The plaintiff is an incorporated business company organized under the laws of the state of Iowa.
About November 21,1893, the defendants contemplated associating themselves together for the purpose of forming a manufacturing corporation, n under the name of the “Kansas City Bale, Tie and Press Company.” No articles of corporate association had then been signed or acknowledged by them or if so the same were never recorded in the office of the recorder or filed with the secretary of state as required by the statute. The defendants, while thus contemplating the formation of said incorporated manufacturing company under the said name, entered into a written contract with the plaintiff for the acquisition of the exclusive right to manufacture and sell in certain specified territory warm air furnaces covered by letters patent issued to one R. M. Weir, in consideration of which defendants agreed to guarantee to plaintiff a certain annual royalty during the time of the contract. The contract was signed by the plaintiff and the “Kansas City Bale Tie Co. (seal) by A. GK Bodwell, President.” It is in effect *392conceded that Bodwell was authorized by his associates, his codefendants herein, to sign the name of said contemplated corporation to the agreement. The evidence discloses that the plaintiff, at the time of the execution of the contract, was aware that the defendants intended to form a corporation.
"^corporation*1' iknmfafbimy.1'About twenty days after the execution of the contract, the defendants formed a manufacturing corporation under the name of the “Standard Manufacturing Company,” which a few months later was, in consequence of its insolvency, placed in the hands of a receiver. Neither the defendants nor the Standard Manufacturing Company paid the plaintiff the royalty as required by the obligation of the “Kansas City Bale, Tie and Press Company,” and this suit was accordingly brought to recover the same. The defendants had judgment in the circuit court and the plaintiff has appealed.
The main question presented by the record for our decision is whether the defendants can be held liable as partners in the contract sued on. If this question were res integra in this state its solution would be quite difficult because of the conflict in the authorities. It is well settled in this and many other jurisdictions that where an association assumes to enter into a contract in a corporate capacity and the party dealing with the association contracts with it as if it were a corporation, the individual members of the association can be held liable on such contract as partners. Martin v. Fewell, 79 Mo. 401; Richardson v. Pitts, 71 Mo. 128; Furniture, Etc., Co. v. Crawford, 127 Mo. 356; Smith v. Warden, 86 Mo. 399; Hill v. Beach, 12 N. J. Eq. 31; Flagg v. Stowe, 85 Ill. 164; Hodgeson v. Baldwin, 68 Ill. 532; Bigelow v. Gregory, 73 Ill. 197; Field v. Cooks, 16 La. Ann. 153; Abbott v. *393Smelting Co., 4 Neb. 416; Hess v. Werts, 4 S. & R. 356; Garnett v. Richardson, 35 Ark. 144; Coleman v. Coleman, 78 Ind. 344; Kaiser v. Bank, 56 Iowa, 104; Holbrook v. Ins. Co., 25 Minn. 229; Ash v. Guie, 97 Pa. St. 493. In these cases the courts proceed upon the theory that if the associates can not be treated as a corporation that they must necessarily be held liable as partners, irrespective of the agreement actually made.
Where, however, the contract specifies that the obligee will not look to the promoters for payment or indemnity, but will take his chances of their succeeding in organizing the proposed corporation and the corporation ratifying the contract thus made by them for it, there can be no liability. 1 Thompson’s- Com. on Corp., sec. 416, and English cases there cited; Beach on Private Corp., sec. 159. And so it is declared in Furniture, Etc., Co. v. Crawford, ante, that ‘Aven when a corporation defacto becomes dejure and makes a contract its own which theretofore had been entered into by its promoters, the promoters are not thereby relieved from the burdens of their own contract, for the plaintiff may elect whether he will hold the corporation or the promoters unless he had agreed in the first instance to look to the corporation alone, and the corporation has assumed the liability.” See Whitwell v. Warner, 20 Vt. 425.
