Sun Printing and Publishing Assn. v. Moore

183 U.S. 642, 22 S. Ct. 240, 46 L. Ed. 366, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 742
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 13, 1902
Docket49
StatusPublished
Cited by281 cases

This text of 183 U.S. 642 (Sun Printing and Publishing Assn. v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Printing and Publishing Assn. v. Moore, 183 U.S. 642, 22 S. Ct. 240, 46 L. Ed. 366, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 742 (1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

All the issues involved are to be determined by ascertaining the nature of the writings, the obligations which arose from their execution, and the conduct of the parties in connection .therewith. It is essential, then, to bear in mind the exact form of the writings and their text. They are annexed in the margin. 1

*646 It would seem to be necessary on the threshold to ascertain whether there was both a principal contract and an accessory contract of suretyship. The two writings are both signed by *647 Lord in exactly the same character. Judging, by the signatures alone, it is impossible to conceive of two contracts, the one principal and the other accessory thereto, as, in the nature of things, if the first evidenced the obligations of the one who hired and the second manifested the agreement of the same person to fulfill his own duty resulting from the hiring, there could be no accessory contract of suretyship, since both documents but expressed the covenants of the same person relating to one and the same transaction. There is, however, this difference between the two papers. In the body of the first, “ Chester S. Lord ” is recited to be the hirer, whilst in the body of the second paper it is recited that it is made by The Sun Printing and Publishing Association.

The first question to be determined is, assuming for the present that Lord had authority to bind The Sun Association, "Was the first document .the individual contract of Lord or that of The Sun Association ?

The rule of law to be applied in the determination of this question is thus expressed in Whitney v. Wyman, (1880) 101 U. S. 892, 395:

“ Where the question of agency in making a contract arises, there is a broad line of distinction between instruments under seal and stipulations in writing not-under seal, or by parol. In the former case the contract must be in the name of the principal, must be under seal, and must purport to be his deed and not the deed of the agent covenanting for him. Stanton v. Camp, 4 Barb. (N. Y.) 274.
*648 “ In the latter cases the question is always one of intent; and the court, being untrammeled by any other consideration, is bound to give it effect. As the meaning of the lawmaker is the law, so the meaning of the contracting parties is the agreement. Words are nierely the symbols they employ to manifest their purpose that it may be carried into execution. If the contract 'be unsealed and the meaning clear, it matters not how it is phrased nor how it is signed, whether by the agent for the principal or with the name of the principal by the agent, or otherwise.
“ The intent developed is alone material, and when that is ascertained it is conclusive. Where the principal is disclosed and the ágent is known to be acting as such, the latter cannot be made personally liable unless he agreed to be so.”

Now, while Lord is referred to in the body of the first writing as an individual, he signed the agreement “for The Sun Printing and .Publishing Association.” Clearly this was a disclosure of the principal, and an apt manner of expressing an intent to bind such principal. Bradstreet v. Baker, 14 Rhode Island, 546, 549; Tucker Manufacturing Company v. Fairbanks, 98 Mass. 101.

It results that the first paper or charter party manifested the intent- to bind The Sun Association as hirer, if Lord possessed the authority which he assumed to exercise, and consequently that the two papers are in legal effect but one contract, must be interpreted together, and the. obligations of the parties arising from them be enforced according to their plain import, seeking always to give effect to the intention of the parties.

It is not denied that Lord was in some respects the agent of the corporation ; but it is asserted that he had not the power or authority to make a contract of the character here involved. The charter of The Sun Association provided for no other officers to manage its concerns but a board of trustees. In the by-laws provision was made for the election of a president and secretary, whose duties were not prescribed, except as- to the signing of certificates of stock and the transferring of stock on, the books of the company. An examining committee as also an executive committee were provided for in article YII *649 of the by-laws, as amended June 27,1893, a copy of which is excerpted in the margin. 1 The provisions relating t© such committees, however, were omitted in the by-laws as amended June 28, 1898.

At the time of the hiring of the Kanapaha, Mr. Paul Dana, was the president of The' Sun Association, he having been elected to that office on October 26,1897. Long prior to the last-mentioned date, however, from about 1879, Lord had been the managing editor of The Sun. As such, the evidence establishes, he exercised an unlimited discretionary authority in-the collection of news for The Sun, mailing all pecuniary and other arrangements in respect thereto. Prior to the hiring pf the Kanapaha he had, solely on his own volition, hired vessels for the use- of The Sun for periods of a week at a time. By whom he was vested with this authority does not appear with certainty, but in the absence of direct evidence we are authorized to presume that the authority was conferred, either directly or indirectly, by the trustees of the association in whom was lodged the power to manage the concerns of the company. United States v. Dandridge, 1827, 12 Wheat. 64. In the Dandridge case, speaking through Mr. Justice Story, the court said (p. 69):

“ By the general rules of evidence, presumptions are continually made in cases of private persons of acts even of the. most solemn nature, when those acts are the natural result or necessary accompaniment of other circumstances.”

After illustrating the application of the principle to cases of public duty and many others, it was said (p. 70) :

*650 ' “ THe same presumptions are, we think, applicable to corporations. .Persons acting publicly as officers of the corporation are to be presumed rightfully in office; acts done by the corporation, which presuppose the existence of other acts to make .them legally operative, are presumptive proofs of the latter. Grants and proceedings beneficial to the corporation aré presumed to be accepted; and slight acts on their part, which can be reasonably accounted for only upon the supposition of such acceptance, are admitted as presumptions of the fact.

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Bluebook (online)
183 U.S. 642, 22 S. Ct. 240, 46 L. Ed. 366, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-printing-and-publishing-assn-v-moore-scotus-1902.