The president of a manufacturing corporation who is also its
superintendent, having general authority to contract by parol
contract without the corporate seal for making and delivering its
manufactured goods, has like authority, unless the power is
withdrawn, to authorize the termination and release of such a
contract.
A board of directors of a corporation to whom the president of
the company communicates his execution of a contract on the part of
the corporation, which is within its corporate powers but
unauthorized by the board, will be presumed to ratify his act
unless it dissents within a reasonable time, and a delay in the
disaffirmance of six months after knowledge of the act is an
unreasonable delay.
This was an action at law on a contract for the sale and
purchase of railroad iron. Judgment for defendant. Plaintiff sued
out this writ of error. The case is stated in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Kansas. The plaintiff in error, which
was also the plaintiff below, is a corporation existing under the
laws of Indiana, and doing business in that state. The defendant in
error is a corporation of the State of Kansas. The latter company,
while building its railroad, contracted on the 8th day of October,
1881, with the former for the purchase of iron rails. The contract
was
Page 120 U. S. 257
for 10,000 tons, to be delivered, during the period between
October and June inclusive, on board of the railroad cars at
Indianapolis. A jury was waived, and the case was tried before the
court, which made a finding of facts, on which it declared the law
to be for the defendant, and rendered judgment accordingly. During
the trial, the defendant company produced a release, apparently
executed by the plaintiff company, from the obligation of the
contract to receive and pay for the iron, except so far as it had
been fulfilled, and upon the validity of this release the decision
depends.
It appears from the facts found by the court that the plaintiff
was in the habit of receiving payment for iron delivered, by drafts
on the defendant, payable in New York, and that Moran Brothers were
the financial agents of the defendant, through whom such payments
were made; that drafts to the amount of $54,000 were due on the
fourth day of October, 1882, and the company, being hard pressed
for money, asked an extension of payment, which was granted for
four months; that when these drafts again fell due, they were
protested for nonpayment, and the defendant company was insolvent,
which fact was well known to the plaintiff. It appears also that
Mr. Thomas, who was the treasurer of the plaintiff company, visited
New York, and called upon the firm of Moran Brothers at whose
banking house said drafts were payable, and endeavored to induce
them to pay the drafts, but that Moran Brothers, who had no funds
of the defendant's at the time, declined to do so, but finally
said: "We, Moran Brothers, will pay these drafts if you will sign a
release for the balance of the contract." To this Mr. Thomas
replied that he was not authorized to execute such a release; but
he communicated with Mr. Jones, who was the president and
superintendent of the company, and obtained from him authority to
accept the money and sign the release. This was accordingly done,
the release being dated "New York, 8th February, 1883," and signed
"Indianapolis Rolling Mill Co., by J. Thomas, Treasurer."
It is said by the plaintiff that Mr. Thomas had no authority to
execute this release, or to make this contract, and therefore
Page 120 U. S. 258
it is void. Bearing upon this proposition, it is found, as a
matter of fact, by the court, that Mr. Jones was president, and Mr.
Thomas treasurer at the time of this transaction. The original
contract for the sale of the iron is executed by Mr. Jones, as
president, without the seal of the company, and there is no
evidence of any resolution of the board of directors authorizing or
approving that contract. The bylaws of the plaintiff corporation,
as the court finds, declare that the superintendent, who is this
case was Mr. Jones,
"shall have charge of the works, property, and operations of the
company, and shall employ all operatives, and certify all wages due
and other expenditures to the secretary, . . . and shall, with the
approval of the president, buy and sell material, and make all
contracts for the same, and for work,"
etc. And the court further finds that, under this bylaw, Mr.
