his confirmation is also required.) This confirmation represents the consent of the court and is granted or refused in the discretion of the court.
Harrell v. Blythe,
In the case of
LeRoy v. Jacobosky,
“Jacobosky Bros.
“H. Jacobosky,
“Guardian of Simon, Fannie and Sadie Weisel.
“J. H. LeRoy.
“S. H. Weisel.”
Subsequently, the property was sold under proper court order to B. F. White and J. B. Flora. The sale was confirmed and the purchasers received title. Defendants refused to convey to plaintiff when he duly tendered the correct contract price. There was evidence that plaintiff knew nothing about the minors’ ages, but that after the execution of the agreement H. Jacobosky informed plaintiff it would be necessary to get a court order because of the minor children. Plaintiff brought action seeking damages for the difference in contract price of the entire property and the amount for which the entire property sold. The trial judge gave peremptory instruction for damages on the interest of H. Jacobosky and A. Jacobosky. Plaintiff appealed. Holding that H. Jacobosky was not personally liable in respect to the interest of the infant wards, the Court stated:
“ ‘The general rule is that whenever a party assumes to act as agent for another, if he has no authority, or if he exceed his *13 authority, he will be held to be personally liable to the party with whom he deals, for the reason that by holding himself out as having authority he misleads the other party into making the agreement. But the rule is founded upon the supposition * * * that the want of authority is unknown to the other party, or, if known, that the agent undertakes to guaranty a ratification of the act, and when this want of authority is known, and it is clear that the agent did not undertake to guarantee a ratification, it results that the agent is not personally bound.’ ... ‘In the absence of all agreement, express or implied, to be personally bound, there can be no case, we apprehend, in which an agent has been held responsible who has not been guilty of fraud either actual or constructive.’ Fowle v. Kerchner, supra. There can be no fraud when the person with whom the agent deals knows that he has no authority to bind his principal, or knows the character and extent of his agency.”
“ ‘If the party with whom the agent has contracted knew that the agent had no authority, or was cognizant of all the facts upon which the assumption of authority was based — as for example, when both parties labored under a mistake of law with reference to the liability of the principal — the agent is not liable either in tort or upon the contract.’ ”
In the case of
Joyner v. Crisp,
“The plaintiffs in this case had no power to enter into a contract to sell their children’s land, and a mere promise to resort to a court for the purpose of decreeing a sale of it cannot possibly be enforced, for it is beyond the power of the plaintiffs to predicate what the judgment of the court may be.
“Upon this principle it is held that a party cannot recover upon a contract wherein a guardian, who owned certain interest *14 in land of which his ward was part owner, agreed to institute and to carry through court proceedings necessary to the consummation of a sale or exchange of such property. . . .
“For the reasons given, we think the contract is one which cannot be specifically performed, nor can the defendant recover damages for a failure on the part of the plaintiff to perform it.”
Love v. Harris,
“The plaintiff cannot recover upon the ground that the mortgagee assumed to exercise a power to sell which he did not have and that he was thereby misled or deceived to his injury, for the simple reason that he bought with full knowledge of all the facts, and as he is presumed to know the law, he was fixed with notice of the fact that the mortgagee did not have the power to sell under the circumstances, and, therefore, he was in no sense defrauded.
“. . . Ruffin, J., in Fowle v. Kerchner, says: ‘The general rule is that whenever a party assumes to act as agent for another, if he has no authority, or if he exceeds his authority, he will be held to be personally liable to the party with whom he deals, for the reason that by holding himself out as having authority, he misleads the other party into making the agreement. But the rule is founded upon the supposition . . . that the want of authority is unknown to the other party, or, if known, that the agent undertakes to guarantee a ratification of the act, and when this want of authority is known, and it is clear that the agent did not undertake to guarantee a ratification, it results that the agent is not personally bound.’ ”
LeRoy v. Jacobosky, supra,
and
Joyner v. Crisp, supra,
were cited with approval in the case of
Griffin v. Turner,
. “Title to real estate, upon the death of an owner, vests in the heirs and not in the administrators. The personal representative has no power as such to convey. Parker v. Porter,208 N.C. 31 ,179 S.E. 28 ; Floyd v. Herring,64 N.C. 409 . Plaintiff was aware of this fact when he paid his ten dollars to Webb. The receipt given by Webb calls for payment of the balance of the purchase price when good and sufficient deed was tendered by the heirs at law and not by the administrators for whom Webb acted.
