Salem Iron Co. v. Lake Superior Consol. Iron Mines

112 F. 239, 50 C.C.A. 213, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4089
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 13, 1901
DocketNo. 34
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 112 F. 239 (Salem Iron Co. v. Lake Superior Consol. Iron Mines) 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
Salem Iron Co. v. Lake Superior Consol. Iron Mines, 112 F. 239, 50 C.C.A. 213, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4089 (3d Cir. 1901).

Opinion

GRAY, Circuit Judge.

The. Salem Iron Company, the defendant "below, plaintiff in error here, is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Pennsylvania, and has its furnace plant in the state of Ohio. Its principal office is at Pittsburg, Pa. In 1897 it was compelled to- reorganize, by an arrangement with its creditors, who took preferred stock for their claims. The.capital stock had been $50,000, and was increased to $247,000, of which $197,000 was preferred. The number of directors. was increased from three to seven, the majority of whom were to be nominees of the preferred stockholders who had control, the holders of the common stock having a minority representation. L. B. Miller, a member of the firm of Oglebay, Norton & Co., who had been creditors an.d took one-fourth of the preferred- stock, was elected president in July, 1899. The said firm were also at the time of this transaction creditors of the said defendant company, without security, for the amount of ■$45,000. The subject-matter of this suit is what purports to be a contract in writing, dated December 29, 1899, between “the Take Superior Consolidated Iron Mines, of New York City, by its agents, Oglebay, Norton & Co., of Cleveland, Ohio, party of the first part, and the Salem Iron Company, of Eeetonia, Ohio, party of the second part.” It was signed on behalf of the Salem Iron Company by L. B. Miller, as its president. It provides for the sale by the party of the first part to the party of the second part of 30,000 tons of Adams ore, at $4.85 a ton, in 12 monthly deliveries, to commence in May, 1900, and to continue until April, 1901. The payments were to •commence on May 25, 1900, and -were to be made every month, whether ore was received or not; the party of the second part, the .Salem Iron Company, having the right to make the one-half of any ■of the payments by its note at four months. Apparently pursuant Lo the terms of said contract, the Salem Iron Companjr made its promissory note in favor of the Lake Superior Consolidated Iron Mines, dated May 26, 1900, for $12,367.50, at four months, which was paid when due, some time in September of that year, and covered 2,500 tons out of 2,543^4 tons, shipped in the said month of September by the plaintiff company, and delivered to and received by the Salem Iron' Company. The delay in shipping, according to the terms of the contract, was the subject of correspondence running through this -period between -Oglebay, Norton & Co., agents of the plaintiff company,-'and thé executive officers- of the defendant com[241]*241pany. The price of pig iron and of ore had materially declined after the making of the contract in question, and shortly after September the furnaces in the plant of the defendant company went out of blast. On December 5, 1900, the following resolutions were passed by the board of directors of the defendant company, and a copy of the same forwarded to and received by Messrs. Oglebay, Norton & Co., agents of the plaintiff company:

“Resolved, that Oglebay, Norton & Company be notified that this company does not recognize the validity of the pretended contracts dated December 29th, 1899, for the purchase of 30,000 tons of Granada ore and 30,000 tons of Adams ore, executed on behalf of this company by Mr. L. B. Miller, and on behalf of the vendors by Messrs. Oglebay, Norton & Company. Resolved, that the secretary notify Messrs. Oglebay, Norton & Company that if they, or their principals, claim or intend to claim damages from this company for nonperformance of the pretended contracts of Dec. 29th, 1899, for the purchase of 30,000 tons of Granada ore and 30,000 tons of Adams ore, of which only about eight thousand tons have been delivered, this company requires them to sell said Iron ore prior to Dec. 21th, 1800, In the open market, for the highest priced obtainable.”

Liability on this contract is denied by the defendant company, on the ground that the contract, as entered into and executed by L. B. Miller, as its president, was voidable, and that the defendant company, having the right to avoid it, effectually exercised that right by the above-stated resolution of its board of directors, passed December 5, 1900. The validity of this defense depends upon these, or some of these, propositions of law and fact: (1) That Miller, the president of the company had no authority, express or‘implied, to make and execute the contract in question in its behalf; (2) that the said Miller, being a member of the firm of Oglebay, Norton & Co., the agents of the plaintiff, and by whom the contract in behalf of the plaintiff was made, could not, without the express consent of the defendant company to his double employment, bind said company by the contract executed by him in their behalf; (3) that there was no ratification of this contract, or evidence of consent on the part of the defendant company, prior to the said resolution of repudiation of December 5, 1900; (4) that the repudiation of the contract, and notice thereof to the plaintiff, was made as soon as practicable, and at the first meeting of the board of directors held after full knowledge on their part of all the facts in the case. These propositions present the material questions embraced in the numerous assignments of error set forth “in the record. Undoubtedly the board of directors is generally the governing and controlling body of a corporation. Its policy and conduct within the scope of the purpose of its creation is in the absolute control of such directors. It cannot incur obligations without the consent of such board, or generally without its express authority; but the board of directors can exercise its plenary power by delegating its. authority as to certain transactions or classes of transactions to its president or other executive officers, -as well as by direct authorization of a particular transaction by express resolution to that effect. A corporation is an intelligent, though artificial, person; and, while its board of directors is its controlling mind, it may be--bound, like a natural person, by a consent implied by law [242]*242from a course of conduct permitted and recognized by its governing body. The minutes of the defendant company disclosed no resolution of the board of directors, conferring upon the president the authority to make the contract here in question, nor any express general authority to make such contracts. But there is testimony tending to show the existence of a de facto executive committee, consisting of three directors, of which the president of the company Seems to have been ex officio a member, and that contracts for the purchase of ore and sale of the product, had for sometime theretofore been negotiated and made by the authority of this committee. There is also testimony to show that this committee authorized the making of the contract in question by the president of the company. Three other contracts for the purchase of ore from other parties represented by the same agents were made in the same way, and about the same time; and contracts for large quantities of ore were made the previous spring in the same manner. Such contracts had always been theretofore acquiesced in by the company, and were in accordance with the usual course of its business.

It was contended by the plaintiff, however, that, whether the' president or executive committee were authorized or not to make and sanction the contract, such action on the.part of the president of the defendant company being only voidable, and not void, it was, in effect, ratified by the company by the acquiescence of its board of directors, with full knowledge of all the facts and circumstances necessary and material to ratification on their part.

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Bluebook (online)
112 F. 239, 50 C.C.A. 213, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salem-iron-co-v-lake-superior-consol-iron-mines-ca3-1901.