284 F. 664 | 1st Cir. | 1922
On May 29, 1912, the Gilchrist Company made a written guaranty to William Filene’s Sons Company of a lease executed by the Filene Company to the Wm. S. Butler Company of premises at the southwest corner of Washington and Winter streets in the city of Boston. For some time before the execution of this guaranty, these three Massachusetts corporations had been' engaged in the
The Gilchrist Company was organized under the General Corporation Laws of Massachusetts (Public Statutes, c. 106), the certifícale stating the purposes of the company to be:
“Buying, selling, jobbing, manufacturing and dealing in dry goods and general merchandise and carrying on tbe business of a department store.”
Section 50 provides that a corporation subject to that chapter shall “not direct its operations or appropriate its funds to any other purpose than that specified in its agreement of association or its charter, as the case may be.” It is assumed on all sides that the power to manufacture, buy and sell merchandise, and carry on the business of a department store does not include the power to guarantee a lease to another corporation on neighboring premises, unless it can be shown that such power is fairly incidental or auxiliary to the main business of the corporation, and necessary or expedient in the protection, care and management of its property. Teele v. Rockport Granite Co., 224 Mass. 20, 25, 112 N. E. 497.
The case presents this plain question of fact: Has the claimant proved by a preponderance of evidence that the execution of the guaranty by the Gilchrist Company was reasonably incidental and. auxiliary to its business and within the scope of its powers ?
The claimant has offered testimony tending to show that, at the time of the execution of the guaranty, the Gilchrist Company was vitally interested in the nature of the occupation to be made of the old
The record does not show very clearly in what way the joint bond issue between the .two companies would be dependent upon proximity of stores, nor does it show that co-op'erative advertising would be greatly assisted thereby. The record also fails to disclose any other bidders who were seeking to obtain the old Filene corner under the terms offered by the Gilchrist Company. It appears, too, that the Filene Company preferred to get a bonus of $20,000 under the lease to the Butler Company rather than to keep their old site and put into this store a “kindly competitor” who would not compete too much.
The appellee urges that the plan of guaranty was not devised by the Gilchrist Company for purpose of obtaining for itself special advantages; that such guaranty with the limited capital of that company could not bring to it any advantage; that it in fact brought bankruptcy; that it was a scheme of finance conceived by an adventurer, who was looking only to his own personal advantage, and who later committed suicide, after he had wrought the ruin of himself and two leading dry goods companies.
Get us follow the current of facts leading up to the execution of the guaranty. Early in 1912, William E. Butler, head of the Butler Company, appears by the testimony to have had the general purpose of getting into the group of department stores on Washington street and to have formed the plan of obtaining a lease of the old store of the Filene Company, when that company should vacate it *to go into its new store. It appears to have been a part of Butler’s plan to operate
On April 30th, Mr. Dunbar, counsel for the Filene Company, called on Mr. Butler to see what he was going to do about this agreement calling for a lease to a new $250,000 corporation. Butler then told him that he was not certain that he should want to form a new company ; that he might want to use the lease in connection with an existing company; but that he “regarded it as very important for his plan that he should have the corner of Winter and Washington streets, this property which the Filene Company then occupied.”
Mr. Dunbar further testified that Butler repeated that he was not then ready to say how he wanted to use the preliminary agreement; he wanted more time. The agreement was not extended. After May 1st, however, Butler was not pressed; he was given time to make good his promise to produce the guaranty of a new corporation with a capital of $250,000. This he could not and did not do; he was in default after May 1st. He then tried to get the Filene Company to accept the guaranty of the Butler Company. This the Filene Company would not do, for the reason that the Butler Company was not good enough. Butler’s plan now develops to get control of the Gilchrist Company and have that company guarantee the lease, instead of forming a new $250,-000 company. He told Mr. Dunbar that he was forming plans to own or control all, or almost all, of the stock of the Gilchrist Company, and
Butler carried out his plan by putting his attorney, Myrick, into the place of Jardine as one of the three directors of the Gilchrist Company, and in that way secured the action of the directors. It is not necessary1- to discuss what the directors did in the alleged meeting of directors.
Date in May, Butler had an interview with Ferris in which he told him that he had decided to take the lease, and it was necessary that the Gilchrist Company should guarantee it; that there was a question whether such guaranty would be ultra vires, and that a paper was to be drawn up by the Filene Company, showing the benefits which the Gilchrist Company would gain, in guaranteeing the lease. It appears that he was thus carrying out the suggestion of Mr. Dunbar, counsel for the Filene Company, that such paper was necessary.
