33 Cal. 183 | Cal. | 1867
Lead Opinion
Action for work, labor and services rendered by the plaintiffs as attorneys and counsellors at law, for the defendant, a corporation duly organized and constituted under the Act of the Legislature, entitled “ An Act to provide for the incorporation of railroad companies and the management of the affairs thereof, and other matters relating thereto,” passed on the 20th of May, 1861, and of the several Acts supplementary thereto and amendatory thereof. The corporation was organized in December, 1862, and the plaintiffs were employed in June, 1863, by the President of the railroad company, and thereafter they rendered and performed labor and services in and about the business of the company, in fulfilment of their obligation under their employment. While the plaintiffs were engaged in the defendant’s service the President of the company had frequent interviews with them in respect to the business which they were managing, and during the same time the Directors and officers of the company, who knew of the employment of the plaintiffs and of their attending to the business of the company, advised with them respecting such business. It was proved on the trial that the services rendered by the plaintiffs were worth five thousand five hundred dollars, for which sum, less five hundred dollars, before then paid, the jury rendered a verdict in their favor, on which judgment was entered.
The books and records of the corporation were produced on the trial, but it did not appear therefrom that any corporate action had been taken by the Board of Directors, assembled or otherwise, concerning any employment of the plaintiffs as attorneys for the corporation; nor that there was such an action as French v. Teschemacher, in and about which the work, labor and services mentioned were rendered and performed; nor did it appear on the trial that at any meeting of the Board of Directors any mention was made of the action of French v. Teschemacher, or of the employment of the plaintiffs therein.
The third section of the Act of 1861, (Laws 1861, p. 609,) under which the corporation was organized, declares that such corporation “ shall be capable in law to make all contracts, acquire real and personal property, purchase, hold and convey any and all real and personal property whatever necessary for the construction, completion and maintenance of such railroad and for the erection of all necessary buildings and yards or places and appurtenances for the use of the same, and be capable of suing and being sued, and have a common or corporate seal, and make and alter the same at pleasure, and generally to possess all the powers and privileges for the purpose of carrying on the business of the corporation that private individuals and natural persons now enjoy.” The ninth section of the Act provides that the Directors of any railroad company incorporated under any law of the State in force, “ shall, for and on behalf of such company, manage the affairs thereof, make and execute contracts of whatever nature or kind, fully and completely to carry out the objects and purposes of such corporation, in any such way and manner as they may think proper, and exercise generally the corporate powers of such company; and such Directors shall also have full power to make such bylaws as they may think proper, and alter the same from time to time, for the transfer of the stock and the management of the property and business of the company of every description whatever, within the objects and purposes of such company, and for prescribing the duties of officers, artificers and employes of said company, and for the appointment of all officers, and all else that by them may be deemed needful
The tenth section of the Act reads as follows: “ Seo. 10. The Directors shall also cause to be kept a book, to be called ‘ Eecord of Corporation Debts,’ in which the Secretary shall record all written contracts of the Directors, and a succinct statement of the debts of the company, the amount thereof, and with whom made, which book shall at all times be open to the inspection of any stockholder or party in interest. When any contract or debt shall be paid or discharged, the Secretary shall make a memorandum thereof in the margin, or in some convenient place in the record, where the same is recorded. Eo contract shall be binding upon the company unless made in writing.”
The defendant offered to prove that at the time the plaintiffs' were employed by the President of the company, as before stated, there was, and since then to the time of the trial had remained in force, certain bylaws of said corporation, duly adopted and upon its records, one of which is in the following words: “2sTo contract shall be binding on the company unless previously sanctioned and ordered by the Board of Directors; and all contracts made by the Board of Directors, or any officer, agent or employé of the company, shall be subject to and shall contain the express stipulation that no stockholder shall be individually or personally liable or bound for the debts of the company, beyond or exceeding the actual amount of stock by him, subscribed or held, and all contracts not containing or subject to such stipulation shall be void, and neither the Board of Directors, nor any officer, agent or employé of the company, nor any other person, shall have the power or authority to bind the company or the stockholders by any contract or agreement, unless the same shall contain such stipulation.”
