Waters v. American Finance Co.

62 A. 357, 102 Md. 212, 1905 Md. LEXIS 144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 23, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 62 A. 357 (Waters v. American Finance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waters v. American Finance Co., 62 A. 357, 102 Md. 212, 1905 Md. LEXIS 144 (Md. 1905).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from the judgment in the short note case in an attachment proceeding instituted by the appellant against the appellee. The short note contains the common counts and the account filed is for “I2j^ per cent commissions on the sale *213 of 3,500 shares of the Giroux Consolidated Mines Company’s stock to Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Center, Brooklyn, N. Y., at $5.00 per share, $2,187.50 less amount paid $135,” leaving a balance of $2,052.50 alleged to be due. The appellee is sued as “a body corporate,” but it is not stated where it was incorporated or what powers it possessed, although the appellant testified it was organized to sell coal and timber lands and unlisted stocks and bonds. Pie said that a Mr. Maegher, of Richmond, Va., was president, he (the appellant) vice-president, and Mr. Beveridge, secretary and treasurer, and he added “but Mi". Beveridge was the man behind the gun of the company.” Those three officers and Mr. Berner, of Mt. Washington, were directors, and each of the three had three thousand shares of preferred and three thousand of common stock, of the par value of $1 per share. Mr. Berner and a Mr. Lawrence, of Dakota, also held some stock. The Giroux Company agreed to pay 25 per cent commissions to the appellee for sale of its stock, at $5 per share. The appellant claims that he made an agreement with Mr. Beveridge by which he “was to receive one-half of the commissions accruing from the sales of all Giroux stock either sold by Mr. Beveridge, as secretary and treasurer of the American Finance Company, or myself as its agent.” That was in Baltimore, but after the fire there in February, 1904, he went to . New York and was to be paid his expenses, in addition to his commissions. Before he went to New York he sold ten shares to one person, and there was a sale by Beveridge of one hundred shares to Mrs. Center — the commissions upon which he said he received one-half, and "Mr. Beveridge got half ."

On March 21st, 1904, he claims to have sold to Mr. and Mrs. Center, who were then in Boston, thirty-five hundred shares for $17,500 — $3,000 cash and the balance to be paid in 90 days. He admits that their subscription included one thousand shares which Mrs. Center had ordered through the appellee. On the face of the subscription, which was in writing, addressed to the Giroux Company, there was an endorsement that it included all previous subscriptions made through the American *214 Finance Company during the month of March, 1904. The $3,000 was drawn from some savings institutions by the appellant for Mrs. Center, and paid over to the Giroux Company, and afterwards $6,500 was paid to that company through him, and the balance to the appellee (through Beveridge), for the Giroux Company.

At the conclusion, of the plaintiff’s testimony the Court below granted a prayer “That there is no evidence legally sufficient to show that the plaintiff was employed by the defendant to act as the agent or servant of the defendant in procuring purchasers for the stock mentioned in the evidence, and the verdict of the'jury must be for the defendant.” An exception to that ruling is the only one presented by the record.

This case is certainly a peculiar one. Apparently the principal business actually done by the appellee was the sale or. attempted sale of Giroux stock — of which it seems to have been authorized to sell thirty thousand shares, but, so far as shown by the record, it sold.less than four thousand shares, including those to Mr. and Mrs. Center. Yet we find the appellant, who was the vice-president, a director and a large stockholder, demanding more than one-half the appellee was to receive, as he was to get one-half the commissions and his expenses. If we take this statement literally, Mr. Beveridge, the secretary and treasurer, was to receivé the balance, but assuming that he meant that Mr. Beveridge was to receive it for the appellee, does the record show such facts as would entitle the appellant to recover against the appellee ?

The appellant cited a number of authorities concerning the powers of officers and agents of corporations, ratification by the corporations of their acts, etc., but here we have a vice-president and director (not to refer to his being a large stockholder)*who presumably knew, and certainty ought to have known, the powers of the officer of the company with whom he was dealing. There is no excuse for his not knowing, and, if he did, he was surety under obligation to furnish more evidence of the powers of Mr. Beveridge than appears in the record. Without some affirmative proof that the *215 secretary and treasurer of the company was authorized to give him, not only one-half of the commissions on sales of this stock made by him, but according to his testimony one-half of the commissions on all sales of this stock, whether made by him or not, in addition to his expenses, he should not be permitted to recover from the company on such a promise. There is no presumption of law that one who is secretary and treasurer of a corporation has such power, and merely because the appellant spoke of Mr. Beveridge as “the man behind the gun,” or even as “general manager,” is not sufficient unless there be more than we have in this record to inform us of the nature of his duties and the extent and character of the business of the company he was representing. The office of general manager in many corporations is one of very large powers, but so far as we are informed Mr. Beveridge seemed to have had but little to manage. The appellant testified “there were no other agents in the employ of the American Finance Co. but myself,” and up to the time he went into the employ of the company no timber or coal lands had been sold, and it is not shown that any were afterwards sold. There is nothing to inform us what the president did or was supposed to do, and there is no intimation that he ever approved of, or even knew of the alleged arrangement between the appellant and Beveridge. Nor is there the slightest suggestion that the board of directors had authorized.it, or that any member thereof, excepting Waters and Beveridge, knew that they were thus' entering into an agreement by which one of them was to get more than one-half of the profits coming to the company from the sale-of this stock, which, as we have already said, seems to have been its principal business — certainly up to the time Waters claims to have been employed. He vyas in the employ of the appellee according to his claim for less than three months, yet if they had succeeded in selling the thirty thousand shares of stock he would have been entitled to one-half of $37,500, as his share of the commissions; Well might Beveridge say to him in one of the letters, offered by appellant: “You know that 30,000 shares *216 means $37,500 for us, and we don’t want to lose this great opportunity.”

One circumstance disclosed by the testimony is very remarkable, in view of the fact that the appellant seemed desirous of giving the impression that Beveridge was “the company practically.” The subscription to the stock of the Giroux Company by Mr. and Mrs. Center is dated March 21st, 1904, yet on March 22nd, he got from the Giroux Company what is spoken of as a due bill, which reads: “Due to Mr. Thos. S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 357, 102 Md. 212, 1905 Md. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waters-v-american-finance-co-md-1905.