98 Mo. App. 227 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
It appears from the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition that “The Springfield Electric Lighting Company, ’ ’ the ‘ ‘ Springfield Gras Light Company” and the “Metropolitan Electric Railway Company” were each corporations created and organized under the provisions of article 8, chapter 42, Revised Statutes 1889, and that the first two of them were, on the 30th of June, 1893, under the authority conferred by section 2876 of said article, consolidated and united under the name of the Springfield Lighting Company, the plaintiff. It further appears that sometime prior to the said consolidation, the said Metropolitan Electric Railway Company entered into a written contract with the.said Springfield Electric Light Company whereby the former agreed and bound itself to furnish and supply the latter power to operate its lighting apparatus, as therein specified, for a period of ten years. It still further appears that at the time of the entering into said contract, the said Metropolitan Electric Street
The defendant interposed a demurrer to the petition on the ground that it shows upon its face that the alleged bond, upon which defendant was security, was given to the Springfield Electric Lighting Company as obligee, while the plaintiff in this case is a separate and different legal entity. The court overruled the demurrer, and the defendant having elected to stand thereon, and declining to plead further, judgment was given for the plaintiff. The defendant, by his appeal, has brought before us for review the action of the trial court in overruling his demurrer to the petition. In support of the ground of such demurrer, the defendant contends (1) that the defendant, as surety, bound himself to “indemnify the Springfield Electric
I. It appears that the rule prevailing in respect to ordinary contracts of suretyship is that the surety is the favorite of the laws, and has the right to stand upon the strict terms of his obligation. Brandt on Suretyship, sec. 97; Bayless on Sureties, 144, 145, 260. He can not be carried beyond his contract; the contract made by the parties must be judged of and not auother substituted in its stead; it can not be varied without his consent, and a surety for a definite engagement shall not be extended to an indefinite one. Ludlow v. Simond, 2 Caines Cases, 1. It was declared by the Supreme Court of the United States in Miller v. Stewart, 9 Wheaton 680, that “ nothing can be clearer, both upon principle and authority, than the doctrine that the liability of a surety is not to be extended by implication beyond the terms of his contract. To the extent and in the manner, and under the circumstances pointed out in his obligation, he is bound, and no further. It is not sufficient that he sustain no injury by a change in the contract, or that it even may be for his benefit. He has a right to stand upon the very terms of his contract; and if he does not assent to any variation of it, and that variation is made, it is fatal. ’ ’
The two last above excerpts were quoted with approval in Nofsinger v. Hartnett, 84 Mo. 549. And the case from which the former (Miller v. Stewart) is quoted has been referred to approvingly in Lionberger v. Krieger, 88 Mo. 160, and in Blair v. Ins. Co., 10 Mo. 560. The rule of strictissimi juris as applicable to the interpretation of the contracts of sureties, was first announced in this State in the opinion of Judge Scott in Blair v. Ins. Co., supra, and all the subsequent cases — cited in defendant’s brief — have uniformly and unvaryingly followed it, so that it (the rule) may be said to have become firmly established in the jurisprudence of this State.
And while the contract of a surety is .to be construed strictissimi juris,, which means that it can not be altered without his consent, and that he is only bound to the extent that he thereby agreed to be so bound, yet, aside from this, it must be construed like any other contract, id est, according to the intention of the parties. Beers v. Wolf, 116 Mo. 179; Harburg v. Kumpf, 151 Mo. 16.
II. Up to the time of the consolidation there was' a complete performance of the contract on the part of the Metropolitan Electric Railway Company. The non-compliance or default complained of took place after such consolidation, so that the question arising, and decisive of the case is, whether or not the defendant, under his contract of suretyship, is bound to in
Included in this transfer was the contract between the Electric Railway and the Electric Light Company, which carried with it, as an incident, the undertaking of the surety, the defendant, even though said undertaking was not in express terms transferred with the said principal obligation. The manifest purpose of the statute in such cases is to give the consolidated corporation the benefit of all the rights of every kind, including such as that here, and a right of action thereon. And this construction of the statute finds support, in adjudications somewhat similar to this.
