782 N.E.2d 117 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2002
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *473
{¶ 3} The contract used the name "State Chevrolet" many times throughout, never adding Inc. to the end of the name. All clauses referring to obligations and rights named State Chevrolet as the obligor or obligee, never naming Sweeney personally. Then, pre-printed under a signature line was "Douglas V. Sweeney," and pre-printed below that was "State Chevrolet." It is worth noting that pre-printed under the signature line for the plaintiff's signature was "C. Bruce Hubley," and pre-printed below that was "Special Events Division The Promotion Co., Inc.," with nothing explicitly indicating that C. Bruce Hubley was president or was signing as president of The Promotion Company.
{¶ 4} Sweeney signed the contract on January 15, 1998, the due date of the first payment. We note here that according to a list of exhibits filed before trial, one of Sweeney's exhibits was the first check paid to The Promotion Company from the account of State Chevrolet, Inc.; it could be reasonable for a trial court to assume that this check was viewed by Hubley before he signed the contract on January 19, 1998. In any case, the 1998 event proceeded as planned. Under the terms of the contract, it would extend automatically each year unless a party notified the other of their desire to terminate the contract by August 28, 1998. Thereafter, in December 1998, Sweeney notified Hubley that the dealership was closing and that it could no longer be the presenting sponsor. The Promotion Company was not paid the fee for 1999 or 2000.
{¶ 5} On January 13, 2000, The Promotion Company filed a breach of contract suit against Sweeney dba State Chevrolet. Sweeney's answer defended by claiming that he executed the agreement as an agent for the disclosed principal of State Chevrolet, Inc. He thus urged he was not personally liable and/or plaintiff failed to join all necessary parties. On August 8, 2000, plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment. The motion argued there is no evidence that "State Chevrolet" exists as a corporate entity and there is no dispute that a contract was signed and breached, pointing to Sweeney's deposition. Hubley's affidavit was attached to the motion but did not speak to the intent of the parties on personal liability or knowledge of State Chevrolet's corporate identity.
{¶ 6} Sweeney responded by citing Indiana law on agent liability and arguing that the court must determine the intent of the parties where the contract is ambiguous as to its intent to hold the agent personally liable. Sweeney's response directed the court to portions of Hubley's deposition which was filed that day. Sweeney also attached his own affidavit which stated that State Chevrolet, Inc. was incorporated in 1944 and existed until dissolution on December 20, 1998. An exhibit from the Secretary of State's office confirmed this *475 period of corporate existence. The affidavit noted that Hubley prepared the contract. Sweeney also disclosed that his intent at the time of signing was to execute the agreement as president and on behalf of State Chevrolet, Inc. and not in his individual capacity. Also attached was a letter from Hubley to Sweeney sent after Sweeney advised that the dealership was going out of business; in this letter, Hubley claimed, "all liabilities and obligations of State Chevrolet are still legally binding and will have to be resolved either by State Chevrolet or the new dealership owner."
{¶ 7} On April 23, 2001, the court heard oral arguments on summary judgment, orally overruled plaintiff's motion for summary judgment, and proceeded to a bench trial. The trial court released its judgment entry on January 31, 2002, wherein it stated that summary judgment had been denied before trial, plaintiff failed to prove Sweeney's personal liability under Indiana law at trial, and Sweeney executed the agreement in his capacity as president of State Chevrolet, Inc. In ruling there was no personal liability, the trial court characterized its order as a dismissal of plaintiff's complaint. The Promotion Company filed timely notice of appeal on March 1, 2002.
{¶ 9} "The trial court erred in overruling the Plaintiff-Appellant's Motion for Summary Judgment in the Court's Entry of January 31, 2002."
{¶ 10} "The trial court erred in dismissing Plaintiff-Appellant's Complaint in the Court's Entry of January 31, 2002."
{¶ 11} "Where an individual enters into a contract without the designation of a corporation that is required by the law of the state in which he does business, may corporate status thereafter be bestowed upon him by reference to irrelevant internal provisions of the contract he signed as an individual, particularly, so as to negate his personal liability?"
{¶ 12} Appellant complains that the trial court's judgment entry failed to cite or explain the Indiana law that it used to reach its conclusion that Indiana law supports its ruling. Appellant states that the identity of parties is not susceptible to change after the fact. Appellant cites R.C.
