191 Mo. App. 219 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
This is a suit upon an attachment bond. The defendant denies all liability thereon upon the ground that execution thereof was never authorized nor thereafter ratified. Upon a' trial' in the circuit court, the defendant’s demurrer to the evidence was overruled and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $745, from which the defendant has appealed. To clearly understand the case it is necessary to make a full statement of the facts out of which it grew.
The defendant is now, and was at the times hereinafter mentioned, a Michigan corporation with a branch house in Kansas City, Missouri. In the course of the business of this branch house, it had, at some time prior to May 29,1905, acquired a note of Fred Mullett. J. P. Baymond was the general manager of said branch house, and he authorized a suit on said note to be brought by original attachment against Mullett, the latter being a resident of California. The attachment suit was filed on the above-named date, having for its grounds the nonresidence of Mullett. No summons was served upon him, but jurisdiction was obtained by levying the writ of attachment on certain property of Mullett’s and garnisheeing certain of his debtors. The affidavit verifying the copy of the note attached to the petition was made by Baymond as “Manager of ParkeDavis & Company, the plaintiff named in the petition attached hereto.” He also signed and swore to the affidavit for the attachment wherein he stated that “'defendant is not a resident of the State of Missouri. ’ ’
The attachment bond was in regular form, purporting to be from “Parke-Davis & Company, a cor
“Witness our hands and seal this 29th day of May, A. D. 1905.
Parke-Davis & Co., by (seal)
J. P. Reymond, Manager, (seal)
J. P. Reymond. (seal)”
It was approved by the circuit clerk on the same day.
Thereafter a trial of the suit was had, resulting in a judgment for the defendant. Thereupon the local Kansas City attorneys, who had brought the suit for Parke-Davis & Co. at the request of Reymond, sought permission from said company at the home office to appeal the case. Parke-Davis & Co. referred the matter to their general counsel who authorized the case to be appealed to the Supreme Court of Missouri. This was done, and the case was duly presented to that court where the judgment of the circuit court was, after several years, finally affirmed. The affidavit for appeal was made by J. P. Reymond as “agent at Kansas City of Parke-Davis & Company, plaintiff in the above entitled action. ’ ’ The bond for appeal was made with Parke-Davis & Co., as principal, with J. P. Reymond and Chas. F. Ayre, as sureties and the bond was signed “Parke-Davis & Co., by J. P. Reymond, Manager” and then by both J. P. Reymond and Chas. F. Ayre individually.
After the affirmance óf the attachment suit Mullett died', and relator Spellman was appointed his administrator, and thereupon the present suit on the bond was instituted. Reymond, defendant’s local manager, who executed the bond also died.
The object of the suit is to hold Parke-Davis & Company liable as principal on the bond. Plaintiff does not claim that Parke-Davis & Company authorized Reymond to execute the bond, but that after it was executed, the defendant corporation ratified his execution thereof by litigating the case in which the bond
The theory of the defense is that the instrument is not under the corporate seal of the defendant; that as to corporations, no instrument executed by them can be considered a bond unless it is so made as to be strictly within the old common-law definition of a bond, namely, an obligation in writing under seal; that it is a rule of the common law that authority to execute an instrument under seal can be conferred only by a writing under seal, and, therefore, defendant’s agent, Reymond, had no authority to execute the instrument sued on; and, as he was never authorized to execute said instrument, nothing done on the part of defendant can ever amount to a ratification unless it is also evidenced in writing and under seal.
There is no doubt but that, under the common law, an instrument in writing is not a • bond unless it is under seal. [State ex rel. v. Clay County, 46 Mo. 731; State ex rel. v. Chamberlain, 54 Mo. 338; State ex rel. v. Thompson, 49 Mo. 188.] It is also fundamental that, under the law of principal and agent, authority to an agent to execute an instrument required by law to be under seal, must be shown and conferred by an instrument executed with the same formality, that is, it must also be under seal, at least where the agent acts outside of the presence of the principal. [Schnetze v. Bailey, 40 Mo. 69; St. Louis Dairy Co. v. Sauer, 16 Mo. App. 1; 31 Cyc. 1231.] It is, without doubt, also essential, in the law of principal and agent, that if the agent’s authority is required to be in writing under seal, then ratification cannot be established by anything less than a writing under seal, provided, of course, there is no element of equitable estoppel involved. [Hawkins v. McGroaraty, 10 Mo. 546; Borel v. Collins, 30 Cal. 408; Bordere v. Den, 106 Cal. 594; Riggan v. Crain, 86 Ky. 249; Judd v. Arnold, 31 Minn. 430; Overman v. Atkinson, 102 Ga. 750; Ingraham v. Edwards,
In Angelí and Ames on Private Corporations (11 Ed.), sec. 219!, it is said that although, under the old common-law rule, corporations could not contract, or appoint agents to do so for them, except by deed, yet, in modern times, the rule had been greatly though gradually relaxed; and that “in our own country, where private corporations of this kind, for every
The above section of Angelí & Ames is referred to, quoted from and applied, in Campbell v. Pope, 96 Mo. 468, l. c. 472. In that case the validity of an appeal bond of a corporation, the Pope Iron and Metal Company, was in question, the defendants denying that it was properly executed. The bond in that case was executed in exactly the same way as the one at bar, except that it was done by the president of the corporation while the one before us was by a branch Manager. This, however, makes no material difference. There was no action of the board of directors, and the court upheld the validity of the bond on the ground that the execution thereof was subsequently ratified. The corporation in that case had a seal but it was not used. Notwithstanding this fact, and notwithstanding there was no previous authorization of the bond, the court held that the corporation having been brought into court “is held to know what transpires in the suit” and
After the passage of that Act, the Supreme Court, in Pullis v. Pullis Bros. Iron Co., 157 Mo. 565, upheld the validity of the deed of a corporation conveying real estate notwithstanding the fact that the deed did not have the corporate seal affixed thereto. It is true the corporation in that case had no seal, and the court held that since it had none and was not compelled by law to have one, it could-convey real estate without the use of a seal, but that certain statutes required, a seal, and, the statute relating to the form of corporate acknowledgments obviated its use only in case it had no
Of course, ratification can only be made with knowledge of the facts, and defendant claims that while it knew that a suit was filed on the note yet there is nothing to show'that it knew an attachment had issued or a bond in support thereof had been made. We think, however, there was ample evidence from which the jury could find that the defendant did know of it. The facts hereinbefore stated show that the note grew out of the branch business of the defendant; that Reymond was general manager thereof and it was therefore his duty to collect the debts due that business; that jurisdiction in the suit arose only by attachment and not through summons and that the suit could be instituted only by attachment. However, defendant says this merely shows knowledge on the part of Reymond and the defendant’s local attorneys, and they had only the authority Reymond could give them. But the evidence also shows that after the case was decided in the lower court, defendant itself was consulted as to an appeal, and it referred the matter to its general counsel at its home office. That general counsel went over the record in the case (which showed on its face that the suit was by attachment), and then authorized an appeal. This general counsel assisted the local counsel in the preparation of the briefs in the Supreme Court and helped argue and submit the case and the litigation covered a period of something like seven years. After the Supreme Court had affirmed the judgment, plaintiff in the case at bar wrote defendant herein concerning its liability on the bond. Defendant also referred this matter to its general counsel and he wrote plaintiff not to annoy the estate of Reymond about the bond on
Some objection is made to the instruction given in plaintiff’s behalf, but it is without merit.
The judgment is affirmed.