
    W. C. Zachow Company, Respondent, vs. Grignon and another, Appellants, and others, Respondents.
    
      September 23
    
    October 19, 1920.
    
    
      Novation: Burden of proof: Corporations: Power of president to effect a novation: Personal advantage to president: StaUite of frauds: Promise to pay debt in particular manner.
    
    1. Where defendants claim they were released from an obligation and that another debtor was accepted in their stead, they have the burden of proving these facts.
    2. Evidence showing that the president of a corporation had done business with the defendants at various times, that their dealings with the corporation had been through him, that he had taken orders for the corporation, and that he had promised to release the defendants from a debt and accept other debtors, is held not to establish a novation where there was no evidence that the president claimed to act for the cor-' poration in making a substitution of debtors and the only- . direct evidence in the case is that he had no power to make such a substitution.
    
      3. It is not within the ordinary scope of corporate business for the president to release debtors by substituting his own obligation or that of a partnership of which he is a member; and in this case the act of the president in substituting his own obligation for that of certain debtors of the corporation is held too clearly antagonistic to the interests of the corporation to be upheld.
    4. Though a promise may be in form to pay the debt of another, if it is founded upon a new and. valuable consideration moving from the creditor and promisee to the promisor and is beneficial to the latter it is not within the statute of frauds.
    Appeal from a judgment of the circuit court for Shawano county: Oscar M. Fritz, Judge.
    
      Reversed.
    
    The action was brought by plaintiff against Grignon and Milles to recover a balance claimed to be due for. supplies furnished them 'for use in logging operations conducted by them for defendants Zachow and Rogers.
    
    The action was originally brought by plaintiff against defendants Grignon and Milles, and they set up that in the latter part of 1913 there had been a settlement between the plaintiff, acting through W. C. Zachow, and the defendants, in which it was agreed that certain accounts and claims which defendants had against W. C. Zachow and the partnership of which he was a member should be accepted by the plaintiff in full satisfaction of plaintiff’s claim.
    There was a special verdict in the first trial in which the jury found that there was an agreement by which defendants Grignon and Milles were to be released, and that W. C. Zachow acted as agent for the W. C. Zachow Company, the plaintiff. The court thereupon set. aside this verdict, denying defendants’ motion for judgment, and ordered that Zachow and Rogers, the partners, be brought in as defendants and that a new trial be had. The court held in that proceeding that the testimony did not constitute a novation. Accordingly an amended answer was filed setting up an agreement between the defendants Grignon and Milles and the plaintiff, Zachow Company, acting through its president, Zachow, and the copartnership Zachow and Rogers, acting throúgh defendant Zachozv, that the accounts between defendants Grignon and Milles and defendants Zachow and Rogers should be settled by allowing to Grignon and Milles as the balance due on their logging contract the amount of plaintiff’s claim against Grignon and Milles for said supplies, and .that the plaintiff accepted the account of Grignon and Milles against defendants Zachozv and Rogers in place of and in payment- of plaintiff’s account against Grignon and Milles, and that Zachozv and Rogers assumed payment of said account. Defendants also alleged that plaintiff should be estopped from questioning the authority of .Zachow by reason of its long acquiescence.
    Defendants filed a cross-complaint against Zachow and Rogers for services in' conducting logging operations, and also alleged an agreement on their part to assume and pay the plaintiff its claim, against defendants. That defendants Zachozv and Rogers failed to make said payments.
    The defendants Zachow and Rogers denied any such agreement. It appeared that Zachow was president of the Zachozv Company, owned two thirds of the stock, and was also a director; that Mr. Kuhl was manager; and that the president sometimes took orders for supplies to be sold.
    The appellants always made arrangements with Zachow when they bought supplies of the company and had dealt with him for a good many years. Appellants were loggers of what is known as “blown-clown timber” on the Menomo-nee reservation, and they obtained necessary supplies from plaintiff’s store. Zachozv was also one of the partners of Zachozv and Rogers. In the fall of 1912 Zachow, acting for Zachow and Rogers, made a contract with Grignon and Milles to do logging for the partnership. No written contract was ever made. The agreement was not entirely definite as to the prices, especially as to one class of timber called “mining timber.” After the operations had been going on some time the defendants received a statement from the Zachozv Company of the account for supplies.
    
