Madden v. Paroneri Realty Co.
This text of 75 Mo. App. 358 (Madden v. Paroneri Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
It is not denied that the plaintiffs made a contract with Prosser to furnish the materials and to do the work sued for, and that the plaintiffs complied with the contract. Nor is it disputed that, at the time the [362]*362contract was made, the Paroneri Realty Company owned the lot upon which the building was erected. Also the evidence tended to prove that the lien account was filed within six months after the completion of the work. The ground of nonsuit insisted on in the circuit court and urged here is, that there is no substantial evidence that Prosser, in making the contract, acted as the agent of the Paroneri Realty Company, or that he was in any way connected with the corporation. To this we can not consent. It is true that the proceedings of the board of directors of the realty company do not show that Prosser was authorized to contract for the building of the house, nor that the board at any time resolved to improve the lot, but the record or minutes and the stock book show, that at the time the plaintiffs made their contract with Prosser he was the president of the corporation; that the capital stock of the company was $10,000; that Prosser owned all the stock, except $200; that he continued to own it until February, 1896; that he continued to act as president of the company until March 26, 1896, and the oral testimony tends to prove that during the time .he was acting as president he assumed the chief management of the business of the company. This evidence we think was sufficient to authorize the finding that Prosser in making the contract with the plaintiffs acted as the duly authorized agent of the realty company. As was said by Judge Gantt in Moore v. Gaus & Sons Mfg. Co., 113 Mo. loc. cit. 113, “the power of an agent or officer of a corporation to bind his principal is governed by the law of agency, and, where an officer has-been permitted to manage all the business of a corporation, his authority to bind it will be implied from the apparent power thus conferred upon him.” Mr. Morawetz says, that “the board of directors may invest the president with authority to act as chief executive [363]*363officer of the company. This may he done either by an express resolution, or by acquiescence in a course of dealing. A person dealing with the president of a corporation in the usual manner, and within the powers which the president has been accustomed to exercise without the dissent of the directors, would be entitled to assume that the president had actually been invested with those powers.” Morawetz on Cor., sec. 538.
The statement is that the plaintiffs “made a contract with the Paroneri Realty Company by T. J. Prosser its president and agent or with T. J. Prosser acting for himself.” At the time the lien was filed the plaintiffs were uncertain whether the title to the property was vested in the realty company or in Prosser. The contract was made with Prosser, and as a precaution the statements as to the ownership of the lot and the capacity in which Prosser acted, were stated in the alternative. We can conceive of no serious objection to this. Besides the abstract of th6 appellants shows that the only objection made against the admission of the lien paper in evidence was that the amount stated therein to be due was not a just and true account, an objection which is not urged in this court.
[364]*364
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
75 Mo. App. 358, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madden-v-paroneri-realty-co-moctapp-1898.