Cunningham Hardware Co. v. Gama Transportation Co.

58 So. 740, 4 Ala. App. 561, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 352
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 58 So. 740 (Cunningham Hardware Co. v. Gama Transportation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cunningham Hardware Co. v. Gama Transportation Co., 58 So. 740, 4 Ala. App. 561, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 352 (Ala. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

WALKER, P. J.

The effort in this case is to charge the Bay City Lumber Company, a corporation, with liability on its indorsement of two promissory notes made to the plaintiff (the appellant here) by the Gama Transportation Company, another corporation, the notes being for the purchase price of materials and supplies furnished by the plaintiff to the Gama Transportation Company. The complaint avers at some length the relations existing between the maker and the indorser of the notes, and the circumstances under which the indorsements were made. ■ The contention of the appellant is that the indorsements, made under the circumstances stated in the complaint as amended, were so supported by a valuable consideration moving to the indorser as to impose upon it enforceable obligations, and that the complaint as amended was not subject to objection on either of the grounds assigned in the demurrers to it. The main contention of the appellees, on the other hand, is that the averments of the amended complaint fail to show that the Bay City Lumber Company had any connection with the notes sued on other than that of a mere accommodation indorser, and that therefore it cannot be held liable on those indorsements.

If the complaint as amended is subject to this construction, it is plain that it discloses no right of recovery against the indorser, as “although a corporation has implied power to make and indorse negotiable notes and bills in carrying on its lawful business, yet it is [568]*568well established, as a general rule, by the great weight of authority, that it has no power to make, indorse, or accept, for the mere accommodation of others, notes and bills in which it has no interest, unless such power is expressly conferred, or is incidental to some other power expressly conferred.”—Steiner & Lobman v. Steiner Land & Lumber Co., 120 Ala. 128, 140, 26 South. 494, 497. The question then is whether the averments of the complaint as amended show that the indorsements were made under such circumstances as to impose liability on the corporation in the name of which they were made.

The complaint as amended discloses the following state of facts; the maker and indorser of the notes being hereinafter referred to, respectively, as the Transportation Company and the Lumber Company: The Lumber Company was engaged in the lumber business, cutting and shipping logs from timber lands in Monroe county, in this state, which it owned or was interested in. By the terms of its certificate of incorporation the general purposes of the corporation were: “The manufacturing, selling, exporting, handling and dealing in lumber, timber, and all other wood goods and products, * * * and the purchasing of lands for the purpose of cutting timber thereof, and the purchasing and acquiring of timber rights, * * * and the building, constructing and operation of wharfs, booms, tramways, ditches and canals, as well as the erection of all necessary buildings, the owning, hiring or leasing of vessels and watercraft required in the operation of the proposed business, the buying, leasing or otherwise acquiring, holding and owning'of all necessary real estate, mills, factories and other personal property to effectuate the purposes of the said company, and apppropriate to its business or any part thereof.” It did not do its own logging. This was [569]*569done by the Transportation Company; two of the three persons who were its incorporators and only stockholders being also, with one other person, the incorporators and only stockholders of the Lumber Company. The Transportation Company was engaged in the business of operating a railway, practically the whole of the right of Avay, of Avhich, and also the steel rails on that right of way, and the logging cars, locomotives, and other rolling stock used in its business, were owned by the Lumber Company or were leased or otherwise obtained by it and furnished for the use of the Transportation Company. The materials and supplies for the purchase price of which the notes sued on Avere given were furnished by the plaintiff to the Transportation Company for use on the logging railroad equipment and logging railroad of the Lumber Company which the Transportation Company Avas using. That equipment was used almost exclusively in hauling logs belonging to the Lumber Company or in Avhich it had an interest. The Transportation Company did practically no other business, and it Avas necessary for it to obtain the supplies and materials furnished on the notes sued on to enable it to do that business.

It is insisted by the counsel for the appellee that the ruling made in the case of Gulf Yellow Pine Lumber Co. v. Chapman & Co., 159 Ala. 444, 48 South. 662, fully supports the action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer to the amended complaint in this case. In that case it was held that a lumber company, which had poAver under its charter, “to operate and maintain a commissary or storehouse, to engage in the buying and sale of goods, and to purchase for either cash or credit, as it may deem proper,” could not be held liable on a promise made in its name by its managing officer to pay for goods sold and delivered to one Lord to furnish [570]*570and maintain a boarding house conducted by him, in which the lumber company had no interest. The court held that the indirect benefit inuring to the corporation from the operation of the boarding house by Lord, in that it affords to the employes of the corporation a place to board, did not confer upon it such an interest in the boarding house as to entitle it to assume liability for expenses of conducting that business. The facts of that case clearly distinguish it from the one at bar. In that case the goods furnished were for usé in the business of a third party in which the corporation sought to be charged had no interest. . In the present case the materials and supplies were fuurnished for use on the property of the corporation sought to be held liable on the notes given for their purchase price. In that case the corporation was not concerned about- the business in which the goods sold were to be used except in so far as it might be of advantage to it for its employes to have the opportunity to avail themselves of the accommodations of the boarding house; in other words, such remote interest as the employer of labor has in his employes enjoying opportunities of obtaining the necessities or conveniences of life, such as may be afforded by the operation of various lines of business in the vicinity of their work, for instance," boarding houses, grocery and dry goods stores, drug stores, meat markets, etc. In the present case, on the other hand, the Lumber Company was not only interested directly in the purchases made as the owner of the property on which the goods furnished were to be used, but it was vitally concerned in the continued operation of the business in which that property was used, as it is made to appear that it was necessary for the Transportation Company to obtain the supplies and materials furnished on the notes sued on to enable it to continue to render for the Lumber Com[571]*571pany a service essential to the carrying on of the latter’s business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 So. 740, 4 Ala. App. 561, 1912 Ala. App. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-hardware-co-v-gama-transportation-co-alactapp-1912.