The plaintiffs " objected to the evidence so offered, on
After verdict and judgment the defendant made an application for a new trial, which proved ineffectual, and thereupon appealed. The real, and in fact the only question, which exists in the ease, is whether the corporation—the Western Pacific Eailroad Company—could be made liable on any contract entered into by the proper officers of the company, unless the same was reduced in some form to writing.
By the third section of the Act of 1861, as we have already seen, the corporation possessed, at the time the President of the company employed the plaintiffs, all the powers and privileges for the purpose of carrying on the business of the corporation that private individuals and natural persons had. The power to make and execute contracts the Act has committed to the Directors of the corporation, and declared, among other things, that “ no contract shall be binding upon the company unless made in writing.” But notwithstanding the power to make and execute contracts has been vested in the Board of Directors, we do not understand the objection of the defendant to be that the contract in the first instance entered into by the President of the company with the plaintiffs was ultra vires, and therefore void. We presume the defendant has foreborne any such objection, because the evidence sufficiently established a ratification by the Directors in pais of what the President had done, or that the open and notorious exercise of the power to enter into this contract must be regarded as presupposing an authority delegated by the Board of Directors, in some form accredited by law, to the President of the company for the purpose. (United States v. Dandridge, 12 Wheat. 70; Olcott v. Tioga Railroad Co., 27 N. Y. 558, 559; Hoyt v. Thompson, 19 N. Y. 215, 216; Argenti v. City of San Francisco, 16 Cal. 265, 266; Bank of Kentucky v. Schuylkill Bank, 1 Parsons' Select Cases in Equity, 250, 251.)
In Bank of Kentucky v. Schuylkill Bank the Court said:
The statement on motion' for a new trial shows that “ on production of the books of the entire records and the examination thereof, it did not appear thereby that any corporate action had been taken by the Board of Directors, assembled ór otherwise, concerning any employment of the plaintiffs as attorneys for the corporation in said action of French v. Teschemacher, and it did not appear by the said records in anywise, and it did not appear on the trial in anywise, that at
Eeturning to the objection made by the defendant to the contract entered into by the company by its President with the plaintiffs, we find that it relates entirely to the mode and manner of contracting, which it is claimed for the defendant is in effect prescribed by the statute, negatively if not affirmatively, by the immunity contained in the clause, “ no-1 contract shall be binding on the company unless made in I writing.” These words, in their largest import, are broad enough to embrace every species of contract, and to require, in the most exhaustive sense, every agreement or undertaking on the part of the company, to be in writing in order to be of any binding obligation. But is it necessary to give to the language of the statute a scope so comprehensive, when to do so would involve results of extreme inconvenience not only to individuals dealing with the company, but to the company itself ? The words of the statute relied on by the defendant in bar of the plaintiffs’ right to recover, properly interpreted, relate to executory contracts. In our judgment they are not, when considered in conjunction with the other provisions of the statute and in view of the objects of the corporation, to be read as exempting the company from liability in all cases founded in contract not in writing. It may be that while such contract remains executory on both sides, an action
To give the statute the construction which the defendant insists upon would be to hold that the company could not be cofmpelled to answer for .any breach of a verbal contract to transport over its road and deliver at an appointed destination goods intrusted to it for the purpose, for a consideration paid; or for a breach of a like contract to safely carry a passenger to a place designated, for a consideration completely performed on his part. On the other hand, such construction would be to hold that the company could not recover for the carriage of property or persons over the road after the service 'had been rendered, unless the contract to pay therefor was ■' in writing; because contracts between a railroad corporation and an individual, as well as between natural persons, must i be mutual, or else neither party is bound.
