Plаintiff sued to recover damages for injuries sustained by two of its barges while under charter to defendant company. Plaintiff is a corporation, defendant a copartnership.
Tbe complaint contained two counts, tbe first tendered issue upon tbe violation of a covenant in a written contract, while the second charged defendant with failing to exercise the ordinary care required of a bailee for hire. (Civ. Code, sees. 1928-30.)
It is undisputed that defendant took the barges upon December 20th, and returned them upon January 2d following. Under the first count defendant denies that it covenanted to return the
At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence a nonsuit was granted, and from the judgment entered plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff, in support of its first count, offered in evidence the following contract, which was denied admission as not being the contract of the defendant dredge company:
“San Francisco, December SO, 189S.
“This agreement, made this day and date above mentioned, is such that Mr. A. W. Von Schmidt, president of the Von Schmidt Dredging Co. of this city, charters from the S. P. Co. their barges named Nicolaus and Yuba Oily, to be used at Baden, Cala., as pontoons to hold up the discharge pipes of the dredging company, and not for rough service, for a period of thirty days or longer, for the sum of ten dollars per day each barge. Barges to be accepted at and returned to foot of Market street, La Rue’s wharf, San Francisco (unless otherwise agreed), in as good order as received, usual wear and tear only excepted.
“(Signed)
J. D. CASE,
Agent S. P. Co-.
“A. W. VON SCHMIDT,
“President Von Schmidt Dredge Co.
“H. T. Graves, Witness.”
The appellant insists that this ruling was error; that upon the face of the agreement there was sufficient to show that it was the contract of the partnership, or at least sufficient to lеave the question one of doubt, to be solved by parol proof. Respondent answers that the contract appears on its face to be the contract of A. W. Von Schmidt individually; that the appended words, “President of the Von Schmidt Dredge Co.,” found in the body of the instrument and after his signature, are words of description merely, and that they no more make it the contract of the company than would a promissory note “signed C. F. Crock-er, president' of the S. P. R. R. Co., make it the note of the company.” But respondent is unfortunate in his illustration, for
Thus the rule is well settled that where a reading of a simple contract, however inartificially it may be drawn, discloses that it is executed for or on behalf of a principal, or discloses an intent to bind such principal, or even leaves the matter one of doubt, parol evidence may be employed do determine whose contract it is, and this even in cases where the instrument is sufficiently clear in its terms to bind the agent. This is not contradicting by parol the terms of a written instrument, for, as has been said, “It is-no contradiction of a contract, which is silent as to the fact, to prove that a party is acting therein not on his own behalf, but for another. ‘This does not deny/ said Parke, B., ‘that it is binding on those whom, on the face of it, it purports to bind; but shows that it also binds another, by reason that the act of the agent, in signing the agreement in pursuance of his authority, is in law thе act of the principal/ ” (Bishop on Contracts, sec. 1084.)
In consonance with this view it was at a very early day, and before the sealed contract was abolished in this state, that this court elaborately considered the meaning of the word “agent” appended to a signature upon a bill of exchange, and held that
Later, in Bean v. Pioneer Min. Co.,
In Burgess v. Fairbanks,
That the rule in California is not peculiar in this regard a consideration of a few of the many authorities bearing on the
In Mechanics’ Bank etc. v. Bank of Columbia, 5 Wheat. 326, the contract under consideration was in form of a check. It read: “Mechanics5 Bank of Alexandria, June 25, 1817. Cashier of the Bank of Columbia; pay to the order of P. IT. Minor $10,000. William. Patou, Jr.55 It was contended that this was a private cheek not enforceable against the Mechanics’ Bank, and it was urgently insisted that, as under the act inсorporating the bank every such instrument was required to be signed by the president and countersigned by the cashier, with the further proviso that the funds of the corporation should not be liable for any contract unless so executed, the bank could not be held under this instrument. But the supreme court of the United States held that the mere appearance of the corporate name on the face of the paper led to the belief that it was a corporate and not an individual transaction, and that when it was shown by parol evidence that the drawer of the check was in fact the cashier, the belief became the stronger, but that' in any event “it is enough for the purposes of the defendant to establish that there existed on the face of the paper circumstances from which it might reasonаbly infer that it was either one or the other. In that case it became indispensable to resort to extrinsic evidence to remove the doubt.”
In Salmon Falls Mfg. Co. v. Goddard,
In Nicoll v. Burke,
In Byinglon v. Simpson,
In Deering v. Thom,
But in Hypes v. Griffin,
In Traynham v. Jackson,
In Smith v. Alexander,
In Use v. Shearer,
In Haile v. Peirce,
In Kean v. Davis, 21 N. J. L. 683,
In Lacy v. Dubuque Lumber Co.,
In Hardy v. Pilcher,
In Richmond etc. R. R. Co. v. Snead,
We think it unnecessary to pursue these citations further, though they might be indefinitely extended. It remains merely to apply this well-settled rule to the contract in question, and, so applying it, we entertain no doubt -that it was competent for the plaintiff to show, if he could, the facts necessary to establish the obligation of the defendant company. The evidences upon the face of the contract that it was designed to be the contract of the company, if not sufficiently clear of themselves to justify a declaration that it is in law the contract of the company, at least are enough to leave the matter in doubt and warrant a resort to parol evidence for explanation. Thus the contract is not with A. W. Yon Schmidt, but with A. W. Yon Schmidt as president of the Yon Schmidt Dredge Company. The barges are chartered to be used by and for the benefit of the dredge company, and Yon Schmidt in signing signs as president of the dredge company. These indicia, it will be noted, are . much plainer and stronger than were shown in many of the contracts where resort to parol evidence was permitted.
It follows, therefore, that the court erred in refusing admission to the contract in evidence and in excluding the offered evidence of plaintiff in respect thereto.
It is not necessary at this time to enter upon a consideration of the effect of this contract upon the liability of the defendant.'
In granting the motion for a nonsuit upon the second count of the complaint, the court was of opinion that the evidence presented did not show negligence upon the part of the defendant while the barges were under its charge. In this also we think the court erred, and that the question of negligence under the proоfs offered was properly a question for the jury. The barges were placed by defendant in shallow water, off a lee shore, and were left exposed to the fury of a southeastern storm of unprecedented length and severity. So .much is admitted. Plaintiffs further proved that the barges were not designed to meet or withstand heavy weather, and that this was known to defendant Avhen it took them. It offered evidence tеnding to prove -that the injury to the barges (over which there is in the record no controversy) was occasioned not by their exposure for a brief time to the sudden fury of the gale, but resulted from their having been left day after day in their exposed position to thresh and pound and work in the heavy sea and wind. It was this long-continued “working” which wrecked them. Plaintiff further offered the evidence of experts—pilots and sea captains—to show that in the exercise of ordinary care and prudence, defendant should not so have allowed the barges to remain, but should have removed them to a sheltered shore near by and readily accessible.
Under such evidence it was clearly a question for the jury to say whether or not the defendant exercised due care' for the preservation of the leased property.
The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded.
