Armour & Co. v. R. Rosenberg & Sons Co.

173 P. 404, 36 Cal. App. 773
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 13, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 2104.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 173 P. 404 (Armour & Co. v. R. Rosenberg & Sons Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armour & Co. v. R. Rosenberg & Sons Co., 173 P. 404, 36 Cal. App. 773 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

*774 KERRIGAN, J.

This is an action brought upon two guaranty contracts executed by defendant corporation for the payment of certain merchandise sold and delivered by plaintiff corporation to one W. Y. Lawton, an individual doing business under the fictitious name of “American Packing Company.” Judgment was rendered in favor of defendant on the ground that the manager of defendant corporation had no authority to execute the guaranties in question.

Briefly stated, the facts are as follows: Plaintiff is a manufacturing and trading corporation dealing in food products. Defendant is a business corporation dealing, among other things, in new and second-hand bottles. American Packing Company originally was a corporation engaged in manufacturing, and in the conduct of its business prepared and put' up in bottles salad oil which it sold to the trade. It was adjudicated bankrupt in March, 1913. W. Y. Lawton was one of its stockholders, and after the bankruptcy proceedings were closed he began and continued in the same line of business on his personal account. Defendant was one of the creditors in bankruptcy of the American Packing Company, having a claim for the sum of $875.58. ‘ No dividend was received on this account from the assets of the defunct corporation, and it was a total loss to the defendant. Later on, however, the claim was paid in full by Lawton after he had resumed the business on his individual account. This payment was made in pursuance of an agreement with the manager of defendant under the following circumstances: When Lawton resumed business he did so under the name of the American Packing Company. At that time Lawton was to the knowledge of defendant’s director and manager, Joseph Rosenberg, without resources or commercial credit; and in order to begin and continue business he made an agreement with defendant through Rosenberg, its general manager, by the terms of which defendant agreed to- guarantee payment of Lawton’s purchases of raw material for his manufactures, and further to sell him on credit such bottles as he might need in preparing and putting up his food products. In return for this financial assistance on the part of defendant, Lawton as an individual assumed and agreed to pay to defendant the amount of its claim against the American Packing Company, and also agreed to purchase exclusively from defendant such bottles as his business needs *775 required. In the bankruptcy proceedings certain personal property of the defunct corporation was sold, and as part of the agreement with Lawton defendant advanced the sum of $310 for its purchase, which Lawton agreed to repay, and this property was acquired by Lawton. These agreements were substantially performed by Lawton. He paid the amount of defendant’s claim against the defunct company, repaid the sum advanced for the purchase of the bankrupt stock, and during the period from July, 1913, to April 26, 1916, purchased all his bottles from defendant, amounting to some fifteen thousand dollars. This agreement between Law-ton and defendant had not been authorized by defendant’s board of directors by resolution or other formal order. It was, however, made known by Rosenberg to another director, who was also president of defendant company. Defendant’s board of directors consisted of five persons, two of whom resided in Chicago, and they only came to San Francisco, where the principal place of business of the corporation was situated, once a year. The other three, of whom Rosenberg was one, resided in San Francisco.

After the arrangement with Lawton, Rosenberg guaranteed, in the name of his company, certain purchases made by Lawton, among them being those which are the subject of this action. Except as to the date, the guaranties are duplicates, and the amount of goods sold thereunder total $1,840. In form they are as follows:

“San Francisco, Mar. 2, 1916.
“Armour & Co.
“Battery and Union,
“San Francisco, Cal.
“Gentlemen:
“We herein guarantee payment of forty (40) barrels of salad oil to be delivered to the American Packing Company.
“Very truly yours,
“R. Rosenberg & Sons Co.
“By J. R.”

The evidence conclusively shows that Rosenberg had the entire and complete management of Rosenberg & Sons Company, defendant herein, and transacted all of its business, and this fact is not disputed. The evidence further establishes the execution by defendant, through its manager, of the guaranties sued upon as well as many others covering a *776 period of two years. The guaranties sued upon were the last of a series. Those theretofore made were for approximately twenty thousand dollars, and were paid. It was proved that the sales to Lawton were made by plaintiff relying upon the guaranties, and that invoices of goods and monthly statements were sent by plaintiff to defendant, which in turn forwarded them to Lawton. At first Lawton made payments direct to plaintiff, but later on he sent them to defendant, which from time to time sent them to plaintiff. It further appeared that defendant kept files of carbon copies of the numerous guaranties, and of letters relating to Law-ton’s purchases and the state of his indebtedness. • There were, however, no entries in defendant’s books of account showing that guaranties had been executed.

Under these circumstances it is the claim of appellant that; Rosenberg had complete authority to bind his company in issuing the guaranties.

It is not contended that trading corporations may indiscriminately guarantee their customers’ purchasers from others, or exercise generally, the functions of corporations chartered for the special purpose of executing surety or indemnity contracts. Whether such a corporation would have power to lend its credit to another with whom it had no business, or where such an accommodation had no relation to the business it was organized to transact, is not here presented. The rule denying corporations the right under such circumstances is one of strict construction applied by the earlier cases based upon the doctrine of ultra vires, that a corporation may not enter into a contract or do any act not specifically authorized. The contract here sued upon involves a different principle. The question presented by the different assignments of error is whether or not the general' manager of a trading corporation has the implied power to guarantee debts or obligations of a customer or other person when such course is deemed by him necessary for the promotion of the business of the corporation. The obligation here guaranteed had relation to the corporation’s own interest, and was designed to promote its own business. In such a case the rule now seems to be firmly established that trading corporations may, in furtherance of their own interests, extend financial aid to their customers. (Hess v. Sloane, 66 App. Div. 522, [73 N. Y. Supp. 313]; Bacon v. Montauk *777 Brewing Co., 130 App. Div. 737, [115 N. Y. Supp. 617] ; Winterfield v.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P. 404, 36 Cal. App. 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armour-co-v-r-rosenberg-sons-co-calctapp-1918.