      •The plaintiff corporation carried on a store at Cecil. Zachow lived at Shawano, ten miles away. Zachow and Rogers carried on a business at Newald, ninety miles from Shawano. Rogers resided at Newald, and the timber, cut by plaintiff was near Newald. The testimony was that after receiving the statement the defendants went to Shawano and told Zachow that they had received the statement and urged him to get their logging matters straightened up. He told them he would fix up the account at the store and call it square, to which they agreed. Later they received another letter from plaintiff and again went to Zachozv. He said he would fix it up as he had agreed to. These interviews were repeated several times. Defendants’ testimony was to the effect that they had always dealt with Zachozv in getting supplies.
    
      Zachozv denied that he had agreed that Grignon and Milles should be allowed an amount for putting in the timber to balance the account of the Zachozv Company, but said he would see the Zachow Company and see that they would not make Grignon and Milles any trouble with that account until they got the regular credit of Zachozv and Rogers. Rogers testified that,he never had any talks with his partner, Zachozv, with respect to taking care of the account and had given him no authority to make the arrangement which the defendants claimed.
    The question of the substitution of Zachow and Rogers in place of Grignon and Milles was never brought to the attention of the board of directors of the Zachow Company, and it was testified that no authority had been given Zachow by the corporation or its directors to substitute Zachow and Rogers in place of Grignon and Milles.
    
    
      Zachozv. and Rogers moved for a directed verdict on the ground that no novation had been shown, that the alleged agreement was within the statute of frauds, and that no authority had been given to Zachow to consent to a novation. Plaintiff also moved for a directed verdict in its favor on similar grounds.
    
      The court directed a verdict in favor of plaintiff against Grignon and Milles, holding that the testimony* would not admit of a finding that the partnership promised to pay the indebtedness of Grignon and Milles to plaintiff, and also on the ground that there was no sufficient evidence for a finding that the plaintiff had consented to a novation. That if there was an oral promise by Zachow to pay the Grignon and Milles indebtedness to the Zachow Company, it would not be enforceable as between Zachow and Grignon and Milles because of the statute of frauds.
    The cross-complaint of Grignon and Milles was also dismissed. •
    For. the appellants there was a brief by Eberlein & Larson of Shawano, and oral argument by A. S. Larson.
    
    For the respondent W. C. Zachow Company the cause was submitted on the brief of P. J. Winter of Shawano, and for the respondents Zachow and Rogers on that of A. M. Andrews of Shawano.
   JoNes, J.

The indebtedness of the defendants Grignon and Milles to plaintiff, the Zachow Company, seems not to have been denied. But it was claimed that it had been released by a mutual agreement by which plaintiff was to release the defendants Grignon and Milles and to accept as a debtor in their, stead the copartnership of Zachow and Rogers. Of course the burden rested on those raising this defense to prove it. They sought to do so by proof that the president of the plaintiff corporation had done business with them at various times, that he had taken orders for the corporation, that their, business transactions with the corporation had been carried on through him, and that he had promised to malee the substitution relied on.

The testimony does, not show that in this transaction he claimed to act for the corporation, and the only direct testimony on the subject is that he had no authority to substitute Zachow and Rogers in place of Grignon and Milles. To sustain their contention appellants rely on such decisions of this court as Garrick T. Co. v. Gimbel Bros. 158 Wis. 649, 149 N. W. 385; Milwaukee T. Co. v. Van Valkenburgh, 132 Wis. 638, 112 N. W. 1083; St. Clair v. Rutledge, 115 Wis. 583, 92 N. W. 234; Figge v. Bergenthal, 130 Wis. 594, 109 N. W. 581, 110 N. W. 798. But these were cases where the acts of the president of the corporation w'ere far more nearly within the line of the ordinary corporate business or where the officer had been given extraordinary powers the exercise of which it would be inequitable to repudiate.

In our judgment the evidence entirely fails to bring this case within the line of the cases cited. It is very clearly not within the ordinary scope of corporate business for the president to release debtors and substitute for the indebtedness his own obligation or that of a partnership of which he is a member. While there is no evidence of any intentional breach of duty in this case, we cannot consent to establish a precedent under cover of which the grossest frauds might be practiced by transactions in which corporate officers might seek to secure personal advantage at the expense of stockholders. Unfortunately such advantage is too often taken when officers follow the letter, of the law and where stockholders and the courts are helpless.

