Kelly v. Ning Yung Benevolent Ass'n

84 P. 321, 2 Cal. App. 460, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 229
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1905
DocketCiv. No. 117.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 84 P. 321 (Kelly v. Ning Yung Benevolent Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Ning Yung Benevolent Ass'n, 84 P. 321, 2 Cal. App. 460, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 229 (Cal. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

HARRISON, P. J.

Action to recover from the defendant for certain legal services rendered it by Charles Gr. Nagle, and assigned to the plaintiff. The cause was tried by a jury and a verdict rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $600. A motion for a new trial was denied, and the defendant has appealed. It is not controverted that Mr. Nagle rendered the services,, nor does the- appellant question their value, but contends that the evidence was insufficient to show that Mr. Nagle was employed by the defendant, and that the services which he did render were not rendered to the defendant, but to another corporation.

1. The defendant was organized as a benevolent corporation in 1892 for the purpose of aiding and assisting Chinese persons in California who may be indigent or needy through sickness or any other, cause. As: a. part of these functions, it interested itself in the removal from California of the Chinese *463 dead, for burial in China, and for that purpose had obtained from the supervisors of San Francisco the right to bury these dead Chinese in the city cemetery. In 1897 the discontinuance of burials in San Francisco was bruited, and the defendant became desirous of acquiring a burial place in San Mateo county. It was advised that under its charter it could not hold land for burial purposes, and that for that purpose it was requisite that a corporation be organized under, the provisions of the Civil Code for cemetery corporations. Accordingly some of its members formed such a corporation under the name of Ning Yung Benevolent Association Cemetery, and a tract of land in San Mateo county was conveyed to this corporation for the purpose of a cemetery; and thereafter the burial of the dead by the defendant was had in this cemetery. The record does not show who were the officers of the cemetery corporation, or whether there were any other members thereof than members of the defendant, but it was shown that the cemetery corporation was incorporated at the instance of the defendant, and that the expenses attendant upon its incorporation and the cost of the land which was conveyed to it were paid by the defendant, and that the cemetery and the cemetery corporation were owned by the defendant. It was also shown that after its incorporation the defendant entered into a contract for the construction of a road leading to this cemetery and other work with one Whalen; that the secretary of the defendant went with Mr. Whalen to the office of Mr. Nagle for the purpose of having this contract prepared; that in that contract it was recited that Mr. Nagle was the attorney for the defendant, and that the work was to be done to his satisfaction; and it was also shown that the défendant paid Mr. WTialen $300 for the work done under this contract, and that an entry thereof was made in its books of record. Upon this evidence the jury was authorized to find that the cemetery corporation was merely an agency or instrumentality adopted by the defendant for carrying out the purposes of its incorporation, and that the defendant was liable for whatever services were rendered by Mr. Nagle at its instance or request in reference to or connected with said auxiliary corporation. (See Chater v. San Francisco Sugar Co., 19 Cal. 248; Shorb v. Beaudry, 56 Cal. 446; Cornell v. Corbin, 64 Cal. 197, [30 Pac. 629]; Hunt v. Davis, 135 Cal. 31, [66 Pac. 957].) It *464 is not necessary to determine whether it was ultra vires for the defendant to make provision for the ultimate transfer to China for burial there of the remains of the Chinese under its caré who might die in San Francisco, and as a means therefor acquire a cemetery for their temporary burial until such transfer could be made. The plaintiff is not seeking to enforce an executory contract against the plea of ultra vires, but to obtain from the defendant compensation for services rendered under a contract which has been fully executed and whose fruits it is now enjoying. , (Main v. Casserly, 67 Cal. 127, [7 Pac. 426].) The defendant assumed such action to be within its corporate powers, and engaged and has received the services of Mr. Nagle for the purpose of carrying it into effect. Having received the benefit of his services, it is not now competent for it to claim that it had no power to employ" him.

2. Mr. Nagle had acted as attorney and legal adviser of the defendant for about a year prior to the rendition of the services for which this action is brought, including the examination óf the title to its real estate, preparation of books suitable for its business, and its records, effecting the incorporation of the auxiliary cemetery corporation above referred to, and the purchase of land for such cemetery, and in these matters his relations with the defendant were carried on , chiefly through its secretary. He was paid for these services by the defendant, and was requested by its- new president and secretary to continue to act as its attorney, and in pursuance thereof rendered the services for which this action is brought. During this period he had several conferences in reference ' thereto with its officers, including the president and secretary and some of its directors, at the headquarters or office of the defendant. After the larger portion of the services had been rendered he sent a letter in November, 1899, to the defendant, requesting some compensation, and in. reference thereto the secretary came to his office with this letter, and stated to him that the defendant wished the Six Companies to contribute thereto, and asked him to write a letter for that purpose. Acting upon this request, he wrote such letter to the Six Companies, which he gave to" the secretary, and in response thereto he received a request from the Six Companies to visit that body. Before doing so he went to the office of the de *465 fendant, and there again met the president and secretary and others, including one of its directors, and was told by the secretary in the presence of the others that the Six Companies had agreed to pay him $500, and that the defendant would pay him the balance. The letter which he wrote to the Six Companies was in reference to services rendered toward removing the tax imposed for the disinterment and removal of the Chinese dead, and at the request of the defendant’s secretary Mr. Nagle named therein the sum of $3,000 as his charge therefor. Mr. Nagle visited the Six Companies in company with the officers of the defendant, as requested by them, and thereafter received from them the sum of $500. Under this evidence the jury was authorized to find, not only that Mr. Nagle had been employed by the defendant, but also that the defendant had received and was in the enjoyment of the services rendered by him under such employment.

The objection to the testimony of Mr. Nagle that he was employed by the secretary of the defendant, upon the ground that it had not been shown that the person so employing him was such secretary, as well as the motion for a nonsuit on such ground, were properly overruled. Although the statement of the secretary that he held that office was insufficient of itself to prove that fact for the purpose of binding the defendant by his acts and representations, yet testimony that he made such statement was not incompetent, but could be considered in connection with other evidence of his authority.

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Bluebook (online)
84 P. 321, 2 Cal. App. 460, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-ning-yung-benevolent-assn-calctapp-1905.