4 Wash. 183 | Wash. | 1892
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The appellant, a corporation organized under the laws of California, had a branch house for the sale of oils at Seattle. In the spring of 1890 the vice president and manager of such corporation, in behalf of the company, entered into a contract with respondent to the effect that the respondent should pay to such corporation the sum of $5,000, and should receive therefor fifty shares of stock of the par value of $100 each, and that in consideration of so doing he should be appointed ¡manager of the branch house in Seattle. It was further agreed, as part of the same transaction, that if at any time the respondent should
It is contended by respondent that such transaction between the parties established the relation of debtor and creditor between them. That in contemplation of law the $5,000 so advanced by respondent was a loan to the company secured by the certificates of stock and payable upon the discharge of respondent from the managership of said Seattle branch. On the other hand it is contended by appellant that by such transaction the respondent' became a stockholder of such corporation with all the rights and duties attaching to such relation. We think the contention of the appellant is correct, and that the rights of the parties must be investigated as being that of a stockholder on the one hand, and the corporation from which the stock was issued on the other.
Some question is made in the briefs as to the authority of the vice president and manager to enter into the contract» but we think that enough appears in the case to show a ratification on the part of the corporation of the acts of such vice president and manager, if the transaction was of such a nature that ratification thereof was possible. The controlling question is as to the nature of the contract. Briefly stated, it was a sale of stock on the part of the corporation with an agreement thatin a certain contingency it would buy it back at its par value. There is nothing in the record, as seems to be claimed by the respondent, to show what was the nature of this issue of stock. It nowhere appears that it was or was not the original issue thereof. In relation to this subscription appellant contends that the condition attached thereto for the re-purchase of the stock was absolutely illegal and void. That such would be the fact if such sale constituted an original issue of
Some other questions were raised, but they were practically waived upon the argument, and we think, in view of the record and the status of the contract as above stated, they are entirely untenable.
The judgment of the court below must be affirmed.
Stiles, Scott and Dunbar, JJ., concur.
Anders, C. J., not sitting.
Rehearing
ON PETITION EOR REHEARING.
In this case a petition for rehearing was filed, and, upon consideration by the court, it was ordered that the appellant answer that portion of said petition which argued what the rule of presumption should be as to the statute law of a sister state in the courts of this state. Before such answer had been filed and the matter further considered by this court, the parties to the action settled the same out of court. It therefore becomes unnecessary and perhaps improper that this court should pass upon that question in the petition for re-hearing, to which an answer was required as above stated, and in view of the fact that an answer had been required, and that the court expected to further consider the point raised with the view of a possible revision of so much of the opinion in the case as related to said question of presumption, the court now directs that the question of whether or not the statute law of a sister state will be presumed to be the same as the statute law of this state in the courts thereof will not be considered as settled by the decision heretofore rendered in this action, but the same will be considered as an open question, and when again raised in this court will be passed upon as such.
Scott, Dunbar and Stiles, JJ., concur.
Anders, O. J., not sitting.