“Plaintiff does not assert that any express warranty of authority existed to bind the heirs. His position is that when one contracts as an agent to convey land, the law will imply a warranty of authority to act. The law does imply a warranty when the party with whom the contract is made does not know the true facts and does not know that in truth and in fact the person sought to be bound is lacking in authority. When, however, the person who claims to be protected knows that the person in whose name and behalf the contract is made in fact has no authority to act, the law will not imply a warranty to act. It would be palpably unjust to create a fiction for the benefit of one who acted with knowledge of facts which are at complete variance with the proposed fiction. Hence, we have heretofore held that when one contracts as administrator to convey land, who has no personal right therein, he is not liable on an implied warranty because the heirs at law are not bound by the contract. Hedgecock v. Tate,168 N.C. 660 ,85 S.E. 34 ; Ann. Cas. 1916D 449. For the same reason a guardian who contracts to convey the property of his ward is not liable on an implied warranty of authority. Leroy v. Jacobosky,136 N.C. 443 ,67 L.R.A. 977 . These cases but illustrate the principle which finds full support in numerous other cases. Joyner v. Crisp,158 N.C. 199 ,73 S.E. 1004 ; Love v. Harris,156 N.C. 88 ,72 S.E. 150 ; Hite v. Goodman,21 N.C. 364 ; Potts v. Lazarus,4 N.C. 180 ; Fuller v. *16 Melko,76 A. 2d 683 (N.J.); 3 C.J.S. 117 and 118;2 Am. Jur. 249 .”
It is a well recognized principle of law in this jurisdiction that the laws in force at the time of the execution of a contract become a part of the contract. This embraces laws which affect the contract's validity, construction, discharge and enforcement.
Spearman v. Burial Association,
Harris v. Trust Co.,
“At the outset the plaintiff Imew that he was dealing with the representatives of a dead man, and consequently the law imposed upon him the duty of ascertaining the extent of the authority of the parties to dispose of the real estate. The power of personal representatives to contract with respect to real property of decedent is limited and fenced in both by statute and the decisions.”
This case differs from the instant case in that in the former specific performance is sought and the action is against executors in their representative capacity; however, the holding as to notice of the representative capacity of defendants is pertinent to decision in the instant case.
Appellant cites and relies on the case of
Warren v. Dail,
“In Joyner v. Crisp it was held that the obligations of the contract, the subject-matter of litigation, were to be performed as an entirety, and the parties were relieved of same, and of all liability thereunder because it appeared on the face of the contract itself that, in substantial and material features, there was an inability to perform. The portions of the opinion as to the effect of notice must be understood in reference to the conditions there presented, and are not applicable to the facts of this record.”
“If a complaint states facts constituting a cause of action for specific performance, and also one for damages for a breach *17 of contract, a failure of the first will not prevent his recovery on the second, whatever may have been the prayer for relief, citing Sternburger v. McGowan, 12-20 and 21. And, assuredly, in the absence of any facts tending to show fraud or imposition, avoiding the contract or creating an estoppel, damages for wrongful breach of contract to convey are not now denied merely because the party seeking relief was aware, at the time of the contract, or before suit, that the other had no title. It is well understood that many contracts of this kind are entered into under just these circumstances, the parties believing they could obtain the title, and being allowed till the time of trial to procure and tender it. . . .”
Warren v. Dail
and
Joyner v. Crisp
are distinguishable factually in that in
Warren
the facts do not show that the remainder-men are minors so as to require legal action as a condition precedent to sale of the entire interest of the property, as was true in the case of
Joyner v. Crisp.
It is also clear that
Warren v. Dail
does not overrule
Joyner v. Crisp.
Plaintiff correctly states that the rules laid down in
Joyner v. Crisp
and
LeRoy v. Jacobosky
exclude cases where the agent receives the consideration for the contract, as in the cases of
Russell v. Koonce,
Plaintiff must have known that defendant Bank, as trustee, was acting in a capacity in which it could only deliver a perfect title under order and direction of the court. Had defendant Bank tendered plaintiff a deed without court confirmation, plaintiff would not have been obliged to accept it. The letter clearly shows that control of the sale was already vested in the court, and the writer of the letter recognized that it must there remain.
The record reveals that Wachovia Bank and Trust Company exhausted every means to properly obtain a resale of the property, except to prosecute an appeal to this Court. The action of the resident judge relating to confirmation of the sale was discretionary, Harrell v. Blythe, supra, and appellant has failed to show abuse of discretion on the part of the resident judge.
The existing law became a part of the contract, and plaintiff was clearly charged with notice that defendant Wachovia Bank had no authority to act without order, direction and confirmation of the court. The facts do not disclose that defendant Bank undertook to guarantee a ratification of any of its acts.
In order to recover compensatory damages in a contract action, plaintiff must show that the damages were the natural and probable
*18
result of the acts complained of and must show loss with a reasonable certainty, and damages may not be based upon mere speculation or conjecture.
Lieb v. Mayer,
Here, if plaintiff technically had a good cause of action, he could only recover nominal damages. If defendant Bank had successfully prevailed on the court to order a resale, plaintiff would have had no assurance that he could purchase the property. He would, at most, have had a right to bid at public sale. G.S. 1-339.27. There could have been no compensatory damages as a consequence of the failure of defendant Bank to obtain an order of resale.
We have carefully examined all of plaintiff’s remaining exceptions and assignments of error and find no prejudicial error.
Affirmed.
