Mandeville v. Courtright

142 F. 97, 73 C.C.A. 321, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4087
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 28, 1905
DocketNo. 58
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 142 F. 97 (Mandeville v. Courtright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mandeville v. Courtright, 142 F. 97, 73 C.C.A. 321, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4087 (3d Cir. 1905).

Opinion

ACHESON, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff’s statement of claim sets forth that the defendants, under the name of Alba Dentists Company, were engaged in the practice of dentistry in the city of Philadelphia, at No. 1002 Market street, and that on or about May 11, 1903, they undertook and agreed to furnish to the plaintiff a set of teeth, and to extract the necessary teeth, and that in the doing of the work, an employé of the defendants, who was operating upon the plaintiff’s mouth by and under the authority of the defendants, negligently and carelessly fractured the plaintiff’s jawbone, causing her great and permanent injury. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $4,000, whereof they reported by way of special verdict that the sum of $1,500 was assessed as punitive damages, subject, however, to the reserved questions of law: First, “whether there is any evidence to go to the jury in support of the plaintiff’s claim”; second, “whether there is any evidence to go to the jury in support of the plaintiff’s claim for exemplary damages.” Subsequently the court entered judgment for the defendants non obstante veredicto.

It appeared that in March, 1901, some- of the defendants procured a charter from the state of New Jersey incorporating a company named Alba Dentists Company. At the trial of this case the learned judge below charged the jury “that the charter of New' Jersey did not give to the corporation, to which that charter related, the power to practice dentistry in Pennsylvania”; and in his opinion disposing of the case on the reservation, the judge said:

“X will assume, without deciding, that the Alba Dentists Company, in practicing dentistry, exceeded the powers conferred upon it by the state of New Jersey, and that by its pursuit of that calling in Pennsylvania it violated the law of that commonwealth.”

[99]*99We agree that its charter did not authorize the Alba Dentists Company to practice dentistry in Pennsylvania, and that by the law of Pennsylvania the company was forbidden to practice dentistry in the latter state. The law of Pennsylvania by which this company is so forbidden is the act of assembly of July 9, 1897 (P. L. 206). In the case of Commonwealth ex rel. Attorney General v. Alba Dentists Company, 13 Pa. Dist. R., 432, which originated since the plaintiff’s cause of action arose, in the court of common pleas of Dauphin county, Pa., which is the state court having special statutory cognizance of actions quo warranto, it was held that the Alba Dentists Company (id est, the very company with which we are concerned) could not lawfully practice dentistry in Pennsylvania, and judgment of ouster was entered against the corporation.,

It appeared from the evidence that all of the six defendants were stockholders of the Alba Dentists Company before and at the time when the plaintiff made her contract for dental work and suffered the injury complained of. But this was not all. There was evidence to show that five of the defendants, namely, Courtright, Mayer, Ridge, Powell, and Brown, were officers of the company, filling, respectively, the positions of president, vice president, treasurer, secretary, and solicitor, and that the other defendant, Noppel, was a director of the company. The defendants Ridge and Brown, the treasurer and solicitor, were also directors of the company. It was shown that two of the defendants, namely, Courtright and Powell, were engaged in the active management of the business at the company’s offices at No. 1002 Market street, Phildelphia, where the business of dentistry was carried on in the name of Alba Dentists Company, and it was further shown that each of the other four defendants from time to time visited these offices. There was ample evidence to justify the jury in finding that all the defendants had knowledge that the practice of dentistry was being carried on under the name of Alba Dentists Company at said offices and that all of them assented thereto and that they were aásociated in the conduct of the business.

The evidence showed that the plaintiff went to the company’s offices at No. 1002 Market street, on May 11, 1903, and contracted to have the desired dental work done. The plaintiff testified that she did not know that the Alba Dentists Company was a corporation, and that she supposed she was dealing with licensed dentists. The court instructed the jury that, if the plaintiff dealt with the corporation with knowledge that it was a corporation, she would be estopped from raising the question whether or not it was acting within its powers, and would be precluded from holding the defendants liable. The verdict being for the plaintiff, it must be taken that the jury found that she had not knowingly dealt with the corporation. There was evidence to show that during the progress of the dental work for which the plaintiff had contracted one Louis Solomon, who was an employé at this establishment, but who had no license to practice dentistry, after consultation with the defendant Powell, the then acting manager of the establishment, and by Powell’s direction, extracted a piece of the plaintiff’s upper jawbone, upon the erroneous supposition that it was a root or piece of process ¡ the result being a badly broken jaw.

[100]*100The case, then, as we read the record, is this: The defendants, who-were stockholders and officers of a company incorporated in the state of New Jersey, caused to be conducted in the state of Pennsylvania, in the name of the corporation, the business of dentistry, which the corporation had no charter right to carry on there and which it was expressly forbidden to carry on in Pennsylvania by the law of the latter state. The plaintiff, in ignorance of the existence of such a corporation, and supposing that she was in the hands of licensed dentists, submitted herself to an authorized employé of the establishment, who operated upon her mouth, so negligently and carelessly as to fracture her jawbone and cause her serious injury. Such being the case, can the defendants escape personal liability to the plaintiff by setting up the charter of the company? We think not. To all intents and purposes, the defendants acted without any charter at all, for the New Jersey charter gave no warrant to the corporation to practice dentistry in Pennsylvania and the Pennsylvania statute prohibited the corporation to practice dentistry in that state. - The defendants were bound to know that their corporation was forbidden by law to practice dentistry in Pennsylvania, and it seems to us that by the use of the name of the corporation they could not avoid personal liability for what they did. The defendants were not innocent nonassenting stockholders, but they were concerned knowingly and actively in the conduct of an illegal business carried on in the name of the corporation. What was being carried on at their establishment, the practice of dentistry, the corporation could not conduct. This the defendants were bound to know. What, therefore, the corporation could not do, thej could not, under the guise of its charter, carry on. And hence they must be conclusively held to have done themselves what was actually done. In a word, these defendants, in view of their knowledge and active participation, cannot be heard to say that what they were causing to be done, was not being done by them but by their corporation, when that corporation could not conduct the business and they knew that it could not. •

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Bluebook (online)
142 F. 97, 73 C.C.A. 321, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mandeville-v-courtright-ca3-1905.