75 Mo. App. 221 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
The answer was a general denial. There was a trial and judgment for the plaintiff and the defendant appealed. The defendant, at the conclusion of the evidence, requested the court by an instruction to direct the jury that under the pleadings and evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. This instruction was refused and the action of the court in refusing the same is assigned as error.
The evidence presented by the abstract of the record tends to prove substantially these facts: That D. M. Steele was a member of the mercantile copartnership of Steele & Walker; that his individual assets amounted in value to several hundred thousand dollars; that Steele & Walker, and Mr. Steele individually, made an assignment to Wheeler and Weakley of their entire copartnership and individual assets for the benefit of all their creditors; that plaintiff presented a claim to said assignees for $502 for medical services rendered the Mr. Steele by him which was duly allowed by said assignee’s against the latter’s estate.
The evidence further tends to show that shortly after the assignment an agreement was entered into between Mr. Steele and a great number of his partnership and individual creditors to the effect that a mercantile corporation was thereafter to be organized, having a capital stock of one thousand shares of $100
The testimony of the plaintiff was that Weakley “came to me and said he was collecting the individual claims and asked me if I was willing to put my claim in with the others — he knew that I had a claim against Mr. Steele — and take the assets, against which my claim was proven, out of the hands of the assignees and turn them over to this corporation, and asked if I was willing to go in with the other individual creditors. He said if I would do that my claim would be paid. That it was a matter of transferring the liability of the assignees to the corporation. And I said, ‘Why, certainly, I,am willing to do anything that will help Mr. Steele.’ And I signed it with the assurance
Weakley was to be one of the directors in the intended corporation. After the consent of all of the creditors to the transfer of the property by the assignees had been obtained it was organized in pursuance of the agreement and an order of the circuit court was made directing the assignees to transfer and deliver the assigned property to the corporation. Mr. Steele, under agreement previously referred to, was'to be made president of the corporation and to receive an annual salary of $3,000. It further appears that in about a month after the organization of the corporation seven hundred and ninety-four of the shares therein, which had been originally issued to Mr. Steele, were transferred to the wife of Mr. Weakley.
Courts will look at the substance of the transaction, and vendors or others who are in reality the promoters will not escape liability by the interposition of a nominal vendor or a nominal promoter who professes to purchase and re-sell, or to undertake the financial operations incident to forming and floating a company. Alger on Promoters & Promotion of Corp., sec. 7. Turning to the acts of Weakley, what he did is already sufficiently indicated, and it is plain that he was active in removing obstacles in the way of setting the corporation afloat. It was not in the discharge of any duty as assignee that he obtained the consent of creditors to the transfer of the assigned property to the corporation, and their assignment to it of their claims. If he had simply obtained their consent to the transfer, without the assignment and without any promise that the corporation would assume and discharge such claims the case would be different. In view of the liberal compensation which is usually allowed assignees
The activity displayed by him in carrying forward the scheme to withdraw the property from the assignment and place it in the possession of the corporation would indicate that he was a promoter, yet it may be said if so that he was only a nominal promoter. It must be conceded that Mr. Steele was principally interested in the promotion of the corporation. It is true the commercial creditors were also interested for they no doubt foresaw that the assigned property administered by the corporation would be more beneficial to them than by the assignees. Mr. Steele was to be the recipient of a handsome annual salary from the corporation and was to be again placed in possession of his large property, and consequently he was greatly interested in the promotion of the corporation. He, or, which is the same thing, his attorney, placed in Weakley’s hands the paper to which he was to obtain the signatures of creditors. For whom did he act in exercising this commission? It appears that an agreement or settlement had to be made with each creditor before his signature could be obtained. The
In looking at the substance of the various transactions in which Weakley participated and to which we have already adverted it becomes plain that the position which he assumed in those transactions was of a fiduciary nature as respects the corporation. He solicited an assignment to it of the claims of creditors and pledged it to pay the same. In view of all the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence in doing this, we think we are justified in deducing the inference that he was not representing Mr. Steele simply as his agent, but that he was subserving some interest of his own and therefore he was a promoter of the corporation for which he assumed to act.
And if Weakley was not a promoter but an assumed agent of the intended corporation and in the-latter capacity made the agreement already stated with plaintiff it is not perceived why, after the organization of the defendant, it could not impliedly assume the responsibility of said agreement and make the same binding on it. Such an assumption would be implied if the defendant, with knowledge of the facts, appropriated to itself the benefits and advantages derived from said agreement. Mechem on Agency, sec. 75; Thompson on Corp., sec. 489. If this agreement was adopted by the defendant after its organization it thus became binding, and such adoption could be shown by acquiescence. Furniture Co. v. Crawford, supra. In any view that may be taken of the evidence adduced we think it was sufficient to take the case to the jury.
This instruction in enunciation is at variance with the rule declared by the supreme court in Gould v. Hill, ante. It will be seen by reference to the italicised words of said instruction that it advised the jury that the defendant was bound by the promise of the said Weakley if it accepted the property transferred to it and the assigned claim of the plaintiff, while Gould v. Hill declares that a corporation is not bound by the contracts of its promoters unless so provided by its charter or by ratification or express provision after it becomes incorporated or where it has, knowing its terms and conditions, received some benefit. Accordingly, to entitle the plaintiff to recover on the theory of a receipt by defendant of the benefits or advantages flowing from the promise of Weakley to him he must show that the defendant had knowledge of the nature and terms of such promise. The rule is, that any ratification of an unauthorized contract in order to be made effectual and obligatory upon the alleged principal must be shown to have been made by him with full knowledge of all the material facts connected with the transaction to which it relates; and especially must it appear that the existence of the contract and its nature and consideration were known to him. He must know the facts. Mechem on Agency, sec. 129, and the numerous authorities there cited; Chouteau v. Allen, 70 Mo. 290; Winsor v. Bank, 18 Mo. App. 665;
Nor was this error cured by the defendant’s instruction which told the jury that the burden was on the plaintiff to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, the facts necessary under the instruction of the court to authorize a recovery. This was not the assertion of the converse of plaintiff’s instruction nor a request by the defendant for the submission of the case to the jury on a similar theory. It was no more than a request that the plaintiff be required to establish his. theory by a preponderance of the evidence, and by making the same it did not thereby adopt the error of the plaintiff’s instruction.
On account of the error in the giving of plaintiff’s instruction the judgment will be reversed and cause remanded.