176 F. 202 | 1st Cir. | 1910
This is an action upon an oral contract, alleged to have been made in September, 188(1, whereby, in consideration that the plaintiff would accept the position of general manager for the defendant in Australia and go to Australia in order to he general manager, the defendant corporation agreed that if, on the termination of liis employment as said general manager, the plaintiff had not succeeded in building up a satisfactory renewal commission account, the defendant would pay to him annually for the remainder of his life an amount sufficient to support him. At the close of the evidence in the court below, a verdict was directed for the defendant, on the ground that the evidence did not show authority of the president to make the contract; nor did it prove any subsequent ratification of the contract by the corporation. To this ruling the plaintiff — the plaintiff in error in this court — excepted, and now assigns the ruling as error.
The testimony shows that the alleged oral contract was made by the president.' The defendant says that the president had no authority to make the contract, and that it was never ratified afterwards by the corporation or by its trustees.
1. Did the president have authority to make the contract?
The following by-laws relating to this issue are brought to the attention of the court:
*204 “(4) Quarterly meetings of the trustees shall be held on the first Wednesdays of January, April, July, and October, and a report shall be made to them by the president of the concerns and business of the company during the previous quarter, stating particularly the contracts that have been made, the sums of money that have been received and on what accounts, the' manner in which the same shall have been invested or paid- and the amounts on hand and the amounts that should have been received during said quarter, and a general balance sheet exhibiting a full statement of the funds, investments, payments, and liabilities.”
“(11) The president shall, if present, preside at all meetings of the trustees. He shall be ex officio member and chairman of all standing committees except the auditing committee and committee on expenditures, which latter committee shall choose their own chairman. He shall also attend the meeting of any special committee when requested by the chairman. The president shall also have the general direction and superintendence of the affairs and of the officers of the company, and shall establish rules and regulations for the conduct of the business of the company and for the direction of its officers ; and in all cases in which the duties of the subordinate officers, employes and the agents of the company are not specially prescribed by its by-laws or by a resolution of the board, they shall obey the orders and instructions of the president.”
“(17) There shall be a secretary, who shall hold office during the pleasure of the board, who shall have power with the president to make contracts for insurance on life and for annuities and all other contract's necessary for the company in the management of its affairs in conformity with the rules and regulations of the board for the time being; but no policy or policies shall be issued on any single life for a sum in the aggregate greater than .$50,000. He shall have the general management of the office business and of the clerks employed in the insurance department of the company, and of the general correspondence of the company except such as reiates to business expressly in charge of the several, departments herein provided for. In the absence of the secretary the assistant secretary shall discharge such of the duties of the secretary as may be assigned Mm by the president, and the president may also, in his discretion, detail any officer or head of a department to act as secretary pro tern.”
“(25) No commissions or compensation, direct or indirect, for procuring or facilitating loans from the company shall be received by any trustee or by any of its officers or other person in its employment: and neither the solicitor nor any person in his office, nor any person whatsoever receiving a fixed salary, shall receive pay from or have any claim against the company, excepting his salary; and such salary attached to the office or employment shall be full compensation for all services rendered to the company or performed on its behalf.”
“(35) The finance committee shall consist of six. trustees, who shall meet at least once every week. All investments of the company shall be made under its direction, and it shall have the supervision of the securities held by the company and select the depositories of its funds. It shall determine all questions of salary and compensation for services when not fixed by the board or other appropriate committee.”
“(40) The committee on agencies shall consist of five trustees. It shall have the general supervision of the agency department of the company’s business, and recommend to the board what amount shall be paid by way of condensation, settlement, or commutation to any agent or his representatives.”