Jones had the power to buy and sell material, and to make all
contracts for the same. Another bylaw declares that
"the superintendent and all other persons shall in all cases be
subject to the control of the board of directors, in everything
where the board shall elect to exercise such control,"
and the court finds that, in the making of the original contract
sued on, and in the extension of the time for the payment of
drafts, as hereinafter mentioned, the board of directors of
plaintiff did not at any time or in any way elect to exercise the
control over its officers given said board by said bylaws. The
court further finds
"that after the return of Mr. Thomas from the City of New York
to Indianapolis, some time in March, there was a meeting of the
board of directors of plaintiff at which the validity of the
release executed by Mr. Thomas was discussed, but the records do
not show that at that particular meeting any definite action was
taken; that the directors at that meeting did in fact agree to
submit the question to counsel of plaintiff, let him investigate
it, and then act upon his advice; that about two years after this
meeting, and a year and a half after this suit was commenced, a
nunc pro tunc entry was made upon the records of plaintiff
of the proceedings of plaintiff's board of directors, which showed
a repudiation upon the part of the board of directors of the
Page 120 U. S. 259
release so executed, and that this suit was originally
instituted in this Court at the first term hereof after the
execution of the release."
We concur with the court below that on the facts thus stated the
release was a valid release. Its execution was of that class of
business which, under the bylaws of the corporation and the course
of business between these parties, had been confided to the
president and superintendent, both of which offices were held by
Mr. Jones. The direction given by Mr. Jones to the treasurer, Mr.
Thomas, both of whom were also directors in the corporation, was
within the line of his authority. He had under this same authority,
without any express resolution or ratification of the board of
directors, made the contract on which this suit is brought, and it
would seem that, not being under seal, a simple contract concerning
the ordinary business of the company, the same power which enabled
him to make it was sufficient to enable him to release it, unless
the power had been withdrawn.
Another principle leads to the same result. These bylaws show
that the board of directors retained the power in their hands to
control the president and superintendent in any transaction,
whenever it was thought proper to do so. This matter was reported
to the directors. They had a meeting upon the subject some six
weeks after the whole thing had been consummated, and after they
had received the benefit of the release by the payment of their
drafts. The rule of law upon the subject of the disaffirmance or
ratification of the acts of an agent required that, if they had the
right to disaffirm it. They should do it promptly, and if, after a
reasonable time, they did not so disaffirm it, a ratification would
be presumed. In regard to this, it appears that the board, when
notified of what had been done by their agents, did not disaffirm
their action at that time, but that the act or resolution of
disaffirmance was passed about two years after notice of the
transaction, and that, if the suit brought in this case can be
considered as an act of disaffirmance, it came too late, as it was
commenced some six months after they had knowledge of the release.
As was stated in the somewhat analogous
Page 120 U. S. 260
case of
Twin Luck Oil Co. v. Marbury, 91 U.
S. 592,
"the authorities to the point of the necessity of the exercise
of the right of rescinding or avoiding a contract or transaction as
soon as it may be reasonably done, after the party with whom that
right is optional is aware of the facts which gave him that option,
are numerous. . . . The more important are as follows:
Badger v.
Badger, 2 Wall. 87;
Harwood v. Railroad
Co., 17 Wall. 78;
Marsh v.
Whitmore, 21 Wall. 178;
Vigers v. Pike, 8
Cl. & Fin. 650;
Wentworth v. Lloyd, 32 Beavan 467;
Follansbe v. Kilbreth, 17 Ill. 522."
See also Gold Mining Co. v. National Bank, 96 U. S.
640;
Law v. Cross,
1 Black 533.
It is said that the release was without consideration, because
Moran Brothers had the means in their hands to pay the drafts of
the property of the defendants, but we think the finding of facts
clearly disproves that; indeed, the court found, as a matter of
fact, that the defendants were then insolvent, and that Moran
Brothers had no funds in their hands out of which they could have
paid the drafts. It is obvious, therefore, that the consideration
for this release was the voluntary payment by Moran Brothers of the
existing protested drafts of the plaintiff company out of their own
means, and not out of the means of the defendant corporation. We
think this was a sufficient consideration to support the
release.
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore
affirmed.