47 Mo. App. 608 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
This action is for rent arising under written lease for the term of three years at $80 per month. Defendant paid the rent for the first ten months, and then repudiated the lease. This action is for the rent due for the first twelve months following those for which the rent was so paid. Plaintiff recovered below and defendant appeals. The.property was actually occupied by one Wolf who kept a saloon therein, in which he sold both beer and whiskey. Wolf
I. It is first contended that the alleged lease is no lease, since it is not signed by the lessor. And so it is decided in Clemens v. Broomfield, 19 Mo. 118, as well •as in many other cases in other jurisdictions, that it is requisite .to the validity of a lease, where the letting is for a longer period than allowed by verbal contract, that it should be signed by the lessor. This being so, we will consider what is a sufficient signing within the spirit and meaning of the law. The object of the statute of frauds and perjuries was to prevent fraud and perjury by requiring that the lease should be put in writing and signed by the parties, r This signing thus ■directed by the statute does not necessarily mean that the parties shall append their names to the end of the written instrument, but, rather, any certain, definite acknowledgment of the.lease over the signature of the party, whether that be on the face or back of the lease, •or even on a separate paper, as in a letter. Taylor’s Land & Ten., secs. 35, 36. In Whaley v. Hinchman, 22 Mo. App. 483, telegrams were held sufficient in a •contract for the sale of real estate. In Hoover v. Oil,
II. It is next objected that the secretary had no authority to sign the corporate name of defendant under the laws of the corporation. We may concede this, and yet the point cannot avail defendant under the circumstances disclosed by the testimony. The uncontradicted evidence is that the defendant regul arly, for ten months, sent its check to plaintiff for the rent, and that •entries of these payments were upon its books. And, furthermore, defendant, by a letter*addressed to. plaintiff and produced at the trial, shows a clear recognition of the lease. These things constitute a complete ratification of the act of the secretary.
III. The next contention is that the act of the corporation was ultra vires. Defendant’s charter contains the following provision: “To handle, manufacture and vend malt, ale, beer and ice, natural and artificial, and to that end to purchase, own and lease, or either, brewing establishments, icehouses, real estate and such other property or machinery needful, incident or proper for carrying on the business of doing the things aforesaid.”
Trading corporations cannot be bound by contracts wholly foreign to the purposes for which they were established. But it is a rule of construction of charters •or articles of incorporation of trading corporations that they should be so construed as to permit them to prosecute their legitimate business in the same manner that an individual would who was engaged in a similar enterprise. ' And it may, therefore, enter into any contract which is reasonably adapted to further the enterprise
In a case closely related to this which arose in Illinois, of Heim Brewing Co. v. Flannery, under a charter, if any different, less broad than the one here in contróversy, the supreme court of that state in speaking to the point that “the defendant had not power to lease the property for saloon purposes,” said: “The defendant,' at the time said contract was entered into, was a corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of beer, and the premises covered by the lease were, and for a considerable time had been, occupied and used by the plaintiffs as a saloon, where, as the evidence tends to show, large quantities of beer had been and were being sold at retail. The purpose of the defendant in entering into said contract, as plainly appears both from the contract itself and from the suiTounding .circumstances, was to increase the sale and consumption of beer
So in a case of a quasi public' corporation it was held by the supreme court of Missouri, that it was not ultra vires a corporation organized for a great public enterprise in building a bridge across the Mississippi river to contract with a newspaper whereby the corporation sold a block of its stock to the newspaper for a certain sum, to be paid for in articles of reading matter { not editorials) promoting the success of the enterprise. Liebke v. Knapp, 79 Mo. 22.
Now, how do these principles dispose of defendant’s contention in this case ? The articles of incorporation here authorize the defendant to handle, manufacture and sell beer, and to that end to lease real estate proper for carrying on the business of doing that thing. The face of the whole case shows, without doubt or uncertainty,-that the object defendant had in view in renting the premises in dispute was to introduce and sell the company’s beer. It ought hardly to be doubted that
The only matter deserving further consideration in this branch of the case is the fact that defendant intended and did sublet the premises to one Wolf to sell the company’s beer, as well as to keep a regular saloon where whiskey was also sold, and that plaintiff knew this. We will refer to this objection in the consideration of two important authorities cited, among others, by defendant’s counsel. One of these cases is Felon v. Brewing Co. (Supreme Court, New York, fifth department, June, 1891). It is there held that a brewing company stated to be organized under the “general manufacturing companies’ act for the purpose of the manufacture and sale of beer and malt” could not become surety of a tenant for the rent of a summer hotel, although the tenant agrees to buy his beer of the company if it would guarantee the payment of rent. This was what was decided by that case, and it is not necessary to our position in this case to combat that decision. But the facts in that case are claimed by counsel to be substantially like these in every particular. We do not so consider them. The corporation in that case signed the lease with the tenant merely as his surety. An expression in that opinion may be misunderstood. It is not said in the opinion that the lease was in the name of the corporation, but that the secretary of the corporation executed the lease in the name of and for the corporation; the tenant also executed it for himself. The corporation had no control over the lease or the property, nor had it any benefit from the lease as such. While in the present case Wolf who occupied the property had nothing to do with the lease nor any interest in it as such. The lease was to defendant, who took the keys to the building and paid the rent stipulated in the lease. Plaintiff had no connection with Wolf. It is true defendant let Wolf occupy the property, but he paid the rent to defendant. Eor
IV. The foregoing is sufficient to dispose of this case, and it is not absolutely necessary to say anything further; but we will nevertheless . add, since the question arises in Grlass against this defendant argued at this term, that defendant has no standing from another
The judgment will be affirmed.