145 Iowa 491 | Iowa | 1909
Defendant is a local corporation; its articles reciting the naturé of its business to be as follows: “Article 3. The object of the corporation or the business to be transacted is the manufacture of butter and milk products for the stockholders of said corporation and the patrons thereof upon equal terms in such a manner as will conduce to the mutual and equal advantage of all such stockholders and patrons.”
Plaintiff, through its salesman, made a contract with defendant through its secretary, one H. G. Smith, whereby it sold to defendant five cream separators for the aggregate price of $390. The separators were delivered to defendant pursuant to this sale, and some of them used by
Smith, who gave the order, said that the separators were not purchased for use in the creamery, but for defendant’s patrons and stockholders for use in separating the cream from the milk which they were to deliver to the creamery. The contract for the machines fixed a gross price for the five. It was not separable in. character, nor ■was it so treated by the parties at any time. This is the entire record upon which the case was decided, and constitutes the basis for the ruling directing the verdict for defendant.
There is considerable doubt in our minds regarding the claim that the contract was and is ultra vires. Such contracts are those which do not in any manner serve the accomplishment of the purposes for which the corporation is organized. They are contracts, not positively forbidden, but impliedly prohibited because not expressly or impliedly authorized. Now defendant seems to be organized as a mutual or cooperative concern for the purpose of manu
The trial court was in error in directing the verdict, and the judgment must be, and it is, reversed.