Moriarity v. Meyer

21 N.M. 521
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1916
DocketNo. 1815
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 N.M. 521 (Moriarity v. Meyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moriarity v. Meyer, 21 N.M. 521 (N.M. 1916).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

PARKER, J.

This is an appeal from the district court for the county of Bernalillo. The case was tried to the court without a jury. Appellant assigns thirty-one grounds of error, and argues three general propositions before this court. Excluding questions concerning certain findings and requested findings, which will be dealt with hereafter, this case turns upon the single question as to whether or not the relation of landlord and tenant existed between the appellant and the People’s Savings Bank of Moriarity, so that the foreclosure of an alleged landlord’s lien resulted in divesting the bank of title in a certain banker’s safe and vesting same in appellant. It is admitted on both sides that the banker’s safe referred to was the property of the People’s Savings Bank of Moriarity, in the first instance. From the evidence it appears that in the latter part of March, 1909, a meeting of citizens was held in the town of Moriarity, the object of which was to promote the institution of a bank at Mori-arity. N. A. Perry, A. J. Green, C. L. Lease, M. T. Moriarity, together with many of the citizens of Moriarity, attended that meeting. It was there agreed that a banking corporation should be organized for the purpose of doing business in Moriarity, and that appellant should become the president and C. L. Lease the cashier thereof. The general scheme of the meeting included the making of an agreement between those present that certain of them would subscribe to the capital stock of the proposed corporation. Those present at the meeting also resolved that N. A. Perry and C. L. Lease should enter into a contract of lease of certain premises with M. T. Moriarity, the owner, presumably in order that the proposed bank might be assured of business quarters when it came into existence. At that time and place a verbal agreement of lease was made between those parties. So far as the evidence discloses the fact, this was the first, last, and only meeting held by these parties wherein the proposition of opening a bank was ever discussed. In April, 1909, articles of incorporation of the “People’s Savings Bank of Mbriarity” were filed with the then secretary of the territory, wherein N. A. Perry was named as president and A. J. Green as cashier, rather than M. T. Moriarity, as president and C. L. Lease as cashier. C. L. Lease was named as statutory agent for the purpose of service, of process. Subsequently a banker’s safe was installed in the premises leased by Perry and Lease from Moriarity by Lease, who acted under the directions of Perry. This safe, as we have heretofore said, was the property of the bank. The key to the premises had been delivered to Lease by Moriarity at the meeting of the citizens béfore the incorporation of the bank.

[1] The trial court found that the relation of landlord and tenant never existed between Moriarity, on the one hand, and the corporate bank, on the other, and that therefore an attempted divestiture of title by a sale made in pursuance of the landlord’s lien statutes of this state was unavailing, so far as the bank, the owner of the safe, was concerned. The appellant contends that the transaction between the parties created the relation of landlord and tenant, while appellees contend that such transaetion did not constitute any such relation, and that, i£ it did, the relation was destroyed by the act of the appellant in subsequently leasing the premises to a third person. In the first place, it may be said that at the time the lease was made between appellant and Perry and Lease the corporate bank was not in existence. Perry and Lease were therefore not the agents of the corporation, nor was the lease binding upon the corporation when it came into existence, unless it adopted the same, either expressly or impliedly. The rule, which is fundamental, is. stated in 1 Thompson on Corporations (2d ed.) at sectipn 91, as follows:

“A corporation has no life and consequently no power until it is legally organized, with authorized officers and agents to conduct and manage its business; hence it cannot authorize promoters to enter into contracts on its behalf, and it logically follows that the corporation after its organization cannot be held liable on any contract made by the promoters in the absence of adoption or ratification. * * * ”

To the same effect see 2 Purdy’s Beach on Private Oorp. §, 812; 1 Clark & Marshall on Private Corps. § 101; and 7 R. C. L., p. 80. The doctrine is laid down in -cases too numerous for citation.

[2] Adoption takes place in but two well-defined cases, viz., expressly, as by resolution of the corporation or admission or agreement of an authorized officer or agent thereof, and impliedly, by act or conduct amounting to assumption of the contractual obligation. While some courts and text-writers assert that a third kind of adoption results from receiving the benefits of the contract, with full knowledge of the facts, that phase of the question should be properly treated under the head of implied adoption; for it is simply adoption by act or conduct amounting to estoppel. Other courts and text-writers treat negotiations between the promoter and third persons, made for the benefit or advantage of a corporation when it becomes organized, as an offer to the corporation, and when accepted' by it one author, at least, treats the act as a novation, whereby the corporation assumes the place previously occupied by the promoter.

In 7 R. C. L., at page 82, it is said:

“To render the contract of the promoters binding on the-corporation it is not necessary that its adoption should be express: it may be shown from acts or acquiescence of the corporation or its authorized agents, as any similar contract may be, and, if the corporation subsequently recognizes and treats such contract as valid, this makes it in all respects what it would have been if the requisite corporate power had existed when it was entered into. And as a general rule adoption or ratification results from the acceptance by the corporation after its organization of the benefits of the contract; having exercised rights and enjoyed benefits secured' to it by the terms of. a contract made by its promoters in its behalf a corporation should be held estopped to deny its-validity. * * * * The benefits of a contract are the advantages which result to either party from a performance by the other; and in like manner its burdens are such as its terms-impose.”

See, also, 1 Mechem on Agency (2d ed.) § 382; 1 Thompson on Corporations (2d ed.) § 99.

In 1 Clark & Marshall on Private Corporations, § 101, c. 2, p. 309, it is said:

“The ratification or adoption by corporations of a contract made by its promoters need not necessarily be by formal vote-of the stockholders or directors, unless it is so required by its charter, but may be implied from any conduct on the part of its stockholders or officers — provided they have the requisite authority to bind the corporation — which shows an intention to adopt and be bound by the contract. * * * ”

Speaking of the contracts of promoters in 1 Elliott on-Contracts, at section 555, it is said:

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.M. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moriarity-v-meyer-nm-1916.