Touching this question, the plaintiff rests his case upon section 11, by which the president is empowered to have the general direction and supervision of the affairs and officers of the company, and to establish rules for the conduct of its business; also upon section 40, which gives the president power to fix the salary or compensation of agents; and, still further, upon section 4, which provides that at each quarterly meeting of the trustees a report shall be made by the president of the business of the company for the previous quarter, stating particularly
Upon an examination of the by-laws,, we are persuaded that they were not intended to give the president power to make such a contract as is now before the court. It seems clear that the contracts mentioned in the fourth by-law are the ordinary business contracts of the company referred to in section 11', which it is the duty of the president to report, as a statement of the business and assets of the company. at the end of the quarter. It seems clear that if it had been intended to give to the president the power to make so vital a contract for an undefined period, imposing upon the corporation obligations which could not he measured at the time of the making, such power would have been expressly conferred upon him, and would not have been allowed to rest upon mere implication. The daily conduct of the corporation business demanded that the president should have the power, with the secretary, and without calling the trustees together, to make contracts for insurances, for annuities, for other daily matters of routine, and at seasonable times to make report of 'such contracts; but we can hardly believe that the formal rule and law of the corporation intended to give the president power to bind the company for an indefinite number of years by an oral contract to do an extraordinary thing. The evidence shows how dangerous it would be to invest a president with such power as is here claimed. Por whenever a president had ceased to hold his office, either by death or resignation, every employe, and every one who dealt with the compapy, might claim that he had a binding verbal agreement; and thus it may readily be seen
It is true, however that the plaintiff is not confined to the letter of the by-laws in his endeavor to show the authorhy of the president. Parties are not held to any particular mode of proving authority of an agent of a corporation. His authority may be proved by circumstantial evidence — by testimony drawn from the whole course of dealings of the parties. A contract may be implied from corporate acts without either a vote or deed or writing. 2 Kent’s Comm. 291; Morawetz on Private Corporations, § 618; Peterson v. Mayor, 17 N. Y. 449; Olcott v. Railroad Co., 27 N. Y. 546, 84 Am. Dec. 298.
In Bank of U. S. v. Dandridge, 12 Wheat. 64, 70, 6 L. Ed. 552, Mr. Justice Story said:
“If officers of a corporation openly exercise a power which presupposes a delegated authority for the purpose, and other corporate acts show that the corporation must have contení])!atod the legal existence of such authority, the acts of such officers shall be deemed rightful, and the delegated authority will he presumed."
But, upon examining- the evidence before us, it can hardly be said that, in making the conversation which is alleged to constitute a contract, the president was acting in the open exercise of any power, within the meaning of the language of Mr. Justice Story; and it clearly cannot be said that any corporate acts of the corporation have been shown which contemplated the legal 'existence of any authority on the part of the president. The whole course of business negatives the authority of the president to make such contract, and leads to the irresistible conclusion that he had the authority, which we have just mentioned, to make only the ordinary routine contracts from day to day, but not to make other contracts, and that he clearly had no power to make an indefinite agreement for a long number of years. On the question of the president’s authority we are, then, compelled to conclude that there was no evidence, either direct or circumstantial, which ought to have been submitted to the jury.
2. Was the contract ratified by the corporation?
Ratification may undoubtedly be proved by a course of conduct consistent only with the supposition that the party ratifying intended to adopt the act as his own. Story.on Agency, §§ 239, 252.
The evidence proves beyond a doubt that the act of the president in making the alleged oral contract was never reported to the corporation or to its trustees. It is not now necessary to enter into a discussion of the various letters and other writings put in evidence upon this question. It is enough to say that, instead of showing knowledge on the part of the corporation, they distinctly disprove such knowledge. The whole conduct of the plaintiff is inconsistent with his having asserted any contract such as he alleges. The testimony negatives the infer
In considering whether the direction of a verdict for defendant is justifiable, it is clearly the duty of the court to take the view most favorable for the plaintiff. But the case presents facts about which hut one inference can fairly and reasonably be drawn from the evidence, either as to the authority of the president to contract or as to the subsequent ratification by the corporation. The learned judge who presided at the trial in the court below was clearly justified in taking the case from the jury and directing a verdict for the defendant.
3. It is unnecessary here to consider whether an agreement was ever, in fact, entered into between the president of the company and the plaintiff. The plaintiff offered certain testimony, in the court below, as to his conversation with the president in September, 1886, from which, he claims, a contract resulted. On the other hand, the defendant says that no contract was ever made, and relies upon inferences to be drawn from all the circumstantial evidence. It urges that the conduct of the plaintiff, in never asserting a contract, and in acting inconsistently with its existence, tends strongly to negative the fact that the contract was ever made, and that the whole course of business of the corporation tends to the same result. If this had been the only point at issue, it might have been the duty of the court to submit the case to the jury upon the direct evidence upon the one side and the circumstantial evidence on the other. We do not pass on this question. It is enough to say that, upon the question of the authority of the president and of the ratification by the corporation, there was nothing which ought fairfy to have gone to the jury, and it was clearly the duty of the presiding judge to direct a verdict for the defendant.
4. The plaintiff also assigns as error that the trial court excluded evidence that the plaintiff, in 1889, sold his Springfield office to the defendant company, and put the money- into the Australian business, by arrangement with President McCurdy. The court finds that this evidence was properly excluded. It was not material upon any issue in the case. It did not tend to show that the contract of 1886 had been made, or that the president had any power to'make it. The only possible question could be whether it was a part of the course of business, and had some bearing upon the question ,of ratification. We are of the opinion that it was not material on the question of ratification.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed, and the defendant in error recovers its costs of appeal. •