54 Minn. 147 | Minn. | 1893
As the defendant’s articles of incorporation provide that certificates (of insurance) will be issued only to persons who are above the age of eighteen years and not above the age of sixty years, and that no person shall become a member of the corporation who is under eighteen or over sixty years of age, the contract of insurance with George M. Seymour, who, when the certificate was issued to him, was over sixty years of age, and the agreement of the defendant with the Northwestern Guaranty Life Insurance Company by which the former agreed to substitute its certificates of insurance' for those surrendered to it by the holder of like certificates of the latter, so far as it assumed to bind defendant to make the substitution as to persons who at the time of the substitution should be over the age of sixty, and all certificates substituted in such cases, were outside of the purposes for which defendant was incorporated. They were ultra vires. But there are few rules better settled or more strongly supported by authorities, with fewer exceptions, in this country, than that when a contract by a private corporation, which is otherwise unobjectionable, has been performed on one side, the party which has received and retained the benefits of such performance shall not be permitted to evade performance on the ground that the contract was in excess of the purpose for which the corporation was created. The rule may not be strictly logical, but it prevents a great deal of injustice. The decisions are found referred to in the following text
Order affirmed.