Hitchings v. St. Louis, N. O. & O. Canal & Transportation Co.

VAN BRUNT, P. J.

TMs action was brought upon a note made by John Stilwell & Go. to the order of the defendant company, .wMch was indorsed by P. J. Olaassen, the president of the defendant company, in its name, and by James A. Simmons and P. J. Olaassen individually, and by said Olaassen transferred to the plaintiff on the .21st March, 1890, before maturity. The answer was, substantially, a general denial. It was claimed upon the trial, by the defendant,' that the president of the defendant had no authority to indorse promissory notes for it. In support of such authority a resolution duly passed by the defendant’s board of directors on the 2d of October, 1889, was offered in evidence, by which it was resolved “that all the banMng business for and in behalf of tMs company be, and is hereby, vested in the president, Gen. Peter J. Olaassen, who is hereby authorized to sign all checks, drafts, and monetary obligations, of any Mnd, against and for any bank deposits, wheresoever made, in the company’s name,” and also a resolution claimed to have been passed on the. 30th of Decepiber, 1889, by which it was “resolved, that the making of certain notes by the president of tMs company in the name of the company, through and to James A. Simmons, and also the indorsing by the president, in the name of the company, of certain notes through and to James A. Simmons, be, and they are hereby, approved.” The .plaintiff also examined said Claassen as a witness in Ms behalf, and Olaassen testified that he gave a check to the canal company for the proceeds, or near the proceeds, of that note, and, again, that he knew he gave the proceeds of that note to the canal company, and that, after the discount of the promissory note by him, he paid out the note to the plaintiff. The plaintiff also introduced in evidence the declarations made by Claassen to him at the time of the receipt of the note. The introduction of this testimony was duly objected to, and the objection overruled,, and defendant duly excepted. ’ The case having been submitted to the jury, and a verdict rendered for the plaintiff, and a motion made for a new trial having been denied, from the judgment and order thereupon entered this appeal is taken.

It is probably true that the first resolution above referred to did not authorize indorsements of commercial paper by the president of tMs corporation on its behalf, as it would seem that the authority given by that resolution was to sign checks, etc., against any bank deposits which might stand in the company’s name, and that tMs was the extent of the authority conferred by that resolution. It is also urged that the' second resolution was no ratification of the indorsement already made, because there was no legal meeting of the board. It is to be observed, in passing, that it is claimed by the counsel for the appellant that this resolution was allowed in evidence against the objection of the defendant that there was nothing to show a properly called meeting. But we have examined the case in vain to find any such objection spread upon the record. At the time *721the resolutions were offered, it appeared that they were taken from the minute books of the corporation. It is true that a general objection was taken to their admission, and the objection overruled, and the resolutions were read. But the record also contains an admission by defendant’s counsel that, if the witness who was then being examined stated that they were copies, they might go in, and the witness thereupon testified that they were copies.

Subsequently, upon the cross-examination of the witness producing the resolutions, it appeared that the second resolution was passed at what was called an “impromptu meeting,” three directors being in the office, and without any notice to the other two directors the resolution was passed. The weight to be given to that resolution was therefore a question which was to be determined during the progress of the trial. The defendant’s counsel asked the court t© charge the jury that a board of directors had no authority to pass a vote authorizing the use of corporate indorsements without notice to each member of the board at which such vote was passed. The court said: “That is the general rule, but you may take into consideration the course of dealing of a particular corporation. With that qualification, I charge the proposition,”-—-to which statement of the law the defendant took no exception. There seems, therefore, to have been no errors committed upon the part of the court, either in the admission of the resolution in question, or in the submission of the question to the jury, which are raised by any exception taken by the counsel for the defendant.

There is also, in the case, positive evidence of the president of this corporation that he discounted the note, and that the corporation received the money therefor, which, if the jury believed, made the president a bona fide holder of the note, and he could transfer it to anybody to whom he might see fit. In connection with this testimony a certain check drawn by the witness on Keene & Co. was shown to him. He testified that he could not say positively that that was the check he gave for the note, but'it looked to him that it was a check he gave on account of the proceeds of the note, whereupon said check was offered in evidence without objection. Subsequently the plaintiff’s counsel offered some other checks drawn by Claassen on Keene & Co. to the order of one Bailey, the treasurer of the defendant, which were objected to as not being properly proved; that they simply showed that they were checks drawn by Claassen on Keene & Co., and had no connection with the transaction in issue, which objection was overruled, and at a subsequent stage of the case, after additional testimony had been taken, the checks were put in evidence without objection.

The only point which is now presented by the appellant is that the check which Claassen thought he might have used with which to discount the note bears no official stamp or evidence of cancellation, nor was there any evidence to show that it had ever been paid, and therefore it was error to admit it in evidence. But, as already seen, no such objection was taken at the time the check was offered in evidence, it being read without objections. As to the other checks, they seem, to a considerable extent, to have contradicted the testimony of Bailey, given upon the stand, in reference *722to Ms connection with the various transactions, and therefore somewhat affected Ms testimony in reference to his contradiction of the evidence of Glaassen that he had paid to the corporation the money upon the discount of the note in question.

The only other objection which it seems necessary to notice is the claim that it was error to admit the declarations of Glaassen, made long after the alleged indorsement, as admissions against the defendant. We do not understand that such declarations were received as admissions against the defendant. The good faith of the plaintiff in the acceptance of the note was challenged upon the trial, and he had a right to show the circumstances under which he had taken the note, and the inquiries he made in regard to its regularity; and these inquiries, made of the president of the defendant, were certainly competent, if not as admissions upon the part of the defendant, as showing the bona tides of the plaintiff in the acceptance of the note.

The questions involved were submitted by the court to the jury without exception upon the part of the defendant, and we see no reason for disturbing the verdict rendered by the jury. The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.