Greenleaf v. Norfolk Southern Railroad

91 N.C. 33
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 91 N.C. 33 (Greenleaf v. Norfolk Southern Railroad) 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
Greenleaf v. Norfolk Southern Railroad, 91 N.C. 33 (N.C. 1884).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

This action is prosecuted by the plaintiff as-signee of William A. Greenleaf, to recover the balance of an alleged indebtedness due for services rendered as secretary of the defendant company under its former name and organization in the sum of nine hundred and fifty-two dollars and fourteen cents, with interest thereon accrued since April 18th, 1876.

The answer controverts any liability in the premises, and, if any exists, sets up as a defense thereto the lapse of time as a bar to the action. Several issues were submitted to. the jury and passed on, of which it is only necessary to consider two as bearing upon the subject matter of the defendant's appeal.

*35 1. Is the defendant company indebted to the .plaintiff and, if so, in what sum ? The jury answer : Yes, about nine hundred and fifty-two dollars and fourteen cents, with interest to date.

4. Is the plaintiff’s claim barred by the stat.ute of limitations ? The jury answer : It is not.

Upon the trial the defendant’s counsel requested the court to give these instructions to the jury:

1. In order to remove the bar of the statute of limitations the new promise must be in writing, and must be unconditional, and if the jury believe from the evidence that the new promise alleged by the plaintiff to have been made by the defendant was not in writing, or was to pay a less amount than the original debt, or in some modified form, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.

The court gave the charge, adding : But if the promise was in writing and to pay the full amount, it removes the bar of the statute. To this the defendant excepted.

2. It is not within the ordinary scope of the power and. authority of a secretary of a railroad corporation to make contracts binding' such corporation, and unless from t,be evidence the jury believe that the secretary of the defendant company was expressly authorized by a regular vote of the board of directors of the company to make the written contract, which plaintiff alleges to have been made, the defendant is not bound -by the contract, and the plaintiff cannot recover in this action.

The instruction was given with the omission of the concluding words, “ and the plaintiff cannot recover, in this action,” in place of which were substituted the following:. But if such contract, if made by the secretary, was after-wards ratified by the company, it is a contract binding upon it.” The defendant again excepts.

The first exception cannot be. sustained unless the substituted sentence so changes the meaning of the instruction *36 as to make it erroneous in law. This is not the effect, for it leaves in full force every substantial element in the charge given in the very form asked, and is but the counterpart of the proposition. The instruction is that the promise, to be operative, must be in writing — unconditional, and not to pay á sum less than the original debt. These conditions must unite in order to remove the statutory bar. The subjoined qualification is, that, if it be in writing and to pay the whole debt, it must revive the contract and displace the obstruction in the way of recovery. Taken in its entirety, the charge leaves in full force what had been before said, that'the promise must be in writing, extend to the whole debt; and not be in “a modified form,” by which last expression is. meant that the promise must be to pay in money, and not in something else of value, or in other words the reviving promise must be commensurate with the original promise.

The argument for the appellant was pressed with much earnestness that an important feature in the “promise or acknowledgment ” required by the statute to give it effect is omitted, in that, it must' be “ signed by the party to be charged,” and that this is error. C. C. P. §51.

The charge, as requested and as given, evidently assumes the presence of the necessary signature and the formal execution, otherwise it would not be the defendant’s contract, and is directed to a description of the essential substance of the contract and its efficiency when properly entered into. No distinction between a contract, signed by the debtor himself and one executed on his behalf by an authorized agent, is adverted to or assignment of error found in the record' for this omission, and surely the appellant cannot complain that the.instruction, prepared by its counsel and given in very worlds hy the court, is erroneous for such now alleged' defect. How cán we take notice of the kind of signature in the absence of any statement in the record, and *37 no objection to the contract is made basedmpon the supposed fact? Our appellate jurisdiction is limited to errors assigned in the rulings of the court below, and in the charge of the judge, for only such are understood to be intended for revision and the statements of the record directed to their elucidation.

Our only inquiry is as to the correctness of the direction upon the features of the contract to which the attention of the judge is called, not to others wholly outside, and in this the ruling is not obnoxious to objection.

2. The exception to the second charge as modified is equally untenable.

It obviously refers to the original contract and declares liow an agreement entered into by an officer of the company, such as is described, without previous authority, may become the agreement of the company. No fault can be imputed to this statement of the. law. It may, by subsequent adoption or ratification, become as effectual and binding as 'if the person acting in its behalf had been invested with power to bind the principal; and the more especially does this principle apply to an officer of the company engaged in the discharge of his duties, upon the maxim, rati-hibitio retro trahitur et mandato cequiparatur.

The court is not defining the promise which in daw is necessary to revive a pre-existing liability, lost or incapable of being enforced in consequenceof delay,but such promise as will in the first instance impose an obligation upon a principal party, and the instruction to this effect requested. Had it been refused, it would then become necessary to send up in the transcript all the evidence heard bearing upon the issues, in order to our reviewing the ruling and passing upon its correctness. If there were none such as would warrant the finding, the jury ought to have been so directed and there would be error in the refusal to so charge. As it is not seen from the record that any such request was *38 preferred, the appellant cannot be heard here to complain that the jury were not instructed in this particular. The practice in this court has been uniform not to entertain such an exception here taken for the first time, and to consider the case as stated to present only the exceptions made in the court below.

We cannot know how much evidence was offered not contained in the statement on appeal., Ward v. Herrin, 4 Jones, 23; Long v. Gantley, 4 Dev. & Bat., 313; Brumble v. Brown, 71 N. C., 513; Whissenhunt v. Jones, 80 N.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.C. 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenleaf-v-norfolk-southern-railroad-nc-1884.