{¶ 14} First, we must point out that the contract is to be interpreted under Indiana law, but this does not mean that this court applies Indiana law to the procedural mechanisms of the court. Thus, contrary to some cites in the briefs, when we discuss the requirements for summary judgment or for appellate transcripts, we are discussing the procedural rules that exist in Ohio, not Indiana procedure. The Supreme Court of Ohio has held that if the evidence at trial showed a genuine issue of material fact, then any error in denying summary judgment (based on a failure to demonstrate a genuine issue for trial) is moot and reversal would not serve substantial justice. Continental Ins. Co. v.Whittington (1994),
{¶ 15} However, appellant is correct in responding that the transcript is not necessary to determine the question of law set forth in his issue presented. That is, whether the trial court was permitted to view any evidence at all besides the face of the contract to determine personal liability and/or whether the face of the contract per se establishes personal liability. We do not need a transcript to determine this question of law because if appellant is correct, then any genuine issues of intent were irrelevant and not permitted to be determined at trial. Similarly, the Whittington doctrine would not preclude review because the legal *477
issue in this case could not be corrected or mooted at a trial. In other words, when the alleged error in the denial of summary judgment is based purely on a question of law that must be answered without regards to issues of fact, then the denial of summary judgment is reviewable. SeeLake Tomahawk Prop. Owners Assn. v. Smith, 7th Dist. No. 00CO37, 2001-Ohio-3970. See, also, Ahern v. Ameritech (2000),
{¶ 16} In conclusion, appellant argues that as a matter of law, from the four corners of the document itself, Sweeney is personally liable. If appellant is legally correct, then the case must be reversed and remanded. If appellant is legally incorrect (and the trial court was permitted to review parol or extrinsic evidence to determine the parties knowledge and intent), then our analysis would end with an affirmance at that point, and we would not review the court's weighing of the evidence on intent due to the lack of transcript.
{¶ 18} Appellant's arguments remain totally focused on the lack of the word Inc. from the end of State Chevrolet in the contract. However, such an omission in a contract drafted by the complaining party does not per se place liability on Sweeney. Although the contract drafted byappellant may not have used one of the statutory words in the name of the company for which appellee was the president, the true name of the company does contain these words. According to documentation provided in response to appellant's motion for summary judgment, State Chevrolet, Inc. was a corporation that existed in Ohio at the time the contract was entered, and Sweeney was its president and statutory agent. Sweeney stated this in his answer and supported this statement with evidence in his response to summary judgment. Thus, corporate non-existence could not have been declared as a matter of law by the trial court prior to *478 trial based merely on the fact that the contract omitted the word Inc. from the company's name.
{¶ 19} To support these conclusions, we refer to the statutes dealing with corporate formation. A domestic corporation for profit exists if it is "formed" under the laws of this state. R.C.
{¶ 20} The corporate name indicators that must be a part of the corporate name in the articles of incorporation submitted to the Secretary of State are mandatory in order to initially form a corporation. The omission of a corporate name indicator in subsequent business dealings does not extinguish the existence of a corporation and place personal liability on the representative who signs a contract for the company. See, e.g., U.S. v. Kessler (S.D.Ohio 1972),
{¶ 21} If this were so, then the trade name and fictitious name statutes would not exist. Under R.C.
{¶ 22} This leads us to a review of the general principles of contract interpretation and agency law. We shall outline the view of the American Law Institute's relevant Restatement volume, the provisions in the Uniform Commercial Code which are often viewed as persuasive authority in simple contract construction, and case law that includes statutory interpretations. *479
{¶ 23} According to Restatement (Second) of Agency, § 322 (1958), where there is an undisclosed principal (i.e. no evidence of agency and no mention of principal), the agent is liable. The agent is also liable where the principal is known by both parties to be nonexistent such as in the case of promoters of a corporation signing contracts for a corporation which has not yet been formed. Id. at § 326, adopted by Illinois Controls, Inc. v. Langham (1994),
{¶ 24} Pursuant to § 327 of this Restatement, the rules on contract interpretation are applicable in an action against an agent. If it appears unambiguously that the agent is a party or is not a party, then extrinsic evidence is not admissible to show contrary intent except to reform the contract. Id. at § 323(1). An example of unambiguous expression of agency, or the lack thereof, is where the agent signs with words such as "acting for myself alone." Id. at § 323, illus. 1. If the fact of agency appears and there is not an unambiguous expression of an intention either to make the agency a party or not to make him a party, then extrinsic evidence can be introduced to show intent. Id. at § 323(2). The statement as to the parties may appear either in the body of the instrument or in the signature; an ambiguity may exist due toa contradictory, defective, or partial expression in either. Id. at § 323, cmt. a.
