Standard Oil Co. v. Scofield
This text of 16 Abb. N. Cas. 372 (Standard Oil Co. v. Scofield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Three objections are urged upon this demurrer to the complaint as not stating facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action: First, that the contract sued upon is ultra vires as to the plaintiff. Secondly, that the contract is void, as being in restraint of trade, and therefore against public policy. And, finally, that the complaint does not allege due performance by the plaintiff of all the conditions of the contract on its part.
I will consider these objections in the order in which I have stated them.
1. Is the contract in suit ultra vires ?
The complaint refers to the particular acts of the Ohio Legislature under which the plaintiff corporation was organized and exists. The demurrer admits that it was incorporated under these statutes. Assuming that this admission brings the charter of the plaintiff before the court, it is argued that no authority can be found therein which warrants a corporation in entering into a partnership with individuals, as the plaintiff did in making the contract now under consideration ; and I am referred to a decision to this effect made in a suit between these same parties, by the court of com[378]*378mon pleas in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, on an application to enjoin the defendants from refining more oil than the quantity specified in the agreement.
I concur with the Ohio court in the view that the relation established between the plaintiff and the defendants was practically one of partnership, and adopt the construction which that tribunal puts upon the statutes of its own State in holding that the act of incorporation does not authorize the plaintiff to become a copartner with individuals. But while this conclusion justified the court there in refusing to interfere by injunction to aid the plaintiff in enforcing its claims under such portion of the contract as remained executory, can the fact that the joint undertaking was ultra vires on the part of the plaintiff avail the defendants in answer to a claim that, so far as the contract has already been executed, they have applied to their own use large sums of money to which they are not entitled ?
I think not. “Contracts with corporations made in excess of their powers, which are purely executory on both sides, and where no wrong will be done if the parties are left in their previous situation, should not be enforced, because such contracts contemplate an unauthorized diversion of corporate funds, and therefore a breach of private trust. But the executed dealings of corporations must be allowed to stand for and against both the parties, when the plainest ruKs of good faith so require ” (Parish v. Wheeler, 22 N. Y. hM, 508). So far as this specification of their demurrer is concerned, the defendants say to the plaintiff in substance : “Yes; we made an agreement with you. We carried on business with you under it. We have taken more than our share of the profits, and now you cannot have any redress, because the con tract between us was really one of copartnership, which you could not make without exceeding your corporate powers.” [379]*379In my opinion, it needs no argument to show that to permit such a position to be successfully maintained would be to disregard the plainest principles of good faith.
S. Is the contract void as being in restraint of trade? and, therefore, contrary to public policy ?
I assume that the demurrer is not to be upheld on this ground, if the agreement is susceptible of any view consistent with the facts set out in the complaint, which would make it valid. Although upon a trial, where all the facts could be disclosed, it might appear that the true purpose of the arrangement between the parties was to effect a combination inimical to the interests of the public, this is not to be inferred upon a demurrer, where the instrument is capable of a construction consistent with a lawful intent.
Regarding the relation between the plaintiff and the defendants as substantially that of partners, the contract is not necessarily such as the law forbids. A man who proposes to put money into a joint undertaking with strangers may lawfully bind them not to do more business than he thinks will be warranted by the capital to be employed, even if the result be to limit the production of a particular commodity. In such cases as the present, the controlling question must be the purpose of the parties. If it be their design artificially to enhance the price of a necessary commodity by keeping-the product of others out of the market, their contracts to that end are illegal (Arnot v. Pittston & Elmira Coal Co., 68 N. Y. 558). A vast number of authorities might be cited in support of this proposition, but it is commonly applied only where the unlawful purpose has been found by the trial court as a matter of fact (68 N. Y. 558, 565) or is necessarily to be inferred from the circumstances of the case.
I think the most that can be said upon the plead[380]*380ings here (outside of which I can consider nothing), is that the facts pleaded point to a probability that the contract was intended to be in restraint o£ trade. Those facts, however, are also consistent with a lawful intent. “ The presumption is in favor of the legality of contracts. The law does not assume an intention to violate the law, nor will an agreement be adjudged to be illegal where it is capable of a construction which will uphold it and make it valid” (Lorillard v. Clyde, 86 N. Y. 384, 387). This is expressly held to be the rule applicable in cases of demurrer. All reasonable intendments are to be indulged in sup-of the pleading. Construing the complaint herein accordingly, it must be held good so far as the second objection is considered.
[380]*3803. Is the absence of an averment that the plaintiff duly performed all the conditions of the contract on its part fatal to the complaint ?
The complaint does allege that the plaintiff and defendants “ entered upon and continued to carry on” the joint business provided for in the contract between them; that the defendants have applied to their own use from the receipts and profits of said business large sums of money greatly exceeding the proportion thereof to which they were entitled (amounting in the aggregate to $80,000), and that they refuse to account.
I think these averments are sufficient to entitle the plaintiffs to maintain their action for an accounting.
There must be judgment for the plaintiff on the demurrer, with the usual leave to answer over on payment of costs.
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16 Abb. N. Cas. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-v-scofield-nysupct-1885.