It appears, then, that the learned and accomplished legal adviser of the claimant found it for the benefit of his client to suggest that the special advantages which the Gilchrist Company might expect to come to it from the guaranty of the lease should be put in as clear light as possible. The attempt to forsee and escape the charge of ultra vires was, then, a safety device for which the Filene Company is entitled to full credit.
Ferris held that the guaranty was an outrage and that he would not sign it. Butler replied: “There will be a way out of that. We will overcome that.” Mr. Dunbar, Filene’s counsel, prepared the draft of the lease and of the guaranty of the Gilchrist Company, the draft of agreement underneath the guaranty as contained on the original lease, a draft of an agreement between the Gilchrist Company and the Butler Company, and drafts of votes for the Gilchrist Company directors and for the Butler Company directors.
The record shows that these papers were all sent to Mr. Weed, Butler’s counsel, late in May. There is evidence that Butler expressed the
The evidence tends to the conclusion that Butler, deeply interested in getting the guaranty of the Gilchrist Company, was using the credit of the Gilchrist Company for his own personal advantage, and was not in good faith seeking to get “special advantages” for the Gilchrist Company, by the guaranty of the lease.
After a study of the whole record we are of the opinion that the claimant has fallen far short of proving, by a preponderance_ of the evidence, that the execution of the lease was incidental or auxiliary to the main business of the corporation and necessary or expedient to the protection, care and management of the Gilchrist Company. We think the District Court was clearly right in its conclusion, and in putting its decision upon Davis v. Old Colony Railroad, 131 Mass. 258, 259, 275, 276, 41 Am. Rep. 221. In that case the defendant sought to guarantee the payment of the expenses of holding “a world’s peace jubilee and international musical festival” in Boston. The ground of the guaranty was the increase in the number of passengers and the amount of business that would result to the railroad. It was urged by the defendant that special advantage would come to it from holding the festival, by increasing its business. The court held the agreement ultra vires, and, in speaking for the court, Chief Justice Gray said:
“A corporation has power to do such business only as it is authorized by its act of incorporation to do, and no other. It is not held out by the government, nor by the stockholders, as authorized to make contracts which are beyond the purposes and scope of its charter. It is not vested with all the capacities of a natural person, or of an ordinary partnership, but with such only as its charter confers. If it exceeds its chartered powers, not only may the government take away its charter, but those who have subscribed to its stock may avoid any contract made by the corporation in clear excess of its powers. If it makes a contract manifestly beyond the powers conferred by its charter, and therefore unlawful, a court of chancery, on the application of a stockholder, will restrain the corporation from ca'rrying out the contract; and a court of common law will sustain no action on the contract against the corpora-, tion. * * *
“The holding of a ‘world’s peace jubilee and international musical festival’ is an enterprise wholly outside the objects for which a railroad corporation is established; and a contract to pay, or to guarantee the payment of, the expenses of such an enterprise, is neither a necessary nor an appropriate means of carrying on the business of the railroad corporation, is an application of its funds to an object unauthorized and impliedly prohibited by its charter, and is beyond its corporate powers. Such a contract cannot be held to bind the corporation, by reason of the supposed benefit which it may derive from an increase of passengers over its road, upon any grounds that would not hold it equally bound by a contract to partake in or to guarantee the success of any enterprise that might attract population or travel to any city or town upon or near its line. * * * ”
It appears that the judgment in that case related to a public service corporation; but the court said:
*670 “The same reasons are no less applicable to manufacturing and trading corporations, established under general laws, and the purposes of which are required by those laws to be stated in their articles of association. * * * ” Tod v. Kentucky Union Land Co. (C. C.) 57 Fed. 47; Central Trans. Co. v. Pullman, etc., Co., 139 U. S. 24, 58, 11 Sup. Ct. 478, 35 L. Ed. 55.
In the case before us, the evidence in the record clearly tends to the conclusion that the Filene Company had knowledge of the guaranty in question, and was familiar with every act leading up to it. An examination of the facts leading to the execution of the guaranty has been of assistance to us in" coming to the conclusion that the claimant has not proved its case by a preponderance of the evidence.
The decree of the District Court is affirmed, and the appellee recovers its costs in this court.