There are numerous other decisions greatly at variance with those cited by us in the preceding paragraph. Among them are: Bank v. Padgett, 69 Ga. 159; Bank v. Stone, 38 Mich. 779; Fay v. Noble, 7 Cush. 188; Blanchard v. Kaull, 44 Cal. 440; Harrod v. Hamer, 32 Wis. 162; Bank v. Hall, 35 Ohio St. 158; Bank v. Palmer, 47 Conn. 443; Bank v. Walker, 66 N. Y. 424; McClinch v. Sturgis, 72 Me. 288. Mr. Morawetz, in section 748 of his work on private corporations, after'referring to these last cited authorities with *394others, states that: “If an association undertakes to enter into a contract as a corporation, it is clear that the members of the association do not agree to be parties to the contract severally or jointly. They do not agree to be bound as partners either to each other or to the party contracting with the association. It is equally clear that the party contracting with the association does not intend to contract with the members individually. To treat the individual members of the association as parties to the contract under these circumstances, would therefore involve not only the nullification of the contract which was actually contemplated by the parties but the creation of a different contract which neither of the parties intended to make.”
However favorably we may be impressed with the reasoning of the authorities last referred to is of no consequence since we must follow the rule announced by the supreme court of this state in the cases from that court already referred to. It follows from the foregoing considerations that the trial court erred in refusing the plaintiff’s instruction by which it was asked to tell the jury that if defendants at the time of the execution of the contract were associated together under the name of the Kansas City Bale, Tie and Press Company; that they caused said contract to be executed in that name by their codefendant Bodwell, and that at the time of executing said contract the said Kansas City Bale, Tie and Press Company was not incorporated to find for plaintiff, etc.
The defendants’' first instruction given by the court which was to the effect that if the jury believed from the evidence that there was no such corporation or copartnership in actual business as the Kansas City Bale, Tie and Press .Company, but that articles of association had been agreed upon by the defendants to *395this suit with a view to incorporate in that name, and that there was a difficulty and doubt as to their ability to incorporate in that name, and that plaintiff’s agent was fully informed as to these facts, and that the contract was executed by the parties thereto not as individuals but in anticipation of incorporating and as sueh corporation by Mr. Bodwell as president, it having been agreed that he was to be president of said corporation when incorporated, and that by the agreement between the plaintiff, by its agent and the defendants that if it failed to incorporate in that name it would be incorporated in another name and that the corporation by whatever name incorporated should be bound by the contract, then the plaintiff can not recover in this action and your verdict should be for the defendants. This instruction is repugnant in its enunciation to that of the plaintiff and if the latter is correct in expression, as we think is the case, then the former is incorrect and for that reason should have been refused.
prommers: cón-tract: evidence: uact'11^con"Besides this, it authorized a consideration by the jury of evidence of a verbal contemporaneous agreement which modified and varied the written agreement. This evidence was admitted over the objection of the plaintiff and was inadmissi-tí x . ble for any purpose m the case. This error was accentuated by the defendant’s first instruction. The theory of the instruction that the written contract could be abrogated and rendered inoperative by such contemporaneous parol agreement can not be upheld. The answer did not plead a valid subsequent parol modification of the written contract. The defendants, as we have seen, did not by their contract bind the non-existing corporation, but thus thereby bound themselves as general partners. They could not defeat the operative effect of that written *396contract by establishing a contemporaneous parol agreement to the effect that they were not to be bound but that a future corporation should be. Kelner v. Baxter, L. R. C. P. 174; Davis v. Creamery Ass’n, 63 Mo. App. 477; Gardner v. Matthews, 11 Mo. App. 269; Rodney v. Wilson, 67 Mo. 123; Henshaw v. Dutton, 59 Mo. 139; Jones v. Shaw, 67 Mo. 667; Smith’s Adm’r v. Thomas, 29 Mo. 307; Gardner v. Matthews, 81 Mo. 627; Blakely v. Bennecke, 59 Mo. 195; Lapsley v. McKinsley, 38 Mo. 245.
The defendants’ second instruction is the same in expression as that of the plaintiff except that it in effect further told the jury that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover if there was any agreement that the written contract was to be that of a corporation which defendants contemplated forming. It is needless to say that for reasons already sufficiently appearing this instruction was erroneous and should not have been given.
The ease was tried on an improper theory and accordingly the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
All concur.