(After stating the foregoing facts.) 1. A corporation is a legal entity, distinguished from any or all of its stockholders. That one person may own a majority or all of the stock ■of the corporation does not establish an identity betweén him and it, .so as to make acts by him in his individual name its acts and binding on it. Newton Manufacturing Co. v. White, 42 Ga. 148; Exchange Bank v. Macon Construction Co., 97 Ga. 1; Sparks v. Dunbar, 102 Ga. 129; Waycross Air-Line R. Co. v. Offerman R. Co., 109 Ga. 827. “When a corporation in a given matter is empowered to act only through its board of directors, or other select body of its officials, individual or separate action of the members of such board is not sufficient. The agent of the corporation is the board itself acting in its organized capacity, and not its members .acting independently of its meetings.” Monroe Mercantile Co. v. Arnold, 108 Ga. 449; Branch v. Augusta Glass Works, 95 Ga. 573; England v. Dearborn, 141 Mass. 590, 6 N. E. 837; Mitchell v. Rome R. Co., 17 Ga. 574(3). Agents must observe all the formalities required by the charter. Dobbins v. Etowah Mfg. Co., 75 Ga. 243. The power of an agent to sign notes for his principal must be given in express terms or be necessarily implied from the nature of the agency actually created. Exchange Bank v. Thrower, 118 Ga. 435. In Maine a by-law providing for a regular meeting of a board of directors has been held merely directory. Sampson v. Bowdoinham Steam Mill Corporation, 36 Me. 78. While the rules above stated are correct as general rules, and an agent can not bind a corporation by executing a mortgage on its property without its authority, unless it ratifies the act, yet the fact that the authority to make a chattel mortgage is not conferred by formal vote at a regular meeting will not in all cases render it void; especially where there has been a practice on the part of the company to transact business otherwise. 1 Jones on Chat. Mges. (4th ed.) § 51; Ping. Chat. Mges. §106; 1 Cob. Chat. Mges. §431; Kraft v. Freeman etc. Pub. Asso., 87 N. Y. 625. Where a corporation loosely *880committed all its business affairs to a superintendent or general manager, and by a settled course of business lie acted for it in all matters, including buying and selling property, and all of the directors and stockholders, with full knowledge of this, held no meetings and took no action, but acquiesced for a considerable length of time in his exercise of authority, if he borrowed money for the company and gave a chattel mortgage on its property, and. no objection was made thereto, but his action was acquiesced in, authority to execute a mortgage might be inferred, or, if not original authority, ratification, as -against the corporation or its stockholders who so acquiesced. See, oh this subject, 10 Cyc. 1200; Martin v. Niagara Falls Co., 44 Hun, 131; Estes v. German Bank, 62 Ark. 7; Sprangler v. Butterfield, 6 Col. 356(4); Bank of Middlebury v. Rutland R. Co., 30 Vt. 160; Wood v. Corry Waterworks Co., 44 Fed. 146,12 L. R. A. 168; Foot v. Rutland R. Co., 32 Vt. 633; Longmont Supply Co. v. Coffman, 11 Col. 551; Poole v. West Point Asso., 30 Fed. 513. Some of these authorities are not in accord with the case of Monroe Mercantile Go. v. Arnold, supra, but they are cited to show the trend of adjudication in the direction of holding that while action on the part of directors or stockholders may not be performed in the regular and proper method, nevertheless where an officer is entrusted with the performance of the entire functions of the corporation, and this has become a settled policy, his act in executing a mortgage, acquiesced in by all the directory and stockholders, will be held binding. This is especially-true in equity. Judge Thompson, in his article on “Corporations,” in the Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure, says: “Where the shareholders of a corporation, by their direct act or acquiescence, invest the executive officers of the company with the powers and functions of the board of directors as a continuous and permanent arrangement, the board being entirely inactive, and the officers discharging all its duties, a mortgage on the property of the corporation, made and executed in its behalf by such officers, is valid, although not authorized by any vote of the- shareholders or directors. . . But in the absence of circumstances of assent and acquiescence such as may afford circumstantial or presumptive evidence of a precedent authorization, then, on principles already discussed, the directors can give a valid authorization of so important a measure as the mortgage of the property of the corporation, only when acting and consulting to*881gether as a board, duly assembled.” 