Fontana v. Pacific Can Co.

61 P. 580, 129 Cal. 51, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 928
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1900
DocketS.F. No. 1431.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 61 P. 580 (Fontana v. Pacific Can Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fontana v. Pacific Can Co., 61 P. 580, 129 Cal. 51, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 928 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Plaintiffs sued to recover a balance due upon the following contract alleged to have been entered into by plaintiffs and defendant on the day of its date:

“Agreement between the Pacific Can Company and Fontana & Co., both of the city and county of San Francisco.
“That the former shall sell to the latter two hundred and fifty (250) shares of the capital stock of the Pacific Can Company, at two hundred (200.00) dollars per share. Payment to be made by the latter’s note for fifty thousand (50,000) dollars, one day after date, with interest at six per cent per annum.
*53 “Both stock and note to be placed in escrow at the Anglo-California Bank, subject to the following conditions:
“Said Fontana & Co. may take up said note with accrued interest and receive said stock in satisfaction thereof at any date prior to February 1, 1896, or they may require that said note be returned to them provided said stock be returned to the Pacific Can Company at any date before February 1, 1896, interest on said note being paid to the date of said return.
“Said Pacific Can Company agree that all dividends declared on said stock up to either of the above dates shall be paid to said Fontana & Co., and that said Pacific Gan Company will make good to Fontana & Co. any deficiencies in said dividends below ten (10) per cent per annum. Should there he no dividends paid, then the Pacific Can Company agree to pay Fontana & Co. ten per cent interest on the amount of the note from the time of the purchase of the stock until the cancellation of the note and the return of the shares.
“Said stock shall be returned to said Pacific Can Company and said note to Fontana & Co. on February 1, 1896, under the above conditions as to interest and dividends if the latter should not previously assume ownership in either way above provided.
“Signed in triplicate.
“San Francisco, April 25, 1894.'
'PACIFIC ¡CAN COMPANY,
“By JOHN LEE, President, “A. D. CUTLEB, Secretary. “FONTANA & CO."

Defendant denied specifically the allegations of the verified complaint and set up a cause of action for damages against plaintiffs on account of an alleged agreement on their part to purchase cans for the year 1895 from defendant. Plaintiffs purchased no cans from defendant for that year. The court found against defendant on this issue, and as the evidence was conflicting defendant does not urge the claim here. The court found that the contract of April 25, 1894, “was executed on behalf of defendant by its president and secretary, and the execution of said contract by said officers was not without authority of its board of directors, and was not without authority *54 of law. Said contract was duly made and executed by said corporation.” This finding is attacked as unsupported by the evidence, the defendant claiming in its answer and at the trial that the contract was unauthorized and void. Plaintiffs had judgment for two thousand four hundred and fifty-eight dollars and thirty-five cents, with interest at seven per cent per annum from February 1, 1896. Defendant appeals from the judgment, and brings the evidence up by bill of exceptions.

Plaintiff offered in evidence the contract sued upon, which ■ is set out supra. The record reads as follows: “Said document [the contract] was not under the seal of the corporation. The witness testified that there were three originals of said document, and that the one shown here was one of the originals. Thereupon the counsel for the plaintiff offered it in evidence.” Defendant objected on the following grounds: That the corporation had no authority to execute any such contract; that upon its face it appears to be ultra vires; that it is contrary to public policy and void; that it does not purport to be executed by the corporation in this, that it is not under the seal of the corporation, and there is no proof yet that the signatures of the officers are their genuine signatures, nor that they were authorized to make the contract. The objections were overruled and the contract was admitted in evidence, defendant reserving an exception. Plaintiffs cite in support of the ruling Pixley v. Western etc. R. R. Co., 33 Cal. 183 1 ; and Crowley v. Genesee etc. Co., 55 Cal. 273. Plaintiffs do not claim that there was any evidence, and there was none, showing that the directors of the corporation had, by resolution or by any other action, official or otherwise, authorized the president and secretary to make the contract; there is no evidence that either of these officers was clothed with general or special powers to make such a contract, or had any powers from which it might be inferred that they or either of them could make such a contract; there was no corporate seal attached; there is no evidence or claim of subsequent ratification by the directors of the corporation. The Pixley ease is not authority for the broad proposition that the partial execution of a contract by a corporation raises the presumption of authority to make it. The presumption in that case arose from the established acts *55 of the directors of the corporation, as well as from the part execution of the contract. In the case here there is no evidence that the directors ever knew of the contract, much less authorized it by their conduct or acts. ¡Nor does it follow, as is claimed, that the contract was under seal because it was executed and because the certificate of the shares issued under the contract was under seal. It is affirmatively shown that the contract bears no seal of the corporation, and its absence is not accounted for in any way. The seal on the certificate of shares is not the slightest evidence that a seal was attached to the contract. Besides, whatever presumption arose that the seal was attached was overcome by the admission that in fact no seal was attached. The principle decided in the Crowley case has since been approved and is not now questioned. But in that case it was admitted that the president of the corporation, who made the contract, was also superintendent and general managing agent of the mining corporation, and it was held that authority may he inferred from the admitted relations of the agent to the corporation, or from its course of business. ¡No such facts appear here. We do not think the finding is supported by the evidence. (Barney v. Pforr, 117 Cal. 56; Pauly v. Pauly, 107 Cal. 8 2 ; Blood v. La Serena Land etc. Co., 113 Cal. 221.)

At the close of plaintiff’s case defendant made a motion for nonsuit on grounds which, in our opinion, would not ordinarily have been sufficiently specific to bring it within the well-established rule as stated in Daley v. Russ, 86 Cal. 114, and cases there cited. (See, also, Palmer v. Marysville etc. Pub. Co., 90 Cal.

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Bluebook (online)
61 P. 580, 129 Cal. 51, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontana-v-pacific-can-co-cal-1900.