68 So. 273 | Ala. | 1914
This action was for the breach of a contract by which appellant agreed to make a loan of $50,000 to- appellee,, for. ten, years, at. 5 per centum.
Defendant assigns as error the ruling on the demurrer to the complaint and replications, and the refusal of the court to set aside the judgment and award a new trial. The demurrer was properly overruled to the amended complaint and to each count thereof as to which appellant complains.
(1) The particular ground of objection to the first count, as amended, is that the count does not aver that the agents who made the contract were duly authorized to act for the defendant corporation in reference to the loan agreement for breach of which the action is brought. This point is not well taken. The allegation of each count is sufficient in this respect. The allegations in this respect are as follows: “The said defendant, acting by .and through its duly authorized agents, to wit, one Lofley and one Atkins, agreed in substance with the plaintiff, or with her agent, W. G. Lunsford, who was at the time acting for her, that if plaintiff would buy 200 shares of the capital stock of said company, at and for the sum of $4,000, the-said defendant would lend, by January 1, 1911, to the said Nora L. S. Lunford, $50,000, at an interest rate not exceeding 5 per cent, per annum, for a period of ten years, without brokerage commissions on 50 per cent.-- of valuation of timber, or timber lands, mineral lands, farm
The second count of the complaint adds the following as to the authority of the agents to bind the defendant: “And plaintiff avers that thereafter, and before said transaction was consummated, being doubtful of the authority of said Atkins and said Lofley to bind said defendant, plaintiff’s said agent did call upon the president of said company, one D. E. Monasco, at the office of the said defendant, in Birmingham, Ala., and did state to him the said agreement, entered into as above alleged, and did further state that said plaintiff would not carry out said agreement, unless it was recognized and ratified by said. defendant. And she avers that said Monasco, as president of said defendant company, and acting for it, did confirm said agreement.”
These averments we deem sufficient, as to the authority of the agents and officers of the corporation, to bind it in the premises. ;
(2) If the corporation had no' authority to make such a contract, that fact should have been set up by a special plea of ultra vires.
(3) To the complaint the defendant filed, among others, two special pleas as follows: “For further answer defendant says that it, through its'president, expressly repudiated and refused to recognize the alleged agreement with said Lofley and Atkins in reference to said loan prior to the issuance of said stock under said loan agreement, and that plaintiff’s said agent, W. G. Lunsford, subsequently thereto, and before any stock was issued to plaintiff, signed a written memorandum, which was in substance that the trade with said Lofley and Atkins for said stock had been cancelled, and that the personal stock of T. P. West was being bought by
“For further answer defendant says: That, after plaintiff made application for said stock through said Lofley and Atkins with said loan agreement attached, a writing, signed by defendant’s said agent, W. G. Lunsford, was presented to defendant, which writing is in words and figures as follows, to wit:
“ ‘In the purchase of two hundred shares of stock from T. P. West, I hereby certify that the deal between me and Messrs. Atkins and Lofley has been canceled, and I am of no obligation to the above Atkins and Lofley parties, and this is a new deal made personally with T. P. West for his personal stock. This June 3, 1910.
“ ‘W. G. Lunsford.’
“That thereafter, defendant being largely indebted to said T. P. West, certificates for 200 shares of defendants capital stock were issued to plaintiff and charged to said West’s account at the request of said West, and that defendant received no part of the proceeds of the note given by plaintiff in payment for said stock.”
To these pleas the plaintiff filed special replications, one of which was as follows: “That after the making of the original agreement, as set forth in counts 1 and 2 of the complaint, the said defendant, through its authorized agents, D. E. Monasco and T. P. West, who were respectively the president and the fiscal agent of the said defendant company, stated to said W. G. Luns
The other replication Avas in effect the same as the above, but Avent more into detail.
These replications were sufficient answers to facts set up in the special pleas, and there Avas no error in overTuling the demurrers thereto.
The rules of law which Ave follow in revising actions and rulings of the trial court on motions for new trial have been so often stated (beginning in the case of Cobb v. Malone, 92 Ala. 630, 9 South. 738) that it is needless to restate them here, or to cite authorities. Following these rules the record in this case has been carefully examined; and we are not willing to say that the
Affirmed.