In Kinion v. Railway, 39 Mo. App. 382, it was said: “By the contract of consolidation all property belonging to the old companies, including their corporate privileges and franchises, aré transferred to the consolidated company, and there is nothing left to sustain the corporate life of the original corporations. . . . The old companies by' their voluntary act completely merge their separate corporate existence and, strictly speaking, a new entity is thereby formed. . . . Literally speaking, it is a new corporation, but substantially it is but the continuation of the old
In 1 Thompson on Corporations, section 365, it is stated to he the general rule that the new company succeeds to,the rights, duties, obligations and liabilities of the constituent companies whether arising ex contractu or ex delicto. And so it has been held that such company succeeds to whatever rights each of the old companies possessed in respect to municipal aid, and that where such aid had been voted to either of the constituent companies before the consolidation, it was entitled to the bonds. Smith v. Clark County, 54 Mo. 58; State v. Greene County, 54 Mo. 540; Railway v. Marion County, 36 Mo. 294; Henry County v. Nicolay, 95 U. S. 619; Callaway Co. v. Foster, 93 U. S. 567; Scotland Co. v. Thomas, 94 U. S. 682.
And it has been held further that the new company is the heir to the obligation of the old and if
No reason is seen why a consolidated business corporation, created under said section 1334, Revised Statutes 1899 (sec. 2786, R. S. 1889), will not “hold and enjoy all the rights, privileges, franchises and property,” and be subject to all the liabilities to the same extent as a railway company which is the result of the amalgamation of two or more companies under section 2567, Revised Statutes 1889, nor why what has been said by us in relation to the status of the latter will not apply as well to .the former. Prom an examination of the numerous authorities to which we have been cited by counsel, we can. reach no other conclusion than that where two or more business companies are consolidated under section 1334, that the constituent corporations become dissolved or extinguished and that the amalgamated corporation is a new corporation, but that touching the business of the old corporations, and as to their respective debtors and creditors, the consolidated company is to be regarded as the continuation of the old companies under a new name and that as to the defendant, it is to be regarded as if it had been named as obligee in the bond in the first instance.
The bond here must be understood and read in the light of the existing law. To consolidate is one of the statutory powers of business corporations, and parties contracting with them are presumed to know that such is the law of their creation. Lionberger v. Krieger, 88 Mo. 160; Hanna v. Railway, 20 Ind. 30. When we view the contract of suretyship in its entirety, that is to say, with the provision of section 1334, Revised Statutes, read into it, we experience no difficulty in reaching the conclusion that the obligation of the defendant extended to the plaintiff, and covered the default of the Springfield Electric Railway Company occurring
It seems that after the consolidation took place the Springfield Electric Railway Company continued to furnish electric power to the new company as it had to the old. It not only supplied power but made out bills and collected the compensation allowed by the contract of the new company just as it had of the old. These acts of the parties afford a basis on which to rest the construction of the contract as made by us. "Wharton on Contracts, sec, 653.
Crane v. Specht, 39 Neb. 123, was not where the change in the name of the obligee was brought about by a consolidation of two corporations. The change was doubtless accomplished under a statute like our section 971, Revised Statutes. It was held that the change in the name of the obligee corporation deprived it of the right to -recover on the contract of guaranty given it by the defendant in its former name. Whether or not that case was rightly decided we need not stop to consider, since it does not appear that there were any .such statutory provisions applicable to it as those which have largely influenced our decision in this.
The case most nearly like that before us is that of Railway v. Hawkins, 149 Pa. St. 121. It was where
After a full examination of the points and authorities urged upon our attention by the defendant, we have not been persuaded that the objections suggested in his demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition were well taken, and it therefore follows that the judgment must he affirmed.