Wood v. Wiley Construction Co.

13 A. 137, 56 Conn. 87, 1887 Conn. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 16, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 13 A. 137 (Wood v. Wiley Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Wiley Construction Co., 13 A. 137, 56 Conn. 87, 1887 Conn. LEXIS 77 (Colo. 1887).

Opinion

Pardee, J.

These are two cases against the Wiley Construction Company, upon the same state of facts. They were argued together by agreement, and will be treated as one case.

[92]*92The defendant corporation was organized early in February, 1880, under the joint stock laws of this state, and located in Hartford. A certificate of organization was filed in the office of the secretary of the state February 9,1880.

The capital stock was fixed at $500,000 divided into five thousand shares. Solon L. Wiley subscribed for two thousand five hundred shares, George W. Ballou for two thousand four hundred and ninety-nine shares, and George E. Beatty for one share.

Wiley lived at Greenfield, in the state of Massachusetts, Ballou at New York City or Boston, and Beatty at Boston. Wiley was, and for many years had been, a civil engineer and engaged in various engineering enterprises, and particularly in obtaining rights or franchises from cities, towns, villages, etc., in different parts of the United States, to construct systems of water works for supplying such niunicipalities and the inhabitants thereof with water; and, having obtained such rights or franchises, had been engaged in constructing the water-works, either personally or through a local company organized to construct them.

Ballou was engaged in the banking and brokerage business in New York and Boston, and at or about the time when the defendant corporation was organized, was interested and engaged in promoting and floating various railroad, mining, and other enterprises, and in providing the capital to build and work the same, and in providing for the issue and marketing of the stock and bonds incident to these schemes. Ballou’s principal place of business was in New York City, and the greater part of his time and attention was applied to bis business at New York, though occasionally he was in Boston. Beatty was employed by Ballou as cashier in his Boston office. Ballou and Wiley had known each other from childhood, and knew of the line of business each was so engaged in.

There was no evidence that the articles of association were advertised, as required by law.

No formal meetings of the stockholders or directors were held after the meetings at which the defendant was organ iz[93]*93ed, except possibly a meeting to place Walter Burnham in the place occupied before his death by Mr. Beatty.

The business and affairs of the company were managed by Ballou and Wiley in an informal manner, and as if it was their joint personal affair, they using the name of the defendant for that purpose.

No formal resolution or vote was had empowering any person to act for the defendant in any way j but the authority to act for and bind the defendant was agreed by Ballou, Wiley and Beatty to be exercised by Wiley in the manner that he did in fact act.

The corporation was organized as the result of the agreement of Ballou and Wiley. Beatty had no real interest in it, and subscribed for his single share so as to make the three persons associating required by the statute. Beatty’s single share was held for the benefit of Ballou.

The corporators were made directors. Wiley was made president, and Beatty secretary and treasurer.

Nothing has ever been paid in on account of any of the subscriptions to the capital stock.

The condition of affairs and the reasons which induced Ballou and Wiley to organize the corporation were as follows :

From and after 1877 or 1878, and down to the organization of the corporation, water-works had been commenced or constructed in whole or in part in several places: those at Ottumwa and Tiffin were completed so far as the original construction was concerned, and those at Niles, Owego and Towanda were in process of construction. Those completed were receiving repairs and extensions from time to time.

The corporation was suggested and organized for the purpose of doing all that had theretofore been done by Ballou and Wiley in obtaining the right to build, and in constructing and extending water-works and pipe lines, and in keeping the same in repair.

Contracts, rights or franchises to construct were to be obtained by Wiley in the defendant’s name, and the con struction, extension and repair were thereafter to be done [94]*94by the defendant or by Wiley in its name, and the material and supplies used in the construction were to be purchased by Wiley in its name or in his own name as he saw fit.

As president and general manager of the Wiley Construction Company, and with the knowledge and consent of Ballou, Wiley, beginning in the spring of 1880, took, in behalf of the company, new contracts to build works at Gardner in Massachusetts, Las Vegas in New Mexico, Clifton in Arizona, and Appleton in Wisconsin. He also contracted to build, and did build a pipe line for the San Pedro & Cañón Del Agua Mining Company. But as Ballou was the president and promoter, and his house the financial agent of the mining company, it was thought best by Ballou and Wiley that Wiley should take this contract in his individual name. But in fact it was for the benefit of Ballou and Wiley in the same manner and to the same extent as all the others, and purchases were made by Wiley therefor in the name and upon the credit of the Wiley Construction Company. Shipments were made on account of this contract, both to Wiley and to Captain Ruger, an employee engaged in the construction of the pipe lines.

All the affairs, financial or otherwise, of the Wiley Construction Company from and after its organization down to the year 1882, were managed by Wiley, with the advice and direction of Ballou.

Beatty died in July, 1881, and his place as director and officer of the corporation seems not to have 'been filled until the fall of 1881, when one Walter Burnham, au attorney-at-law by profession, but then employed by Ballou in some of his many schemes, acted, to some extent, in place of Beatty as an officer of the company.

No books of the defendant seem to have been kept, and no formal record of the doings of its officers or stockholders. No reports, as required by law, were made. But Ballou and Wiley continued to prosecute their schemes after the formation of the corporation substantially as they did before, using the name of the corporation when it suited their purposes, and omitting it when they chose.

[95]*95The manager at the plaintiffs’ works, and the treasurer and financial manager of the plaintiffs, called upon or saw Ballou, and he told each of them that the defendant was responsible, and that Wiley had power to purchase on behalf of the defendant, and the goods were sold and delivered to Wiley upon the credit of the defendant, and the debt in question incurred in reliance upon such statements of Ballou, and upon the representations of Wiley, and the credit of the defendant. The goods were used at Tiffin, Towanda, Las Vegas, Clifton, Ottumwa, Owego and Appleton.

The defendant filed reasons of appeal as follows;

1. 'That the court erred in not holding that, there being no evidence that the articles of association were published as required by law, the Wiley Construction Company was never authorized to transact business and could not legally transact any.

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 A. 137, 56 Conn. 87, 1887 Conn. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-wiley-construction-co-conn-1887.