Court Opinion

ID: 7953611
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:43:54.364464+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:14.990408
License: Public Domain

Dethmers, C. J.
(dissenting). The facts in this case are adequately stated in the opinion of the Court of Appeals (5 Mich App 53) and that of Mr. Justice T. E. Brennan here. With the decision in the latter I am not in accord.
Plaintiff stresses that the trial court, in its opinion, made certain findings of fact; that, when supported by competent evidence, they ought not to be set aside by an appellate court; and that those findings compel, so plaintiff says, a decision for him. Those findings are: (1) that plaintiff was informed by defendant, before procuring the furnace for it, that defendant corporation had been obtaining financing in the past through giving its corporate notes indorsed by its directors, (2) that plaintiff had a right to rely on defendant using that method of financing in this transaction, and, finally, (3) that “defendant could have financed the deal had it wished to do so”. It is evident, from the contest and wording of the entire opinion, however, that, by the quoted language, the trial court meant and was saying that it found that defendant could have financed the deal if its directors had been willing to indorse notes for that purpose. Although plaintiff points to testimony suggesting possibilities of obtaining financing for defendant from sources other than its usual banking connections, there is no evidence to support a finding, nor was one made, that financing was available to defendant from any *42source without the signatures of the directors. That leaves us, then, where we would have been without the mentioned trial court finding of fact, namely, confronted with the necessity of determining the legal question of whether defendant is liable to plaintiff for a commission when it could not of its'elf have financed the deal without the directors’ voluntary, personal accommodation. Hence, affirmance of the holding of the Court of Appeals and .consequent reversal of the trial court judgment does mot involve substituting our opinion as to the facts for that of the trial court. And so there was not, ■as:suggested'by Mr. Justice T. E. Brennan, a disturbing by the Court of Appeals of a factual determination by the trial judge.
I agree with Mr. Justice T. E. Brennan that the Court of Appeals’ reference to the rule announced in Whitney v. Wyman (1880), 101 US 392 (25 L Ed 1050), that one who concludes a contract with a corporation can look only to it and not its officers or representatives for performance, has no particular ■application here as this action is against the corporation only and not its directors. At the same time, I consider equally inapt his analogy that when A promises B that C will do something, if A is not C’s agent, C is not bound to do it, but, upon failure, A becomes liable for breach of his promise. Here, even if plaintiff and defendant both thought, at the time of making the contract, that the directors would do so, and even if the trial court thought and .found that that was what they both thought, the trial court, did not find, the testimony does not show, ■and plaintiff, in his brief, does not claim that-defendant corporation promised plaintiff that its directors would sign promissory notes for defendant to secure financing for the purchase. That leaves the A, B, C analogy out in the cold.
*43A difficulty here seems to be that plaintiff, and possibly the trial court, were confused by the fact that the corporation’s agreement to purchase was based on approval by the board of directors as such, and that the members thereof were the same persons who refused to sign notes. That identity of persons does not make the refusal to sign an act of the corporation. It was that of the directors as persons, not that of the corporation board of directors. Therefore, no contradictory or inconsistent or deceitful action by the corporation defendant can be ascribed thereto.
Plaintiff urges that when nonoccurrence of a condition is attributable to defendant itself, it cannot be pleaded by defendant as a defense to its contract liability. The trial court did not find as a fact nor is there any evidence to support a finding of fact that defendant corporation itself caused its failure to obtain financing or failed to do what it reasonably could or should have done to get it. It is true that the trial court said that the law should not allow defendant to sidestep its obligation by resorting to such tactics. Evidently reference was to the action or nonaction of the directors in refusing to assume a personal obligation. That was not a tactic of the corporation. There is no evidence to show nor did the trial court find that the directors ever promised to sign notes, that they were in any way obligated to do so, or that either plaintiff or defendant corporation could have required them to do so.
The deal between plaintiff and defendant corporation was “subject to financing.” The court may not read this out of the contract. The financing, without signature of the directors, who ■ were not obligated to sign, was unavailable to defendant. Under the express language of the contract defendant was not obligated to take the furnace, pay for it, or pay plaintiff a commission.
*44The decision of the Court of Appeals should he affirmed and the trial court judgment reversed, with costs to defendant.
O’Haba, J., concurred with Dethmers, C. J.