The complaint in this action, after alleging the status of the parties and that Arthur J. Moxham was president of the plaintiff up to March, 1916, states that between the dates of March 1 and December 17, 1915, the plaintiff corporation entered into certain large contracts with the French government and with the Canadian Car and Foundry Company for the manufacture and sale of munitions and supplies for manufacturing munitions, aggregating more than $30,000,000 in price. It then alleges that prior to the making of these contracts by the plaintiff the defendant Bassick formed the design of securing for himself and others large and unconscionable profits and sums of money in connection with the sale of these supplies by the plaintiff. The complaint then alleges that at the time the aforesaid contracts of plaintiff for sale of munitions and supplies were entered into, Moxham, plaintiff’s president, assuming to act for and on behalf of the plaintiff, agreed to pay to Bassick certain sums of money for services alleged to have been rendered by Bassick in obtaining the munitions contracts. There follows a description of the manner in which it was agreed that plaintiff would pay to Bassick out of payments made to plaintiff for the said munitions, commissions in excess of $3,000,000 which it is alleged are out of all proportion “ to any services which may have been rendered by said defendant Bassick ” and “ are altogether excessive and extravagant and constitute a gift of funds and property of the corporation without real or substantial consideration therefor.” It is then alleged that Moxham in making the agreements with Bassick “acted without authority from the plaintiff, and acted negligently and in abuse of his authority and in disregard of his *580duty properly to safeguard the interests of the plaintiff,” and that Bassick knew that Moxham so acted and “knowingly undertook to take advantage of said Moxham’s abuse of authority and of his negligence and failure to act in accordance with his duty to the plaintiff.” There follows a totally irrelevant statement concerning the capital stock of the plaintiff and trading therein by persons not connected with this action. The complaint then alleges that Moxham and Belin, as president and treasurer, respectively, of the plaintiff, have paid to Bassick in pursuance of the said agreements, made with him, large sums of money from the plaintiff’s funds and have given to him promissory notes purporting to be notes of the plaintiff, and which were given “ as the defendant Bassick and the other defendants well knew, without authority from the plaintiff and in violation of the duty owed the plaintiff by said Moxham and Belin.”
It is then alleged that $644,960.76 has been so paid to Bassick in cash and $170,000 by transfer of stock of the plaintiff company to his nominees defendants John and Eppstein, and $595,592.67 by the payment of notes, and in addition thereto notes aggregating $753,234.40 have been given to said Bassick without authority and remain unpaid, which Bassick claims are valid obligations.
The plaintiff then states that on March 21,1916, new directors of the plaintiff were elected who discovered the aforesaid agreements and payments to Bassick and that “ no services having any real .or substantial value were rendered by said defendant Bassick.” It is then alleged that the defendants claim an interest in Bassick’s contracts and that Bassick has indorsed certain of the aforesaid notes to defendants, who claim to be holders in due course, as a result of which defendant Lenpier Trading Company, Inc., has sued plaintiff in the Supreme Court, New York county, upon five of said notes aggregating $135,973.71, and defendant Smith has sued plaintiff in the Supreme Court, New York county, upon six of said notes aggregating $101,931.91, and Bassick has brought suit upon eighteen of said notes, aggregating $321,583.78, in the United States District Court, and the defendant John has brought an action upon five of said notes in the United States District *581Court, all of which suits are now pending and undetermined. The complaint then states that it cannot be satisfactorily determined under all the facts and circumstances whether “any sum of money was originally due the defendant Bassick for any services which may have been rendered by him in connection with the contracts referred to in paragraph V hereof, and, if so, how much was due him, nor can it be determined whether any sums of money are now due and payable or will become due and payable on account of said agreements or said notes or any of them.”
The relief demanded is that the agreement entered into between Moxham and Bassick and the notes assumed to be given in pursuance thereof be declared void and be canceled; that the fair value of Bassick’s services be ascertained and he be directed to account for all payments of money and property in excess thereof; that the defendants be enjoined from prosecuting them actions and from bringing further actions upon the notes or agreements and from negotiating or assigning them.
