Joseph Greenspon's Sons Iron & Steel Co. v. Pecos Valley Gas Co.

156 A. 350, 34 Del. 567, 4 W.W. Harr. 567, 1931 Del. Super. LEXIS 13
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJune 1, 1931
Docket278
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 156 A. 350 (Joseph Greenspon's Sons Iron & Steel Co. v. Pecos Valley Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph Greenspon's Sons Iron & Steel Co. v. Pecos Valley Gas Co., 156 A. 350, 34 Del. 567, 4 W.W. Harr. 567, 1931 Del. Super. LEXIS 13 (Del. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Rodney, J.,

charging the jury:

This is an action by Joseph Greenspon’s Sons Iron and Steel Company, a corporation of the State of Missouri, the plaintiff, against the Pecos Valley Gas Company, a corporation of the State of Delaware, the defendant, to recover a sum of money which the plaintiff claims is due to it by reason of the alleged breach of a contract.

The plaintiff claims that the defendant, on the 7th day of January, 1929, agreed to buy from it 45 miles of 6$4" gas pipe at the sum of 61 cents a foot. The pipe was not delivered. The plaintiff has proved, and the defendant concedes that the plaintiff could have obtained the pipe at 51 cents a foot, and so the plaintiff alleges that he lost the sum of 10 cents a foot upon the amount agreed to be purchased. This by arithmetical computation amounts to $23,760.00 and this is the amount claimed by the plaintiff as the profits he would have made had' the contract been carried out by the defendant.

The defendant denies that it is obligated to the plaintiff in any amount. It admits that Mr. Woods, the president of the defendant company, signed the contract in question, but it insists that the signature was affixed thereto in a conditional manner and was understood to be dependent upon the approval of the board of directors and of Mr. Burkett, the general manager, who subsequently would not and did not approve thereof and that, therefore, no valid contract was ever entered into on behalf of the defendant company. The defendant further contends that no delivery of pipe was to be made until shipping orders were given by the defendant and that the giving of the shipping orders in turn should depend upon the *569 completion of the arrangements for financing the company. The defendant contends that these arrangements of financing were expressly understood to be in charge of and the duty of Louis Greenspon, president of the plaintiff company, and related to the financing of an installation of a 6pipe and that Louis Greenspon failed to perfect any arrangements and that no arrangements of financing were or could be made with regard to the installation of a 6-H$" pipe and that, therefore, no shipping instructions were given, no pipe delivered and no indebtedness incurred.

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One question for your determination is the manner of the execution of the contract.

The defendant contends that the contract was signed with the express and explicit understanding that it would not be operative unless or until it was approved by Mr. Burkett, the general manager. It is not claimed that Burkett did approve it and the defendant expressly proved that he refused so to do.

The plaintiff denies that the contract was conditional or dependent upon the approval of Burkett in any manner, but on the contrary contends that it was unconditional insofar as any approval of other parties was concerned.

This feature of' the case is quite important. If you should find from the evidence that the contract was agreed to be conditional upon the approval of Burkett and should further find that Burkett did not approve it, then such finding would be determinative of the case and your verdict should be for the defendant, for in such case no valid contract would have subsisted and no indebtedness created, unless you should find that the contract was afterwards ratified, which subject I shall consider at a later stage of this charge.

If, on the other hand, you should find from the evidencé that the contract was unconditional and not subject to any approval by Mr. Burkett, the general manager, then you should further consider the matter with reference to the power of the president to bind the defendant company.

*570 At this point I may be of some service, for as it is the duty of the jury to determine the facts of a case, so it is the duty of the court to pronounce the law applicable thereto and the power of a corporate officer may often be a mixed question of law and fact.

A corporation is an artificial being created by law and acting under the authority of law for designated purposes. Being artificial and the mere creature of the law, it can only act by its officers and agents. Its officers are its agents or rather the agents of those who compose the corporation and many of the principles of law applicable to the relationship of principal and agent apply to the question of powers of a corporate officer. The precise question here involved is whether a corporation is bound by the contract or writing of the president alone where it involves a contract for 45 miles of pipe at 61 cents a foot involving the expenditure of $144,-936.00, without express authority from the board of directors.

Many cases concerning the powers of a president of a corporation have been presented to me and I have examined a very large number of them. I do not propose to prolong this charge with a long and confusing citation of, or from, authorities, but to cull from them what I consider to be the law.

I have been asked specifically to charge you that if you should find that Albert T. Woods, president of the defendant corporation, signed the contract in question, that then the corporation would necessarily be conclusively bound by such contract, for I am requested to state that the power of a president of a corporation is as complete and effective as is the power of a board of directors acting pursuant to a vote of the board.

This I decline to do as I deem it an extreme and incorrect view of the powers of a president of a corporation.

The powers of a president of a corporation, i. e., the powers over its business and property, are, of course, merely the powers of an agent, for a corporation can speak in no other manner. The control over the company’s business and property is vested in the board of directors, but subject to this control certain powers are delegated by implication to certain officers. Corporations have assumed and acquired such a position in the business world that the *571 office of president carries with it certain implied powers of an agency. He is usually either expressly or by implied consent made the chief executive officer, without special authority or explicitly delegated power he may perform all acts of an ordinary nature which by usage or necessity are incidents to his office and by virtue of his office he may enter into a contract and bind his corporation in matters arising from and concerning the usual course of the corporation’s business. These are the implied powers of the president of the corporation and they inhere in him by virtue of the position itself. Beyond these powers—beyond the carrying out of the usual and proper functions of the corporation necessary for the proper and convenient management of the business of the corporation, the president remains as any other director of the company, and other and further powers must be specifically conferred.

The plaintiff contends that the action of the president in ordering the pipe was an ordinary and usual duty and within the powers impliedly placed by the law in a president who is also managing executive of a corporation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 A. 350, 34 Del. 567, 4 W.W. Harr. 567, 1931 Del. Super. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-greenspons-sons-iron-steel-co-v-pecos-valley-gas-co-delsuperct-1931.