{¶ 25} Here, we have a dispute between the original parties. We do not have a representative capacity expressly spelled out, but we do have a business name under the individual's name and a business name used throughout the agreement. This business is the "final end user" of all services and is obligated to make payments. See Edcom Prod., Inc. v.Wattenmaker Advertising, Inc. (Dec. 23, 1982), 8th Dist. No. 44829. As for naming the represented person, appellant seems to argue that without the word Inc., the principal was not actually disclosed. However, a principal was disclosed; the omission of Inc. by the plaintiff-drafter of the contract did not make the principal undisclosed or partially disclosed under the terms of the above Restatement sections. We move to an analysis of other law. See Restatement (Third) of Agency, Tentative Draft No. 2, Chapter 2, Topic 4 (2001) (noting that agency law does not operate in isolation from other doctrines). *480
{¶ 26} A relevant statute in both Ohio and Indiana which is derived from Uniform Commercial Code 3-402 implies a similar result. Ind. Code § 26-1-3.1-402; O.R.C.
{¶ 27} This new (1993/1994) signature interpretation law acts to further insulate the representative. The Official Comment to U.C.C. 3-402 notes how the former version (U.C.C. 3-403) caused courts to refuse to allow an agent to attempt to prove intent where he signed his name but did not mention his principal. The comment then states that U.C.C. 3-402(b)(2) changes this result. The comment also notes, "Former Section 3-403 spoke of the represented person being `named' in the instrument. Section 3-402 speaks of the represented person being `identified' in the instrument. This change in terminology is intended to reject decisions under former Section 3-403(2) requiring that the instrument state theexact legal name of the represented person." (Emphasis added.) Thus, not only does this section establish that failure to use the exact legal name of the represented person is not fatal to the agent, it also establishes that extrinsic evidence on intent is admissible in a dispute between the original parties in a situation such as the one before us. Besides setting forth some general agency principles and reviewing the U.C.C. signature of representative section, we have collected other authority on the subject.
{¶ 28} Recently, an Indiana Appellate Court ruled on a case similar to the one before us. Evans v. Medical Prof. CollectionServ., Inc. (Ind.App. 2001),
{¶ 29} The cable company assigned its rights to a collection service who filed suit against Evans personally. The trial court found Evans personally liable. However, the appellate court reversed. The court noted that the issue was one of contract interpretation. Id. at 797. Thus, the court's goal was to determine the intent of the parties at the time of execution as revealed by the language in the agreement. As in all contract cases, interpretation is a matter of law where the terms are unambiguous. Id. However, when the meaning cannot be gleaned from the four corners of the agreement, the parties' intent becomes a question of fact upon resort to extrinsic evidence. Id. at 797-798. See, also,Alexander v. Capitol Lumber Co. (1914),
{¶ 30} The appellate court noted that whether the contract was ambiguous or not is determined by asking if a reasonable person would find the agreement subject to more than one interpretation. Evans,
{¶ 31} Similarly, we have a defendant who was not the drafter of the contract. We have a car dealership that is referred to in the contract as its common fictitious name rather than its proper legal name which includes Inc. We have a contract that, on the very first line, explicitly states that the contract is between The Promotion Company, Inc. and State Chevrolet, rather than between plaintiff and Sweeney. We can infer no desire to hide the existence of a corporation. See OilSupply Co. v. Hires Parts Serv. (Ind. 2000),
{¶ 32} In Price v. Aronson, the plaintiff attempted to place personal liability on the defendant who was a shareholder, officer, and director of a body shop. (Ind.App. 1994),
{¶ 33} The appellate court noted that it could find no Indiana law addressing whether failure to comply with Indiana Code § 23-1-23-1(a) in everyday business dealings with the public justifies imposing personal liability on the director of the corporation. Price,
{¶ 34} The Indiana Supreme Court affirmed the decision of the Indiana Appellate Court in Price v. Aronson (Ind. 1994),
{¶ 35} In construing all of the above law, we find that the trial court did not err in failing to grant summary judgment and in proceeding to trial on the *483 genuine issues of fact surrounding any ambiguities in the contract regarding liability.1
{¶ 36} For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the trial court is hereby affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Donofrio and Waite, JJ., concur.