Cleaveland v. Stewart

3 Ga. 283
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 15, 1847
DocketNo. 45
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 3 Ga. 283 (Cleaveland v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleaveland v. Stewart, 3 Ga. 283 (Ga. 1847).

Opinion

By the Court.

Nisbet, J.,

delivering the opinion.

I do not consider, as claimed by counsel, that this case is [1.] controlled by tliat of Ghent vs. Adams, in 2 Kelly R. 214. In that case, tbe instrument sued on was made by certain individuals, with the addition of the letters J. I. C. tp each of their names. The Court ruled that they were not individually liable upon the face of the paper; that the letters J. I. C. indicated their character as Justices of tbe Inferior Court, and as public agents; and that credit must have been given to them in that character. Being public agents — the agents in fact of a political or public corporation — • persons dealing with them are presumed to know that fact, and to contract with them in that character. It is argued that the Oackchumpna Academy is a public corporation, and upon 4he reasoning in Ghent vs. Adams; if it is, these defendants are not personally liable. But in our judgment, it is not. Incorporation gives to many institutions, as hanks, rail-road companies, colleges and schools, a certain public character ; the public are interested in them, and they subserve valuable public purposes; but they are not legally public incorporations. A corporation is public when it has for its object the government of a portion of tbe State; and although in such a case it involves some private interests, yet as it is endowed with some portion of political power, the term public has been deemed appropriate. Another class of public corporations are those which are founded for public — although not political or municipal — purposes, and the whole interest in which belongs to tbe government. Thus, a hank, organized by the government for public purposes, is a public corporation if the whole of the stock and all the interest in it, reside in the government. Ang. & Am. Corp. Introduction 9; Dartmouth College vs. Woodward, 4 Wheat. R. 518; 2 Kent, 275, So the Trustees of the University of Alabama, were held for the same reasons, a public corporation 5 Stew, & Por. Ala. R. 17; and so would, no doubt, [292]*292the University of Georgia be held; and so also the Central Bank of Georgia. But as to the last named, there juay be doubt.

Towns, cities, counties and parishes, are public corporations. Ang. & Am. Corp. 25; 1 Bald. C. C. R. 222; 2 Kent Com. 275.

But'banks founded on private capital, hospitals founded on private benefactions, and colleges founded and endowed by private enterprise and liberality, although the funds may in part be derived from the bounty of the government, are private corporations, 4 Wheat, R. 518; 7 Serg. & Rawle 559; 2 Kent. Com. 274, 275; 1 Sum. C. C. R. 276; 9 Wheat. R. 907. An incorporated academy, founded on private funds, is, like a college, a private corporation. It is no denial of this position, that they are entitled, under certain conditions, to share in the academic fund. This bounty the academy can receive or not. It is the beneficiary of the State, but that gives the State no rights over it; it may withdraw its bounty, but it has no visitorial powers over it. This principle was settled in the case of Allen vs. McKeen, reported in 1 Sum. C. C. R. 276. That case made the question whether Bowdoin College was or not a public incorporation ; it was argued that it was, because its funds had been generally derived from the bounty of the government. Mr. Story, in a learned opinion, decided that it was a private corporation; and that it was so, notwithstanding its fwnds had been generally derived from the bounty of the government. [2.] The instrument upon which this action is founded, is in the following words:

“We the Trustees of Oakchumpna Academy, promise to pay A. C. Cleaveland or his order, six hundred dollars, for teaching a school at said Academy, during eleven months of the year eighteen hundred and forty. We pay the same money on the first day of the year eighteen hundred and forty-one.
This 26th Oct., 1839. Edmund Stewart,
Wm. Robertson,
Nathan Respass,
W. Worthy,
John Barker.”

A plea of incompetency from intemperance, false charges for tuition the previous year, and such general character, that the signers of the above paper were unable to make up the school; was filed. There was no plea filed to the effect that they were not personally bound, and that the credit was given to the corporation. In addition to the before recited instrument, the record exhibits a [293]*293paper signed by Cleaveland, and bearing even date with it, in which he binds himself to the Trustees of Oakchumpna Academy to perform, all the duties of a teacher, from the 1st day of February, 1840, to the 25th December thereafter, and relinquishes to them all claim to the money that might be coming to the academy from the State. The suit was brought against the defendants in their individual character, to charge them personally. The defendants demurred to the writ, upon the ground that they were not liable personally, and the Court overruled the demurrer. Upon the trial, however, the paper signed by Cleaveland being in evidence, the presiding judge charged the jury, that taking the two papers together as evidence of the contract, the defendants were not liable in their personal characters. To this charge the plaintiff excepts. We think that the paper signed by Cleaveland, so far from disproving that the contract was by these defendants personally, and that the credit was given to them individually, strengthens that idea. The paper made by Cleaveland, is in the nature of a covenant with the trustees, and not with the academy in its corporate character, that he will discharge the duties of teacher. In it he relinquishes to them the dividend which might accrue to the institution, from the State; which relinquishment seems to us to imply, th'at he was not looking to the academy, as a corporation,, for his money, but to them; and also that they had assumed to pay him, and required this relinquishment that they might control the whole income of the institution, and thus protect themselves. Thus viewing this paper-, and looking at it and the instrument together, we think these defendants were personally liable. Judging as we do, however, that the paper made by Cleaveland, has but little to do in any way with the question, we lay it aside. The real question is, were these defendants liable personally upon the instrument sued on? We think the learned judge presiding below, was right in the view he took of this question on the demurrer, and wrong in his charge to the jury.

I quote from Chancellor Kent the two rules, which, to my mind, apply to this question, and by which it is to be tested; premising that, upon the supposition that this corporation, and not the individuals, is bound, it is bound by the act of its agents; and therefore the" question is one of liability between the defendants, as agents, and their principal. “It is a general rule,” says Chancellor Kent, “standing on strong foundations, and pervading every system of jurisprudence, that when an agent is duly constituted, and names [294]*294his principal, and contracts in his name, and does not exceed his-authority, the principalis responsible, a.nd not the agent.” 2 Kent Com. 630.

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3 Ga. 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleaveland-v-stewart-ga-1847.