The affidavits read in support of the motion for an injunction pendente lite, in so far as they are relevant, confine themselves principally to an attempt to show that though plaintiff’s former president Moxham employed Bassick and his associates to negotiate contracts with the agent for the French government, he or other regular employees of the plaintiff could probably have obtained the contracts directly without the interposition of a broker or agent, and could thus have saved commissions. There are other affidavits which tend to show that the price paid to the plaintiff by the French government was not in excess of the market price and that the commissions paid and agreed to be paid to Bassick were larger than the usual commissions upon such transactions. As to the authority of Moxham to enter into the contracts with Bassick, it is shown by plaintiff’s own papers that he was president of the plaintiff, and as such, by section 2, article IV of the plaintiff’s by-laws it is provided that he shall “preside at the meetings of the stockholders and the board of directors. He shall be the chief executive officer and head of the corporation and subject to the direction of the board of directors and the executive committee *582and shall have the general management and control of its property, business and affairs, and may sign and execute all authorized bonds, contracts and other obligations in the name of the corporation, and shall perform such other duties as may be assigned to him by the board of directors. ”
It is well settled in this State that where a president of a trading or business corporation is given general management and control of its property, business and affairs, the corporation is prima facie bound by contracts entered into by him in the name of the corporation, if the contracts are within the apparent power of the corporation to make, and third parties entering into such contracts are not bound by secret limitations of his authority contained in the by-laws. (Oakes v. C. W. Co., 143 N. Y. 430; Powers v. Schlicht H. & P. Co., 23 App. Div. 380; affd. on opinion below, 165 N. Y. 662.)
While it is true that as between the directors or officers and the corporation or the stockholders, a fiduciary relationship exists, and at the suit of either the corporation or in a derivative action by stockholders the directors are accountable in equity as trustees, as between the corporation and third persons the officers are agents, and so long as they act within the actual or implied scope of their employment, or their acts are subsequently ratified, the corporation is liable. As between the corporation and third parties there is no obligation to inquire whether the act is advantageous or disadvantageous to the corporation. Nor are the obligations which are imposed upon one dealing with a trustee in relation to the property of a cestui que trust applicable to a person dealing with the officers of a corporation. The sole duty is that which rests upon one dealing with an agent of a principal, which is to ascertain that the agreement is one that the agent has either express or implied power to make. If the agreement is improvident or negligently made the loss must fall upon the principal. If it had been alleged that there was fraud in which the defendants participated a different situation would arise.
Equity will not restrain a prosecution of an action at law merely on the hope expressed by an attorney, that he may be able in the course of a trial of an equity action to develop testimony that might tend to prove fraud.
*583It appears from the exhibits annexed to plaintiff’s motion papers that at a meeting of the directors of the plaintiff, held on February 25, 1915, the president submitted to the board of directors a statement of the negotiation pending in the matter of the selling of the powder and the chemicals used in the manufacture of explosives that were the subject of the contracts subsequently made, as per a memorandum attached to the minutes which was a letter of that date addressed to Bassick and stated explicitly the commission that was to be paid to him. This memorandum was signed by the “.¿Etna Explosives Oo., Inc., A. J. Moxham, President.” The minutes state, “after discussion the general policy of closing these negotiations, if possible to do so on a satisfactory basis, was acquiesced in without motion.”
In my opinion the plaintiff has not shown even prima facie that the contract was not in fact authorized by the corporation. It is well settled that a formal resolution of the directors of a corporation is not essential to their authorization of an act by an agent. (Young v. U. S. Mortgage & Trust Co., 214 N. Y. 279, 285.) All that plaintiff has shown is that there was no formal resolution authorizing its president to make the contracts.
It is not alleged that Bassick entered into a conspiracy to defraud the plaintiff or that the contracts were induced by false or fraudulent representation. There is no allegation of a mutual mistake nor is there any ground set forth that would justify a court of equity in granting a rescission of the contract, which was the asserted ground for relief in Deiches v. Western Development Co., No. 2 (157 App. Div. 676).
