Fuller v. Reed

215 N.W. 147, 55 N.D. 707, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 145
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 20, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 215 N.W. 147 (Fuller v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuller v. Reed, 215 N.W. 147, 55 N.D. 707, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 145 (N.D. 1927).

Opinion

Christianson, J.

Plaintiff brought this action against Walter Reed, A. J. Mclnnes, I. N. Rasmusson, Franklin Paige, Martin Jacobson, John Dawson, John Strauss and the North Dakota Farm Bureau Federation, to recover for services performed by the plaintiff during the years 1921-22-23 and 24, as secretary of the North Dakota Farm Bureau Federation.

The North Dakota Farm Bureau Federation is an unincorporated voluntary association of farm bureaus of some thirty-five to forty counties of the state. The membership in the county bureaus consists of farmers in the respective counties. Under the plan of organization each member of a county farm bureau pays an annual membership- *710 fee of $10, and the county farm bureau pays to the North Dakota Farm Bureau Federation one half of each membership fee so received by it. The North Dakota Farm Bureau Federation was organized at a convention of representatives of the various county farm bureaus, held in January, 1921. At this convention a constitution and by-laws were adopted and a board of directors and an executive committee were chosen. The constitution provided that the executive committee should have power “to establish and maintain offices and to employ a secretary and such assistants and employees as it may deem necessary and fix the salaries in each case.” The defendant, Franklin Paige, was one of the members of the executive committee chosen at the first meeting; but the other individual defendants held no official position in the North Dakota Farm Bureau Federation until in and after January, 1922. The plaintiff was present at the convention at which the North Dakota Farm Bureau Federation was formed; and was, at or about that time, elected executive secretary and afterwards served as such. In January, 1922, the defendants Franklin Paige, Walter Peed, A. J. Mclnnes, John Dawson and John Strauss were chosen members of the executive committee and constituted such committee during that year and the following year. The defendants I. N. Basmusson and Martin Jacobson were not members of the executive committee nor of the board of directors during the year 1922.

The case was tried to a jury, but at the close of plaintiff’s case defendant’s counsel also rested his case and moved for a directed verdict in favor of the defendants for a dismissal of the action. Thereupon both parties consented that the jury be discharged and that the cause be submitted to the court. The trial court denied defendant’s motion for a directed verdict and made findings and conclusions in favor of the plaintiff. Thereafter the defendants moved that the judgment be vacated and that they be permitted to introduce certain evidence. Defendants further moved in the alternative for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial. The trial court denied the latter motion, but granted the motion to vacate the judgment and directed that either party be permitted to introduce additional evidence. Thereafter it was stipulated that the defendants Franklin Paige, John Strauss, A. J. Mc-Innes and one Hector, if called as witnesses and duly sworn would 'testify as follows:

*711 “That they attended the annual meeting of the delegates from the county bureaus attending the state convention of the North Dakota State Farm Bureau Federation held in January 1922 at which time there was also held the annual meeting of the Board of Directors and members of the executive committee. That at the request of the president of the association, such parties went to see the plaintiff, H. B. Fuller, as a committee to discuss with him his employment as secretary and the matter of payment of salary and the amount of salary which Mr. Fuller would expect. That in the presence of the other witnesses above named and in the course of that discussion, Mr. Paige stated to Mr. Fuller that the members of the executive committee would not sign any notes or personally go good for any debts of the defendant association and that Fuller would have to look to the association for the payment of his salary. That he would have to, keep after the county bureaus in the collection of membership dues, and if he did this he ought to have no trouble in getting his money, to which Mr. Fuller replied that he did not expect to look to any of the members of the executive committee nor the directors for the payment of his salary claims. . . ."

The trial court made findings and conclusions in favor of the plaintiff and ordered judgment in his favor against all the individual defendants, except I. N. Rasmusson and Martin Jacobson. Judgment was awarded against the defendant Franklin Paige, individually, for the amount which the trial court found to be due to the plaintiff for salary for the year 1921; and judgment was rendered against the defendants Franklin Paige, Walter Reed, A. J. Mclnnes, John Dawson and John Strauss for the amount which the trial court found to be due the plaintiff for salary during the year 1922. All the defendants against whom judgment was rendered appeal.

Voluntary unincorporated associations naturally divide themselves into two classes: (1) Those organized for profit, i. e., with the end in view of earning profits for the members; and (2) those which do not contemplate any pecuniary profit to the members. Associations of the first class are generally formed for business purposes, while those of the second are generally formed for noncommercial purposes. An association of the first class is in legal effect a partnership so far as the liability of the members thereof to third persons is concerned; and “ac *712 cordingly each member is individually liable as a partner for a debt contracted by the association. As each partner represents his copartners, so each member of the association represents his comembers, and each is bound by the acts of the others in the common behalf.” 5 C. J. 1363; 1 Williston, Contr. § 307. But an association of the second class is not a partnership, and the members thereof “become liable for obligations incurred in behalf of the association within the scope of the authority of the agent attempting to create the liability.” 1 Williston, Contr. § 308. “Membership, as such, imposes no personal liability for the debts of the association; but to charge a member therewith it must be shown that he has actually or constructively assented to or ratified the contract upon which the liability is predicated.” 5 C. J. 1363; Vorachek v. Anderson, 54 N. D. 891, 211 N. W. 984. “The distinction between an association which is a partnership and one which is not, is mainly in that the relation of partners to one member implies an authority in itself, whereas the liability of members of an association which is not a partnership for the acts of its officers or other members, must be determined on general principles of agency.” 1 Williston, Contr. § 308.

In the instant case it seems to be conceded that the North Dakota Farm Bureau Federation is a nonprofit association. And plaintiff does not predicate defendants’ liability upon their membership in the North Dakota Farm Bureau Federation; he predicates liability upon the theory that the North Dakota Farm Bureau Federation was and is legally incapable of contracting, and that the defendants, having entered into a contract with the plaintiff as agents of a legally incompetent and irresponsible principal, are individually bound by the contract. In plaintiff’s brief on this appeal it is said:

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Related

Askew v. Joachim Memorial Home
234 N.W.2d 226 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1975)
Fuller v. Reed
236 N.W. 267 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
215 N.W. 147, 55 N.D. 707, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-v-reed-nd-1927.