16 S.E. 415 | N.C. | 1892
The defendant denied the debt, and resisted payment upon the further ground that the contract was not in writing under seal of the corporation, nor signed by any authorized officer thereof, and therefore void under section 683 of The Code. When the plaintiff rested his case, the court intimated he could not recover on his own showing, the contract being above $100, was not according to the formalities prescribed by The Code, sec. 683. Whereupon the plaintiff submitted to a nonsuit and appealed.
The court ruled that the plaintiff could not recover in any aspect of the evidence, because the contract of the defendant (433) company was not "in writing and under seal of the corporation, *273
or signed by some officer of the company duly authorized," as required by The Code, sec. 683. That section and its purport was construed in Curtis v.Piedmont Company,
The defendant contends, however, that this action is brought upon the express contract, and that no recovery can be had upon a quantummeruit, and that if this is not so, still there was no evidence to justify a verdict for the value of the services. The complaint is sufficient to warrant a recovery, either upon express contract or for the value of the work and labor done. Stokes v. Taylor,
The nonsuit must be set aside, and the case remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
REVERSED.
Cited: Luttrell v. Martin,