RKO-STANLEY WARNER THEATRES
INC. V. GRAZIANO
355 A.2d 830 (Pa. 1976)
EAGEN, JUSTICE. On April 30, 1970, RKO-Stanley Warner Theatres, Inc.
[RK01, as seller, entered into an agreement of sale with jack Jenofsky and
Ralph Graziano, as purchasers. This agreement contemplated the sale of the Kent
Theatre, a parcel of improved commercial real estate located at Cumberland and
Kensington Avenues in Philadelphia, for a total purchase price of $70,000.
Settlement was originally scheduled for September 30, 1970, and, at the request
of Jenofsky and Graziano, continued twice, first to October 16, 1970 and then
to October 21, 1970. However, Jenofsky and Graziano failed to complete
settlement on the last scheduled date.
Subsequently, on November 13, 1970, RKO filed a complaint in equity
seeking judicial enforcement of the agreement of sale. Although Jenofsky, in
his answer to the complaint, denied personal liability for the performance of
the agreement, the chancellor, after a hearing, entered a decree nisi granting
the requested relief sought by RKO. . . . This appeal ensued.
At the time of the execution of this agreement, Jenofsky and Graziano
were engaged in promoting the
formation of a corporation to be known as Kent Enterprises, Inc.
Reflecting these efforts, Paragraph 19 of the agreement, added by counsel for
Jenofsky and Graziano, recited:
It is understood by the parties hereto that it is the intention of the
Purchaser to incorporate. Upon condition that such incorporation be completed
by
closing, all agreements, covenants, and warranties contained herein
shall be construed to have been made between Seller and the resultant
corporation and all documents shall reflect same.
In fact, Jenofsky and Graziano did file Articles of Incorporation for
Kent Enterprises, Inc., with the State Corporation Bureau on October 9, 1971,
twelve days prior to the scheduled settlement date. Jenofsky now contends the
inclusion of Paragraph 19 in the agreement and the subsequent filing of
incorporation papers, released him from any personal liability resulting from
the non-performance of the agreement.
The legal relationship of Jenofsky to Kent Enterprises, Inc., at the
date of the execution of the agreement of sale was that of promoter. As such,
he is subject to the general rule that a promoter, although he may assume to act
on behalf of a projected corporation and not for himself, will be held
personally liable on contracts made by him for the benefit of a corporation he
intends to organize. This personal liability will continue even after the
contemplated corporation is formed and has received the benefits of the
contract, unless there is a novation or other agreement to release liability.
The imposition of personal liability upon a promoter where that promoter
has contracted on behalf of a
corporation is based upon the principle that one who assumes to act for
a nonexistent principal is himself liable on the contract in the absence of an
agreement to the contrary.
[There [are] three possible understandings that parties may have when an
agreement is executed by a promoter on behalf of a proposed corporation:
When a party is acting for a proposed corporation, he cannot, of course,
bind it by anything he does, at the time, but he may (1) take on its behalf an
offer from the other which, being accepted after the formation of the company,
becomes a contract; (2) make a contract at the time binding himself, with the
stipulation or understanding, that if a company is formed it will take his
place and that then he shall be relieved of
responsibility; or (3) bind himself personally without more and look to
the proposed company, when formed, for indemnity.
Both RKO and Jenofsky concede the applicability of alternative No. 2 to
the instant case. That is, they both recognize that Jenofsky (and Graziano) was
to be initially personally responsible with this personal responsibility
subsequently being released. Jenofsky contends the parties, by their inclusion
of Paragraph 19 in the agreement, manifested an intention to release him from
personal responsibility upon the mere formation of the proposed corporation,
provided the incorporation was consummated prior to the scheduled closing date.
However, while Paragraph 19 does make provision for recognition of the
resultant corporation as to the closing documents, it makes no mention of any
release of personal liability. Indeed, the entire agreement is silent as to the
effect the formation of the projected corporation would have upon the personal
liability of Jenofsky and Graziano. Because the agreement fails to provide
expressly for the release of personal liability, it is, therefore, subject to
more than one possible construction.
In Consolidated Tile and Slate Co. v. Fox, 410 Pa. 336, 339, 189 A.2d
228, 229 (1963), we stated that where an agreement is ambiguous and reasonably
susceptible of two interpretations, "it must be construed most strongly
against those who drew it." . . . Instantly, the chancellor determined
that the intent of the parties to the agreement was to hold Jenofsky personally
responsible until such time as a corporate entity was formed and until such
time as that corporate entity adopted the agreement. We believe this
construction represents the only rational and prudent interpretation of the
parties' intent.
As found by the court below, this agreement was entered into on the
financial strength of Jenofsky and
Graziano, alone as individuals. Therefore, it would have been illogical
for RKO to have consented to the release of their personal liability upon the
mere formation of a resultant corporation prior to closing. For it is a
well-settled rule that a contract made by a promoter, even though made for and
in the name of a proposed corporation, in the absence of a subsequent adoption
(either expressly or impliedly) by the corporation, will not be binding upon
the corporation. If, as Jenofsky contends, the intent was to release personal
responsibility upon the mere incorporation prior to closing, the effect of the
agreement would have been to create the possibility that RKO, in the event of
non-performance, would be able to hold no party accountable: there being no
guarantee that the resultant corporation would ratify the agreement. Without
express language in the agreement indicating that such was the intention of the
parties, we may not attribute this intention to them.
Therefore, we hold that the intent of the parties in entering into this
agreement was to have Jenofsky and Graziano personally liable until such time
as the intended corporation was formed and ratified the agreement. [And there
is no evidence that Kent
Enterprises ratified the agreement. The decree is
affirmed.]