Church v. Church Cementico Co.

77 N.W. 548, 75 Minn. 85, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 995
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 21, 1898
DocketNos. 11,377—(169)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 N.W. 548 (Church v. Church Cementico Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Church v. Church Cementico Co., 77 N.W. 548, 75 Minn. 85, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 995 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

Assuming, as we shall, for the purposes of this decision, and as asserted by plaintiff’s counsel, that William Church, plaintiff’s husband, was in the employ of Reiss Clarke for the year ending November 1, 1896, and that they were not copartners in business; and, further, that the evidence at the trial was ample to support a finding that an assignment of that part of Church’s salary which was mentioned and reserved in the memorandum signed by Clarke was duly and legally made to plaintiff, so that she had a right of action against some one when the business was sold; and also assuming that, as to this branch of the case, the assignments of error in respect to the admission or exclusion of evidence at the trial are not well taken, and also that the court did not err in its charge, — • we are brought directly to a consideration of the facts as shown by the record concerning the assumption of the alleged indebtedness of Ross Clarke to plaintiff, by defendant company, at the time of the incorporation or later, although not then due, but which actually matured and became payable in cash when the business was sold to the Baker Company.

Was there any evidence upon which to rest a finding that defendant company ever assumed, expressly or by implication, that obligation? And this question is to be answered with the facts in mind that Church held one share of defendant’s stock; that Ross [89]*89Clarke held one share; that his wife, Anna W. Clarke, held the remainder, 48 shares; that these three persons were named as the first board of directors in the articles; that Mr. Church acted as, and assumed to be, the president of the corporation; and that Mr. Clarke acted as, and assumed to be, the secretary and treasurer. Mrs. Clarke had been in some way named as vice president, but it was not shown that she was advised of the honor, or ever acted as such. These facts and these relations demand of us a close scrutiny as to the assumption agreement, and required of the persons who pretended to act, the highest degree of fairness. Battelle v. N. W. Cement & C. P. Co., 37 Minn. 89, 33 N. W. 327.

The articles of incorporation of defendant company were executed and filed October 29, to take effect November 21, 1896. Just before this, there had been, according to the testimony in plaintiff’s behalf, a conversation between Mr. Church and Mr. Clarke, in which the latter promised that what was then due on account of this agreement as to the $50 per month, then amounting to $600, should be assumed and paid by the corporation. There was also some conversation betwreen plaintiff, Mrs Church, and Clarke, in which Clarke stated that he had made such an agreement with Mr. Church, and that Church should continue to receive a salary of $125 per month, of which $75 should be paid in cash each month, and1 the balance should be credited as before."

This was nothing more than a promoter’s promise, and was of no validity as against the corporation thereafter brought into life. It could not be bound by the promise, for it could have no agent to act in its behalf before it had an existence. Battelle v. N. W. Cement & C. P. Co., supra; McArthur v. Times Printing Co., 48 Minn. 319, 51 N. W. 216.

Nor does counsel claim that, taken by itself, there was a promise, either as to the past or future, which would bind the contemplated corporation. But the contention is that the evidence in some manner discloses that the promise or agreement made in advance by the promoter was afterwards adopted, expressly or by implication, by the corporation, became its engagement, and as valid as if it had never been thought of until the corporation was organized. It is true that this corporation could adopt the promise and agree[90]*90ment of the promoter, and bind itself to the same extent as it could be bound upon a similar, but purely original, engagement.

The only evidence tending to show an adoption of the promise or agreement by the corporation was that, soon after the organization, Church, who kept the books both before and after November 2r asked Clarke if the old' business should be balanced, and an entry made in the journal of the change in affairs, whereupon the latter replied that this was unnecessary;

“Let it run just the same; we assume all the liabilities of the old concern.”

At most, this was nothing but a conversation between the president of the corporation and its secretary and treasurer, in respect to an indebtedness of the latter, in the payment of which the former was vitally interested. Its object was to bind the corporation, in which both of these persons had an interest, amounting to 4 per cent, of the stock shares, and to appropriate its funds to the payment of the debt of one of them, and, to all intents and purposes, due to the other. It had not been shown that the corporation was under any legal obligation to pay this debt, or that it had received any consideration for a promise to pay.

The other stockholder, holding 96 per cent of the capital stock, knew nothing of the transaction, and ¿ad never heard of the indebtedness, or of any effort on the part of Church or Clarke to saddle the claim upon the corporation. And it stands conceded that the directors, as a board, never assumed this or any other obligation of the business predecessor of the corporation. It was shown that, out of the assets of defendant, some of the liabilities, existing at its incorporation, were paid, either by Church or Clarke; but this had no tendency to show an assumption of the amount now in controversy by such corporation.

An agreement of this kind, if actually made, would have been a fraud upon the corporation, and especially would it have been a fraudulent and forbidden transaction as to the other shareholder, Mrs. Clarke. The two officers before mentioned, of defendant corporation, could not divert its assets from their legitimate purposes, that one or both might be benefited. The corporation had no in[91]*91terest in the payment of Eoss Clarke’s debt. It had received no consideration for the attempted assumption; and the holder of 48 of the 50 shares of its capital stock could not be plundered by the consummation of such a scheme.

Nor is there a particle of merit in the contention of plaintiff’s counsel that, because Mrs. Clarke failed to disapprove the assumption of her husband’s indebtedness within a reasonable time after she should have discovered or known of it had she exercised ordinary diligence or prudence respecting the corporate affairs, she is bound by such assumption as fully as if it had been duly authorized by the board of directors upon a full and adequate consideration. Ordinary prudence and diligence in regard to the affairs of the corporation would not have disclosed the fact that the two persons who were managing its business had entered into such an agreement, for it existed entirely in the verbal understanding before mentioned. It was in the minds, perhaps, of those who participated in the conversation, and no one would demand of Mrs. Clarke that she search it out from these receptacles. Nothing appeared upon the books kept by Church which would inform her of such a transaction.

As before stated, Mrs. Church had been credited $50 each month, in what was known, on the books kept prior to the incorporation, as the “investment account,” and the total of this credit amounted to $600 when the articles were signed. Thereafter, and for the next six months, the credit was given to Mrs. Church in the same account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.W. 548, 75 Minn. 85, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-v-church-cementico-co-minn-1898.