\ The clause of the Act under consideration does not render/l verbal contracts, of the kind of that on which this action was/ brought, void. They are voidable so long as unexecuted or both sides; but when executed by one of the parties by com- ’ píete performance, the other becomes liable and must render the consideration stipulated in ...advance, or a reasonable compensation to be ascertained* ‘ás a matter of fact, if not fixed and agreed upon by the parties themselves. The doctrine here laid down must be admitted to be just, and we have no doubt of its perfect accord with the true intent and meaning of the Act, which placés the corporation acting within the scope of its powers upon the same footing as natural persons. The third section of the Act declares such corporations capable of suing and'iieing sued, and generally as possessing all the powers and privileges for the purpose of
The fourth section of Ch. 3, Stat. 29, Car. II, provides that no action shall be brought to charge any person upon any agreement that is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof, unless the agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof shall be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or by some person thereunto by him lawfully authorized. In Donellan v. Read, 3 Barn. & Adol. 899, it was decided that where a contract within the letter of the statute had been fully performed on one side, the consideration of that performance, though, by the contract not payable until after the expiration of the year, could be recovered by action when the stipulated time arrived. (Browne on Statute of Frauds, Sec. 117; Lockwood v. Barnes, 3 Hill, 130.) And so a party who has paid money in fulfilment of a verbal contract for an interest in land, which cannot be enforced because within the Statute of Frauds, may recover back the money so paid in an action for money had and received upon the refusal or inability of the other party to the contract to.carry into execution the contract on his part. (Kidder v. Hunt, 1 Pick. 328; Seymour v. Bennet, 14 Mass. 266; Barickman v. Kuykendall, 6 Blackf. 22.) In like manner, one who has rendered services in execution of a verbal contract, which on account of the statute cannot be enforced against the other party, can recover the value of the services upon a quantum meruit. (Souch v. Strawbridge, 2 Com. Bench, 813, 814; Burlingame v. Burlingame, 7 Cow. 94; King v. Brown, 2 Hill, 485; Browne on Stat. of Frauds, Sec. 118.) It would indeed be extremely unjust if the law was so construed as to permit a party, after having obtained the benefit of a contract, originally within the Statute of Frauds or other statute of like or analagous nature, not only
In the case of Fister v. La Rue and Others, Trustees, etc., 15 Barb. 323, it was objected to the recovery by the plaintiff* that she was not employed by the corporation to render the services for which she sued, in the mode and manner prescribed by the statute. But the Court held that in an action brought upon an executed contract, to recover for services rendered under it, no proof that the contract was made on the part of the corporation in the mode and manner prescribed by the statute was necessary. The Court in further consideration of the question said: “It is well settled, at least-in this country, .that where a person is employed for a corporation, by one assuming to act in its behalf, and goes on and renders the services according to the agreement, with the knowledge of its officers, and without notice that the contract is not recognized as valid and binding, such corpo-. ration will be held to have sanctioned and ratified the contract, and be compelled to pay for the services according to the agreement. ' Having availed itself of the services and) received the benefits, it is bound in conscience to pay, and will not be heard to say that the original agreement was not made by a person legally authorized to contract. (Ang. & Ames on Corp., 216, 218, Oh. 8, Sec. 8.) Where the contract is still executory, and nothing has been done under it, and the action is to recover damages merely for non-performance, it is for the plaintiff to show a legal contract binding upon the corporation.”
The case here cited clearly distinguishes between contracts executory and executed, recognizing the doctrine that so long as a contract remains entirely executory the party who seeks to recover merely for non-performance of it by the other, must show a legal contract binding upon the corporation.
