Opinion by
Greene, Chief Justice.According to the transcript, the cause now before us for review was begun by appellants in the District Court on the 26th of May, 1883, to receive from appellee, which is a corporation, the' amount of a warrant issued by the corporation through its president, on the 28th of April, 1883, and payable to appellants, or their order. For payment, the warrant was, on the day *351of its issue, presented to the treasurer of defendant, and by him accepted, but owing to lack of funds, not paid. Refusal to pay occasioned the suit.
It appears from an allegation of the answer, undenied by the reply, that at and for a long time before the issuance of the warrant the affairs of the corporation were managed by a Board of five trustees, of whom one of the plaintiffs was one. Eventually, the cause came to trial, upon issues duly framed as to whether or not the corporation issued the warrant, and whether the warrant was not, as against the defendant, fraudulent and void. Nothing is alleged in the pleadings as to any ratification of the warrant.
Defendant’s by-laws and the warrant were offered in evidence on the trial by plaintiffs, and were without objection admitted.
On admission of these, plaintiffs next offered the proceedings of a meeting of the trustees, held on the 23d of April, 1883, which proceedings included a resolution then passed by the Board, and purporting to authorize the issuance of the warrant. Erom the face of the proposed evidence it was apparent that the same person acted both as president and as secretary of the meeting; that four of'the five trustees were present; that the resolution passed unanimously ; and that the plaintiff trustee was present and voted its passage: but there was nothing to show that the meeting was a stated meeting, or was called pursuant to any notice.
To the admission of this evidence defendant objected.
1st. Because the president acted also as secretary of the meeting;
2d. Because the plaintiff trustee was present and voting; and
3d. Because no notice of the meeting appeared.
Holding with the defendant as to one or more of the points made, the Judge sustained the objection, and excluded the evidence. Exception was duly taken by plaintiffs, and allowed by the Court.
Without tendering more evidence, plaintiffs then rested. On this the Court, at defendant’s request, instructed the jury that the warrant was void; for the reason that one of the plaintiffs was a trustee when it was issued, and could not contract with *352himself. Reasoning thus, the Court proceeded further to instruct the jury to find for the defendant; to which instruction and the other instruction plaintiffs duly served exceptions. •Left without option, the jury, of course, returned a verdict for -defendant, and this verdict the plaintiffs in vain endeavored by a motion for a new trial to set aside. Defendant followed up his verdict by taking the judgment from which the plaintiffs, under the Act of 1888, have sued this appeal.
In view of these occurrences in the lower Court, the soundness of the judgment is conceded to depend upon the correctness •of the ruling of the Judge upon the admissability of the evidence offered and rejected. Simply because the chairman of the meeting of the Board of Trustees acted algo as its scribe would, in our opinion, operate to invalidate neither the action of the meeting nor the minutes of that action, as taken down ■and recorded by him. There has been no authority cited bearing on the point, and perhaps there is none that could be.
How the duty of mere moderator can conflict with the duty of mere clerk, save in the matter of dispatch of business — a matter which must be determined by the meeting such officers •serve — or how the one officer can be a check upon the other, is not easy for us to see. Every assembly, in the absence of its regular secretary, must decide for itself whether its minutes shall be kept by a person other than its presiding officer, who may be the fittest or only fit person present to act as scribe. Even though the president and secretary be chai’ged by statute with incompatible functions, the former officer would not thereby be prevented, in the absence of the latter, from accepting and discharging, pro tempore, for the latter, a function not incompatible. No force therefore, we think, should be attributed to the first ground of objection to the proffered evidenee.
All meetings of Boards of Trustees, to be valid, must, no doubt, be regular meetings; that is to say, cannot be valid unless they be stated meetings, or meetings called pursuant to authoritative notice. Yet it does not follow that when the meeting is not a stated one, proof or recital of notice must appear on the face of the record of proceedings. Our opinion is that any needed proof of the regularity of the meeting might be supplied aliunde, and that until the contrary appeared, the proceedings would be *353presumed regular. (Bank of U. S. v. Dandridge, 12 Wheat.; Ry. Co. v. McCarthy, 96 U. S. 258; Gelpecke v. City of Dubuque, 1 Wallace, 221.)
From these points, therefore, we pass to the main questions, whether the simple fact of the plaintiff being trustee, or the more complex fact of his presence and action at the meeting, would render the apparent corporate action void. Giving his vote was a formal, but not a substantial participation in the do- ■ ings of the Board. On the business in hand, he had no power to pass; and, therefore, his seeming exercise of power cannot be •considered as real or effective. Doubtless, in the absence of statute to the contrary, the corporation could contract with him, for its interest might lie that way. Admitting this, it would seem to follow that he could treat with the corporation through its proper business functionaries, the trustees other than himself doing it in a fair and open-handed manner; and he could appear before them in his own interest, and in good faith press them to comply with his desires or necessities. More than this, we are not at liberty to presume that the plaintiff trustee did. Every case may, indeed, suggest suspicion of fraud, and in a particular case fraud may, perhaps, be establishable by proof, but a Court will always regard a transaction as honest until by competent evidence it is shown to be otherwise. No evidence sufficient to prove fraud got before the Court on the trial of this sause ; and even if it had, the office of passing upon its sufficiency would have fallen to the jury.
As to these main questions, the authorities are somewhat divergent, but the weight of them and the better reason accord with our view. Most of the decisions that seem to favor a contrary doctrine are controlled by statutory provisions, or are based upon circumstances displaying actual or constructive fraud. Enough books to show the reasoning and attitude of the Courts in the premises are cited, when we name the following : (Angel and Ames on Corp., 8th ed., Sec. 233, and citations; U. S. R. S. Co. v. R. R. Co., 34 Oh. St. 450; Hallam v. Indianola H. Co. et al., 56 Iowa, 178; Neal v. Hill et al., 16 Cal. 146; Smith v. Skeary, 47 Conn. 47; Duncomb et al. v. N. Y. H. & N. R. R. Co. et al., 88 N. Y. 1; Leavitt v. Oxford & G. S. M. Co., 1 Pac. Rep. 356; Sutter St. R. R. Co. v. Baum, 4 Id. 916; *354Twin L. O. Co. v. Marbury, 91 U. S. 587; Pneumatic Gas-Co. v. Berry et al., 113 U. S. 322.)
Nothing remains,.but to add that the judgment of the District Court must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new triaL
We concur: John P. Hoyt,'Associate Justice.
George Turner, Associate Justice.