National Sales Co. v. Manciet

162 P. 1055, 83 Or. 34, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 8
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 162 P. 1055 (National Sales Co. v. Manciet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Sales Co. v. Manciet, 162 P. 1055, 83 Or. 34, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 8 (Or. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

The evidence shows that the defendants on July 1, 1914, signed a printed and written order addressed to the plaintiff, requesting it to ship to them 5,000 ballots for a voting contest; 2,000 trade duebills to be sold by candidates, and other printed matter; 2 certificates each good for a round trip by rail from Bandon, Oregon, to San Francisco, California, and return, including side trips from the latter city; 7 grand awards consisting of pieces of plated silver and plated nickel-ware ; 10 smaller prizes of similar ware to be awarded weekly to the leaders of the campaign; and of plated silverware “three dozen teaspoons, one half-dozen to be given the leader of the following six weeks of the campaign.” The writing contained the following clauses:

“All to be included in the purchase price of $400 f. o. b. transportation company. Terms: 5 per cent 10 days, net cash 60 days. By special agreement the above can be paid in four installments of $100 each in 2, 3, 4 and 5 months, if the detachable note below prop[38]*38erly signed accompanies this order. In consideration of the expense in preparing printed matter, shipping goods, and special terms of payment, purchaser agrees not to rescind this order, but to stand as given on the day and date hereof. Purchaser (the defendants) represents his sales preceding twelve months were $9,600. Next twelve months you (the plaintiff) hereby guarantee sales to be $12,000, or if 3.33 per cent of said sales does not amount to the purchase price, you hereby agree to pay the purchaser the deficiency in cash. You also agree to send your bond in the sum of $1,000 to cover this agreement. To make this agreement binding purchaser agrees to take shipment promptly, carry out campaign plan fully, promptly meet all obligations entered into by this agreement, keep award well displayed in store, report gross sales each thirty days and promptly furnish all information requested to assist in pushing this campaign.
“7 — 1, 1914.
“National Sales Co.,
“By N. J. Sand,
“Salesman.
“[Signed] H. Manciet,
“ByH. Manciet,
“Freight Station Bandon.
“Express Station Bandon, State Ore.
“The attached note is tendered in settlement for above contract and goods; if acceptable to the company, they will detach same when order is accepted, otherwise return.”

Following the language last quoted, a perforated line was indented across the paper, below which originally was the promissory note hereinbefore set forth.

The defendant H. Manciet, referring to the plaintiff, testified as follows:

“They agreed to increase our sales a certain per cent and sent down some silverware and tickets, etc., to enter into the contest business.”

[39]*39George Manciet, also alluding to the plaintiff, to its scheme for increasing defendants’ sale of merchandise, and to the reason for not discharging the note, stated upon oath: “I didn’t pay them because it wasn’t doing us any good.” Whether the plaintiff furnished the specified certificates for transportation or all the plated ware or the entire printed matter indicated is not disclosed by the testimony. Nor does it appear from the transcript before us how the voting contest was to have been conducted or the prizes awarded. It will be assumed, however, that upon a sale of any merchandise at regular prices by the defendants they issued to the purchaser ballots representing the sum of money so paid for goods, which tickets had a supposed value and entitled the holder to express his choice a certain number of times, depending upon the adopted unit of value, in favor of any person competing for a prize, and that the party receiving or holding the greatest number of votes for any premium was entitled to it.

1. The scheme thus outlined is not a “lottery,” since it does not involve an element of chance: Quatsoe v. Eggleston, 42 Or. 315 (71 Pac. 66). See the notes to that case in 56 Cent. L. J. 332. The same conclusion was reached by the Kentucky Court of Appeals: Commonwealth v. Jenkins, 159 Ky. 80 (166 S. W. 794, Ann. Cas. 1915B, 170, and notes). After our decision on this subject was rendered, a statute was enacted licensing the use of trading stamps, a somewhat analogous scheme, by requiring the payment of an excise tax based upon the gross receipts of merchants using them: Laws 1915, c. 228.

2-4. The stipulation in the contract hereinbefore quoted that, if 3% per cent of the defendants’ sales for the year beginning July 1, 1914, did not amount to [40]*40$400, the purchase price of the goods, etc., to be shipped, the plaintiff would pay them the deficiency in cash, though designated in the writing as a “guaranty” of sales, was not properly a “guaranty,” since it did not contain a promise to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of another. Nor did the agreement create a “suretyship” between the parties, for the obligation was not secondary and successive as distinguished from a liability which is joint and equal: Frost, Guaranty Ins. (2 ed.), § 3, notes 1, 2. The policy contract may be classed as a species of commercial insurance: Frost, Guaranty Ins., § 2. The plaintiff was the insurer, the defendants were the insured, the customers which they had or might obtain were the ri.sk, and the profit which the plaintiff expected to make from the sale of its goods, etc., constituted the premium for issuing the policy contract.

Corporations may be formed under general laws of this state for the transaction of insurance business, provided such corporation has a paid-up,, unimpaired cash capital equal to $100,000 in gold coin which is invested in government, state or municipal bonds, or in notes secured by mortgages upon first-class, otherwise unencumbered, real estate, the market value of which shall be at least double the amount of the loan: Section 4610, L. O. L.

“The powers of the corporation,” says a text-writer, “are dependent upon the grant of the sovereign power, and it is well settled that a corporation has only such powers as are expressly granted in its charter or which are necessary for the purpose of carrying out its express powers and the purpose of its incorporation”: 7 R. C. L. 526.

“Every corporation,” says a noted author, “has by necessary implication the power to do whatever is necessary to carry into effect the purposes of its crea[41]*41tion, unless the doing of the particular thing is prohibited by law or by its charter”: 10 Cyc. 1097-

Though the tendency of modern decisions is to assimilate the powers of a private corporation to those of individuals and partnerships (Fink v. Canyon Road Co., 5 Or. 301), it is not believed that the liberal rule thus promulgated authorizes a domestic corporation, organized “to engage in and conduct a wholesale establishment or establishments, to buy, sell, import, export, manufacture and generally deal in goods, wares and merchandise of every class, nature and description,”to transact guaranty insurance business when such employment can be conducted only in the restricted manner prescribed by the clause of the statute cited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 P. 1055, 83 Or. 34, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-sales-co-v-manciet-or-1917.