Arapahoe Investment Co. v. Platt

5 Colo. App. 515
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Colo. App. 515 (Arapahoe Investment Co. v. Platt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arapahoe Investment Co. v. Platt, 5 Colo. App. 515 (Colo. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Thomson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff, Platt, brought this action to recover the reasonable value of his time and services in behalf of the defendant, The Arapahoe Investment Company, from September 1, 1890, to October 1,1891, less the sum of $900 paid [516]*516to him by the defendant. There was evidence tending to establish the following facts :

In May, 1890, the plaintiff, who then lived in the east, being in Denver for the purpose of investing some money in city real estate, met a Mr. Sage, who advised him to put his money into a company which he, Mr. Sage, was then endeavoring to organize. Sage proposed to him that if he would invest his money in stock of the proposed company, and come to Denver and devote his time and services to the company, he should be made a director and appointed its counsel; and, as soon as the company was on its feet and able to pay salaries, a salary should be paid to him for his services. These services were to be rendered in the legal business of the company, in selling real estate for it, and in doing such other business as it might require. The proposition was accepted by the plaintiff, who then went back to his home, settled up his affairs there, and returned, reaching Denver about the middle of August, 1890. The defendant company, which was the identical company proposed by Mr. Sage, had been incorporated in the preceding June, the plaintiff having been made a director, and on the 1st of September, 1890, he put 82,500 into the company and entered into its service. The amount of salary which he should receive was not agreed upon between himself and Mr. Sage. On the first of the following October the directors of the company elected him its counsel for the ensuing year. He endeavored from time to time to have the amount of his salary fixed by the board, but did not succeed. He devoted his time to the company, performing such services as were required of him, although it had very little business for him to do. The condition of the company was not flourishing until August, 1891, when a wave of prosperity struck it, and it found considerable money in its treasury. The directors then determined that the company was in a condition to pay salaries. A committee was accordingly appointed by the board to adjust the salaries to be paid, which thereupon fixed the amounts which should be received by the president, the vice president and treas[517]*517urer, and the secretary, to he paid from the 1st day of the preceding December. The committee reported that it was unable'to agree upon the amount which should be paid to the plaintiff. After making an unsuccessful effort to have his own salary provided for, he threatened the board that he would sue the company if some action was not taken in his behalf, and was answered by one of the directors that he should have a salary, that they would vote him one. There Avas no disapproval of the remark by the board or any of its members. Mr. Sage, with whom the plaintiff had contracted, was a member of the board. Mr. Woodman, another director, had personal knowledge of the contract. At the meeting in August, upon the request of Mr. Bullock, who was also a director, and remarked that he was not fully informed in the matter, the plaintiff made a statement of the facts to the board. The board adjourned without taking any action upon the question. The plaintiff had, previous to this time, occupied the company’s office, and, after the meeting, continued in its office until the first of the following October, Avhen he left. In August, about the time of this meeting, the company paid the plaintiff $400, and a month afterwards $500 more. These íavo sums were all that he ever received.

The contract under which the plaintiff claims was made with Mr. Sage, who at the time Avas engaged in promoting the organization of the defendant company. It was a contract Avhich, by its terms, was to be performed by the company after it should be incorporated. Mr. Sage was not, and could not be, its agent, because it had not yet come into existence. It was in virtue of his efforts, and through his instrumentality, that it was afterwards organized; but, prior to its organization, and at the time of the making of the contract, he was merely a promoter. The company which he assisted in creating was not bound by any of his precedent acts, except, as by adopting them, it made them its own. No liability attached to it on account of the contract between the plaintiff and Mr. Sage in virtue of the contract itself, and no such liability could arise unless i,t was voluntarily [518]*518assumed by the adoption of the contract on the part of the company. Land and Water Co. v. Adams, ante, p. 190. But it is not necessary that the act of adoption should be formal. Whatever would amount to a ratification of the unauthorized acts of an agent would be sufficient evidence of an adoption of the contracts of a promoter. 1 Beach on Private Corporations, secs. 197, 198.

In Land and Water Co. v. Adams, supra, we held that certain acts of the officers of the company in reference to a contract made by its promoter, done with knowledge of its existence and terms, were sufficient to justify a finding that the contract had been adopted by the company.

There is very little controversy over the facts of this case, and in so far as it may be said that they are disputed, they are set at rest by the verdict of the jury, which leaves them as we have stated them. In June, while the plaintiff was absent in the east, the defendant was incorporated, and the plaintiff was made a director. In October he was elected counsel of the defendant company for a year. In September, after his return, he entered into its office and there remained ready to do whatever might be required of him. The defendant availed itself of his services in so far as it had business to do. Some of the directors knew exactly the agreement under which he was serving the company, and the others must necessarily have known that he was there, occupying the company’s office, in pursuance of some arrangement, the nature of which was easy of ascertainment. They were accepting his services, and if they deemed it important to know the details of his employment, they should have inquired. Afterwards, in August, 1891, while they were assembled as a board, the facts were laid before them fully, and they then knew all that the plaintiff himself knew. No suggestion looking to a disaffirmance of the contract between him and Sage was made. On the contrary, after he had given them the particulars of his contract, a statement by one of their number that the board would vote him a salary met with no dissent from any director. He continued in the service of [519]*519the company for some time afterwards without objection from any source. He received two sums of money aggregating $900, and if the payments were not made in pursuance of the contract, they are totally unexplained.

Here is a succession of facts which are explicable only upon the hypothesis that it was the intention of the company to carry out the contract made by Mr. Sage. The adoption of the contract is a legitimate if not a necessary inference from them, and they are amply sufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury in the case. It does not matter that the company had not sufficient business to keep the plaintiff employed. That was not his fault. The contract exacted of him the devotion of his entire time to the company.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Colo. App. 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arapahoe-investment-co-v-platt-coloctapp-1895.