In the present case the contract alleged to have been made by the president was too clearly antagonistic to the interests of the corporation to be upheld. In numerous decisions this court has condemned contracts or transactions in which officers sought to serve their own interest at the expense of the stockholders. In a recent decision, where the conflict in interest seemed far more remote than in the present case,-this court said:

“The directors of a corporation are not permitted to use their position of trust and confidence -to further their private interests, nor to become parties to contracts concerning corporate affairs intrusted to their management which conflict with a free and impartial discharge of their duties toward the stockholders. Any participation by them in contracts dealing with matters of corporate interest which is antagonistic to their free and impartial discharge of official duties is denounced by the law, unless all of the stockholders with full knowledge assent thereto.” Timme v. Kopmeier, 162 Wis. 571, 575, 156 N. W. 961.

See, also, Miley v. Heaney, 168 Wis. 58, 169 N. W. 64; Pietsch v. Milbrath, 123 Wis. 647, 101 N. W. 388, 102 N. W. 342; Meating v. Tigerton L. Co. 113 Wis. 379, 89 N. W. 152; Hiawatha I. Co. v. John Strange P. Co. 106 Wis. 111, 116, 81 N. W. 1034; Haywood v. Lincoln L. Co. 64 Wis. 639, 647, 26 N. W. 184.

In the cross-complaint against Zachow and Rogers the defendants alleged as follows:

“That some time during the fall of 1913 or spring of 1914, the exact date of which these defendants are unable to state, it was agreed between these defendants and the said defendants, Zachozv and Rogers, that in payment and settlement of the balance due these defendants, Grignon and Milles, from the said defendants, Zachozv and Rogers, on account of said logging operations, the said defendants, Zachow and Rogers, would assume and pay to the plaintiff herein the amount of its claim against these defendants, which said claim had been incurred in connection with said logging operations, and these defendants agreed to accept the assumption and the payment of said account by the said Zachozv and Rogers in settlement of their said claim against them growing out of said logging operations.”

There remains the question whether the judgment dismissing the cross-complaint against Zachow and Rogers should be sustained.

In» his opinion the circuit judge used language which seems to hold that the alleged oral agreement' made by Zachow was a promise to pay the debt of another and void under the statute of frauds, although in the brief of respondent Zachozv Company it is claimed that this was not the holding of the court.

In the brief of the appellants it is requested that, if this court should reach the conclusion that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment against them, final judgment be deferred pending a new trial in order that appellants may in the same judgment recover against Zachow and Rogers on their cross-complaint in the event that they should prevail on a new trial.

It is the claim of appellants that the promise on which they rely is not repugnant to the statute of frauds because it was not a promise to pay the debt of another, but the promise of Zachow and Rogers for a valuable consideration to pay their own debt in a particular manner. It is well settled that such a promise is not an undertaking within the statute. Said Dixon, C. J., in Dyer v. Gibson, 16 Wis. 557, 583:

“We cannot discuss the question whether the promise of one person, though in form to answer for the still subsisting debt of another, if founded upon a new and sufficient consideration moving from the creditor and promisee to the promisor, and beneficial to the latter, is within the statute of frauds and therefore void unless it be in writing, expressing the consideration, and subscribed by the party making it. Decision has multiplied upon decision, with scarce a syllable of conflict, for more than a century, that such a promise is not reached by the statute; and it is now too late for discussion.” Fosha v. O’Donnell, 120 Wis. 336, 97 N. W. 924.

We have come to the conclusion that the judgment for the plaintiff, against the appellants should be affirmed, but that the part of the judgment dismissing the cross-complaint should be reversed, and that the appellants should be allowed in this action to prosecute their claim against Zachow and Rogers; but it does not seem necessary" that the entry of judgment, in behalf of the plaintiff should be delayed.

By the Court. — Judgment reversed. The cause is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion! Costs in this court should be taxed in favor of the plaintiff against defendants Grignon and Milles, and in favor of Grignon and Milles as against Zachow and Rogers.  