Fowle v. . Kerchner

87 N.C. 49
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 87 N.C. 49 (Fowle v. . Kerchner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fowle v. . Kerchner, 87 N.C. 49 (N.C. 1882).

Opinion

Ruffin, J.,

after stating the above. The contract which is the basis of the action, being in writing and its terms therefore fixed, His Honor rightly treated its construction as a matter of law, the determination of which rested with *56 the court. But we are constrained to say that we cannot concur in the interpretation which he placed upon it.

The legitimate aim of all interpretation is not to make a contract for the parties, or to modify the one they have made for themselves, but simply to ascertain their intentions and to-give them effect, if not inconsistent with some policy of the law ; and in the effort to arrive at their intentions, it is always proper for the court to consider not only the precise terms of the instrument, but the circumstances under which it was made, the situation of the parties, and the manner in which they have borne themselves with reference to it. Omitting the question as to the defendants’ lack of authority to contract for the “ Journal Publishing Company,” and for the present supposing them to have been duly authorized, and considering only the terms in which they have expressed their intentions, and the concomitant circumstances, there would seem but little room to doubt, that according to the understanding of the parties, then existing, the defendants contracted in their representative ■character as trustees, and that their own personal responsibility did not- enter into the expectation of any of the contracting parties.

It is true their signatures affixed to the instrument are without any qualification, and in many doubtful cases, this circumstance has been seized upon by the courts as tending, f rima facie; to show a purpose, on the part of the parties signing, to oblige themselves personally. But the signatures apply to the entire context of the instrument, and if* from this it be plainly seen that the- undertaking is in behalf of another, then the courts without regard to the form of the signature must so construe'it, and not treat it as the personal contract of the party signing it.

In 1 Parsons on Contracts, 54, it is said “that the more recent cases and the better reasoning, are, for determining in each instance and with whatever technical inaccuracy the *57 signature is made, from the facts and the evidence, that a party is an agent or a principal in accordance with the intention of the parties to the instument.”

In De Wolf v. Insurance Company, 8 Pick., 56., Chief Justice ParKee, declared that the rule that the agent to bind his principal must sign the name of .the principal, applies only to deeds, but that, as to other instruments, their effect must depend upon the intention "with which they are made, and if from the whole instrument it can be ascertained that the party signing it intended to act for another, and not for himself, then he will not be bound.

In other words the courts now regard the particular form of executing a contract, not under seal, by an agent, as be ing wholly immáterial, provided the context of the instrument, and the circumstances under which it was executed, show that it was a ministerial act on his part.

Recurring then to the contract now under consideration, we see that not only did the proposition which the defendants submitted to the plaintiffs, and which upon their acceptance became the contract between the parties, expressly purport to be made'as trustees and in behalf of the projected company ; but, as if to exclude by express provision all possibility of personal liability on their part, the defendants indicate the company’s property as that which should be given in mortgage for the debt, and the company’s funds as the source of its ultimate payment, and if to this we add the further fact disclosed in'the correspondence between the plaintiff, Fowle, and the witness, Saunders, that at onetime he insisted that the mortgage upon the company’s property should be endorsed by parties “known to be good,” but that he finally, upon being assured by Saunders, that the proposition as submitted was as advantageous as could be had, agreed to accept it “unendorsed,” it would seem, if we are to adopt the intentions of the parties as the governing rule *58 of construction, absolutely to exclude all thought of responsibility on the part of the defendants personally.

Indeed we understand plaintiffs’ counsel to admit so much as this, when in their brief, they say, that they do not mean to assert'that the contract in terms bound the defendants to pay the amount of the purchase money out of their own pockets, but that it “ operated as a guaranty by the defendants to the plaintiffs of the success of the scheme for organizing the company, and that it would perform what the defendants had agreed in its behalf.”

But we find ho such stipulation in the writing; nothing beyond a proposition as trustees to purchase for the benefit of the company : an agreement to mortgage the company’s funds; a refusal to procure any indorsement of the mortgage, and the consent of the plaintiffs to accept it without such indorsement.

It is too apparent that all parties with equal opportunities for information were inspired with confidence in the successful organization of the proposed company, and that they dealt with each other on the footing of this assurance; and that their contract, not contemplating a failure of the scheme, did not provide, and was not intended to provide> for such a state of affairs — and for the court, now to make it do so, would be to go outside of the intentions of the parties, and to make and not to interpret the contract.

Neither do we feel at liberty, so plainly have the parties manifested their intentions, to vary this construction of the contract, because of the fact that the defendants had no principal capable of conferring upon them the authority to actas its agents — it being apparent, both from the pleadings and the proofs, that the plaintiffs had full knowledge of their want, of authority.

It is unquestionably true that all the authorities concur in saying, that when upon a written contract in which mention is made of both principal and agent, he who is styled *59 the principal, should not be bound, it furnishes a strong argument for holding the agent to be bound. The rule, as one of construction, has been applied to those cases in which upon the face of the instrument, it was left doubtful whether the named principal, or the party signing, was intended to he bound, and a fortiori, would it apply to a case in which, like the present, it appeared that there was no principal to be bound — that is to say — if there could be the least doubt in the minds of the court, arising from the terms of the contract or the circumstances surrounding the case, as to the party intended to be charged.

The rule however is, as we. have said, one of construction, and by no means a legal conclusion. The parties having entered into a contract are presumed to have contemplated a performance of its stipulations by some one, and since the principal cannot be held to such performance, it must have ueen the intention of the parties that the agent should be— the maxim being id res magis valeat quampereat.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.C. 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowle-v-kerchner-nc-1882.