In the consideration of this case we have proceeded on the theory that the contract entered into with the plaintiffs was one which the corporation by its duly constituted agents had
In conclusion, we may remark that we have not overlooked the cases of Zottman v. The City and County of San Francisco, 20 Cal. 96, and the cases therein cited, nor that of Wallace v. The Mayor and Common Council of San José, 29 Cal. 180. In the first of these cases it was held that where the charter of a municipal corporation prescribes the mode in which its contracts shall he made, the mode must he followed in order to render them valid and binding. The doctrine thus declared had not its origin in that case, as will be observed by reference to the authorities referred to therein. When to a corporation is prescribed, by the law of its being, the mode of exercising its power, it results necessarily that such mode must he observed in order to render its acts binding. But when, by its organic law it is declared in general terms that
In the case of Wallace v. The Mayor and Common Council of San José, the question decided was one relating to the power of the Common Council. In that case the Common Council entered into a contract with the plaintiff, which was plainly beyond the power delegated by the Act of incorporation, and the point determined was that the corporation could not be rendered liable upon it, for the obvious reason that it was not the contract of the corporation—it being ultra vires under the organic law of the corporation.
Judgment affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment, and on the ground that if a person not duly authorized make a contract on behalf of a trading corporation, and the corporation take and hold the benefit derived from such contract, it will be held to have
It is quite impossible to reconcile the authorities upon this subject, but in so far as trading corporations are concerned, the decisions, in this State at least, are consistent with each other and sustain the proposition. Some of them hold municipal corporations to be within the principle. (Gas Company v. San Francisco, 9 Cal. 453; Argenti v. San Francisco, 16 Cal. 265; Fraylor v. Sonora Mining Co., 17 Cal. 594; Rosborough v. The Shasta Fiver Canal Co., 22 Cal. 556; Allen v. Citizens' Steam Navigation Co., 22 Cal. 28.)
Concurrence Opinion
This is an action to recover attorney’s fees in the suit of French v. Central Pacific Railroad Company and Western Pacific Railroad Company, in which plaintiffs, upon the request of the President and officers of the company, acted as attorneys and conducted the defence to a successful termination. The defendant, as the result of the litigation, received into its treasury two hundred and fifty thousand dollars of the bonds of the City and County of San Francisco. The main point, in the case, to which all others is subordinate, is, that there '» was no contract of retainer in writing between plaintiffs and j defendant, and, for that reason, no liability could be incurred by the defendant to pay for the services. The question arises, under section ten of the Act of 1861, concerning railroad corporations, which provides that “ the Directors shall cause to be kept a book, to be called ‘ Becord of Corporation Debts,’ in which the Secretary shall“record all written con- (\ tracts of the Directors and a succinct statement of the debts of the company, the amount thereof, and with whom made; which book shall at all times be open to the inspection of any ' stockholder or party in interest. When any contract or debt shall be paid or discharged, the Secretary shall make a memorandum thereof in the margin, or in some convenient
The last clause is the one supposed to be an insuperable obstacle in the way of a recovery in this case. When taken in connection with the context, it is not so clear what was intended by this provision. But, manifestly, it cannot possibly have been intended to have so broad a scope as is claimed for it; for, to give it such a construction, would be, t.o so ¡utterly bind the company down to a mode of proceeding, that, under it, it would be utterly impossible for it to perform its functions, or transact its ordinary business. It could not do the least thing in the way of contract, whereby a right is acquired, or a responsibility incurred about the smallest matters, which are occurring every minute in the day, without making a contract in writing and having it recorded by the Secretary in the “ Eecord of Corporation Debts.” It would be impossible to make a contract, although fully executed on one side, which would bind the other party, to carry a passenger, or a pound of freight from station to station, or purchase a cord of wood, or a pint of oil, without these formalities. To give the provision any such construction would be absurd in the extreme. Ho man in his senses could knowingly vote for such a law, and no sane man would attempt to build, or operate, a railroad under its provisions. The provision must be limited to express contracts wholly executory — such contracts as are generally made in the ordinary course of business, when important matters are involved, and there is time for deliberation, and in which the terms are usually arranged in advance, and specified with more or less particularity. It cannot refer to those liabilities, which the law itself implies from benefits received, and actually enjoyed, without making any express contract in advance, where the services have been performed on one side, and the consideration received and enjoyed by the other. The provision itself says, all “ written contracts ” shall be recorded, as if there would necessarily be other contracts. If there were to be no others
The case is different from Wallace v. San José. In that