Hardin v. Morgan Lithograph Co.

160 N.E. 388, 247 N.Y. 332, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1076
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 14, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 160 N.E. 388 (Hardin v. Morgan Lithograph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardin v. Morgan Lithograph Co., 160 N.E. 388, 247 N.Y. 332, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1076 (N.Y. 1928).

Opinion

Pound, J.

The complaint alleges that:

II. On or about the 1st day of July, 1918, or prior thereto, the defendant promised plaintiff that if plaintiff introduced defendant to Famous Players-Lasky Corporation or officers or agents thereof, and if thereafter defendant secured lithograph business from said Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, defendant would pay plaintiff five (5%) per cent commission on the gross lithograph business which defendant should do with said Famous Players-Lasky Corporation.
“ III. Thereafter and pursuant to said agreement plaintiff did introduce defendant to Famous PlayersLasky Corporation or officers or agents thereof, and upon information and belief defendant thereafter did lithograph business with the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, the exact amount of which plaintiff does not know and has no means of ascertaining.
IV. Plaintiff has duly performed all the terms, conditions and promises of said agreement on his part to be performed ” and thereon plaintiff demands judgment for $100,000.

*336 The answer puts in issue these allegations but admits that defendant had done lithograph business with the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation. A counterclaim asks judgment for $2,000 on a promissory note, which has been had against plaintiff.

That defendant is in the billboard lithograph business and that Famous Players-Lasky Corporation uses billboard lithographs for advertising its moving pictures may be assumed without hesitation. On the trial, it appeared that plaintiff had a large experience in the billboard advertising business. He testified that in 1917 he met Edward Gaylor, a salesman for the defendant company in New York, in connection with another contract for this class of work. He was not allowed to testify for whom Mr. Gaylor was acting, or what conversation he had with him, as he had laid no foundation therefor by showing Gaylor’s authority to make a contract of the character alleged in the complaint for the defendant company. Dropping this line of inquiry temporarily, plaintiff gave evidence of a conversation with Mr. Morgan, the president of the defendant, in April, 1919, in Cleveland, Ohio, as follows: Q. What was the conversation with Mr. Morgan in April, 1919, when you saw him in Cleveland? A. I told him I want to get $10,000 to go into business, to finance my business and he said he couldn’t let me have that much money. I said, Well, there is quite a lot of money coming to me on that contract, the Famous Players.’ He says, There wont be anything due on that for a year, we have to take over about $300,000 worth of lithographs from them and give them credit for it before we will get any money for ourselves out of it.’ Finally — I said to him, Can’t you let me have some money personally? ’ He finally decided to let me have a personal loan of $2,000, which was independent of the Famous Players,” and further testified that The first day he told me — the first day I saw him I didn’t get the money, he said to see him the next day. I saw him the next *337 day and he gave me a check for $2,000 and I gave him a note for $2,000. After he told me that the contract — there wouldn’t be any money due me on the contract until after they had disposed of all the lithographs they had taken over from the Famous Players,” and gave a third statement of the conversation as follows: “ Mr. Morgan at that time told me it would be some time before any of that commission would be due, something like about a year before they would start to make any money out of the company. I said, Well, I will have to let it go until such time.’ So he made this personal loan, which was entirely separate and independent from the other,” and again he testified that Morgan said: “ It will be a nice contract. There would be a lot of money made out of it and it would take some time.”

This evidence was all stricken out on defendant’s motion and an exception was taken. It was stricken out because the court ruled in substance that the president of a corporation, as such, had no authority to ratify an unauthorized act of a salesman, or to ratify any agreement that he as president was not authorized to make.

Plaintiff then made another ineffectual effort to prove the conversation he had with Gaylor in 1918.

Defendant’s counsel made a concession as follows: “For the purpose of expediting the trial, I make the concession which is intended to be simply this, that if the plaintiff was able to prove a contract, such as is claimed in the complaint, then we concede that there would he an amount of damage. ’ ’ Plaintiff’s counsel also stated without question that “ It is conceded that there was a contract made between Famous Players and the defendant on September 16, 1918, or thereabouts, whereby the defendant was to make lithographs for Famous Players, and that a large volume of business was done under that contract, and that if the Court would permit the conversation between the plaintiff and Mr. Gaylor, which has already been excluded; and if the Court would permit *338 to stand the conversation between the plaintiff and Mr. Morgan, which the Court has stricken out, the plaintiff could produce evidence of damage.”

The complaint was then dismissed for failure to establish a cause of action, without the offer of further proof by plaintiff. As he was not allowed to prove the contract, it would have been idle for him to attempt to show performance and damages. It may be assumed that, if plaintiff could lay a proper foundation for evidence of the conversation with Gaylor, he would testify to the terms of the contract as set forth, in the complaint and give evidence bearing on performance on his part and damages.

This is a question merely of making out a prima facie case by the plaintiff so as to shift the burden of going on with the proof to the defendant. Did defendant’s president have power, prima facie, to ratify a contract of the character set forth in the complaint made between plaintiff and defendant through Gaylor, the defendant’s employee? If so, did plaintiff’s evidence of his conversation with the president have sufficient probative force as evidence of such ratification so that plaintiff should have been allowed to go on with his case?

The trial proceeded on the theory that the directors of a business corporation could authorize or ratify a contract to pay commissions on business obtained by it through the services of another,' even though the other agreed to do no more than introduce it to a prospective customer but that no presumption existed that the president had such authority. The presumption as to the authority of the president of a corporation has been broadly stated: “ The president, having full personal charge of the business which the defendant was organized to transact, represented the corporation and prima facie he had power to do any act which the directors could authorize or ratify.” (Hastings v. B. L. Ins. Co., 138 N. Y. 473, 479; Oakes v. C. W. Co., 143 N. Y. 430, 436).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 N.E. 388, 247 N.Y. 332, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardin-v-morgan-lithograph-co-ny-1928.