Mor can this suit be sustained as a bill of peace. The actions sought to be restrained are by different plaintiffs on separate and distinct obligations of this plaintiff, each involving different issues; as to all except Bassick the issue of a bona fide holder is presented, which the party plaintiff therein is entitled to have tried separately by a jury.
Furthermore, all the issues involved in the various actions cannot be tried in this suit.
The issues present in the two actions pending in the United States District Court cannot be litigated in this suit. Where *584a Federal and a State court have concurrent jurisdiction “the tribunal where jurisdiction first attaches holds it, to the exclusion of the other, until its duty is fully performed and the jurisdiction involved is exhausted; and this rule applies alike in both civil and criminal cases.” (Harkrader v. Wadley, 172 U. S. 148, 164; Ex parte Young, 209 id. 123.) The plaintiffs in those actions being citizens of other States have a right to select their forum. Having made their selection and the Federal court having acquired jurisdiction, the courts of this State cannot compel them to litigate the issues therein involved in our tribunal, either directly by enjoining the prosecution of the actions in the Federal court, or indirectly by restraining an amendment of pleadings, or by assuming jurisdiction of those actions and trying the issues involved therein, as is attempted by the order under review. “ It may not be doubted that the judicial power of the United States as created by the Constitution and provided for by Congress pursuant to its constitutional authority, is a power wholly independent of State action and which therefore the several States may not by any exertion of authority in any form, directly or indirectly, destroy, abridge, limit or render inefficacious. The doctrine is so elementary as to require no citation of authority to sustain it. Indeed, it stands out so plainly as one of the essential and fundamental conceptions upon which our constitutional system rests, and the lines which define it are so broad and so obvious that, unlike some of the other powers delegated by the Constitution, where the lines of distinction are less clearly defined, the attempts to transgress or forget them have been so infrequent as to call for few occasions for their statement and application.” (Harrison v. St. L. & San Francisco R. R., 232 U. S. 318, 328.) Furthermore, it does not appear that any of the negotiable instruments outstanding have not matured, the negotiation of which equity will enjoin to prevent their coming into the hands of innocent holders. Another ground upon which it is sought to sustain equitable relief is that it may be found that Bassick is entitled to recover something for his services, upon a quantum meruit, and in that event it is claimed that an apportionment of such sum could be made among all the defendants. If the contract and notes are void none of the defendants, except pos*585sibly Bassick, could have a claim upon a quantum meruit against the plaintiff. What the rights of the respective defendants may be against Bassick has not been asserted in any of the actions, and in no way concerns this plaintiff. Plaintiff need not be solicitous of a claim by Bassick to recover on a quantum meruit until he asserts it. There are, therefore, no grounds for equitable relief presented.
The plaintiff has a complete and adequate remedy at law. Assuming that the contract with Bassick was ultra vires and unauthorized and that the notes given thereunder were without consideration and void and that the defendants all had notice thereof, which is the assumption upon which plaintiff bases its right to an injunction, any and all of these matters could be asserted as defenses in actions at law upon the notes or upon the contract. “Equity will not * * * restrain an action at law unless special reasons demonstrate that full justice cannot be done in the latter action * * *. If the equitable action holds out no promise of relief which may not be secured in the other and more restricted proceeding, there is.no occasion for interference and it will be withheld.” (Burke v. Burke, 212 N. Y. 303, 307.) It may be as the plaintiff asserts that the facts are complicated, and proof thereof in some of the actions will be difficult. But “mere complication of facts alone and difficulty- of proof are not a basis of equity jurisdiction.” (Curriden v. Middleton, 232 U. S. 633, 636.)
For the reasons above set forth the order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied and the temporary injunction vacated, with ten dollars costs.
Davis and Shearn, JJ., concurred; Clarke, P. J., and Scott, J., dissented.