10 Cyc. 1199; Cunningham v. German Ins. Bank, 101 Fed. 971(3); Palmer v. Toms, 96 Wis. 367, 71 N. W. 654; Miller v. Matthews, 87 Md. 464, 40 Atl. 176. This affords a reconciliation between what might otherwise seem to be conflicting authority, the general rule being laid down in the latter part of the quotation, and the exceptional cases in the first part of it. In the present ease the board of directors and the stockholders held no meetings and were entirely inactive, devolving the whole management of the affairs of the company upon Medlock. And this was not a casual or occasional state of affairs, but was continuous and permanent. Medlock was negotiating with Jaudon, the president, for his stock, and took a formal transfer of it shortly after the mortgage was-executed. LaRoche, who held the stock issued to Medlock as security, is not complaining. And as one witness expressed it, Medlock was “the lock, stock and barrel of the concern, —he was the whole thing.” Or, as another witness expressed it, “he practically did all the running.” Apparently he had exercised the entire functions of the corporation, including buying ’ and selling property. After his purchase of Jaudon’s stock, he renewed the nóte in the name of the corporation more than once. Under this condition of affairs, we think that the mortgage should be held good as against the corporation, and also as against a'subsequent creditor who obtained a lien, if at all, by suing out a distress warrant after the record of the mortgage and with full knowledge of such mortgage. The rent accrued long after the making of the mortgage. Indeed the landlord’s lien arose only upon the levy of the distress warrant. Civil Code, §3125. And the evidence leaves it in doubt as to when the levy was made, relatively to the time when the restraining order was passed. The judge of the superior court did not err in'holding that the lien of the mortgage was superior to that of the distress warrant. See 10 Cyc. 1196; Antietam Paper Co. v. Chronicle Pub. Co., 115 N. C. 143, 20 S. E. 366.
2. Objection was made to the admission, of certain evidence in regard to the corporation and its acts, on the ground that the books were the best evidence. It appears, however, from the evidence, that-no minute-books or stock-books were found, either by the temporary administrator, the receiver, or the purchaser from the receiver. The temporary administrator did testify, that he found a sheet of paper which contained a memorandum purporting to be *882the minutes of some meeting, that it was a small piece of paper, hardly a full sheet, written >in pencil, and that he thought the piece of paper was among the papers in his office, but could not find it. In another part óf the testimony he said, that one Chaplain, representing Mrs. Medlock, came to his office, and he handed to Chaplain some personal effects, “some things that-were taken out of Mr. Medlock’s pocket; and I think I handed him that piece of paper,, but' I ám not sure. I can not say that I took it to the office. Mr. Chaplain is dead.” The court did not err in holding that a sufficient foundation had been laid, and in admitting parol evidence in regard to the transactions of the company,"the sole objection to the testimony being that the books were.the best evidence. The case was submitted to the presiding judge without a jury, to decide both upon the- law and the facts, and he found that there was no stock-book, no minute-book kept, no corporate seal, and no record of any corporate action. Nor was there error in admitting the mortgage of Lawton in evidence. If it had been executed under the common seal ■ of the corporation, a presumption of authority would have arisen. But the absence of a seal was not fatal to it, under the facts already discussed.
3. Where a mortgage was given to secure a note, and it was provided in the instrument that the payee of the note had agreed to renew it from time to time,- it was admissible to show that a note bearing a later date was a renewal of that first given.
4. It was error to admit evidence of Lawton in regard to transactions with Medlock, who was deceased and whose administrator was a party to the case. He was not competent as a witness even to testify to the delivery of the mortgage to him. But evidence so admitted was'not, under the facts of the case, of sufficient materiality to require a reversal. The mortgage in fact was recorded and in Lawton’s possession with the note. It purported to be signed by the corporation through Medlock as superintendent and general manager. If his evidence had been rejected, we' do not think it would have changed the result. The. presiding judge added, after his signature to the bill of exceptions, a note in which he said that most of the evidence referred to was in fact rejected. But the statements in the bill of exceptions already certified can not be changed by a note following the certificate. .
Letters are the best evidence of their own contents. But the *883evidence admitted here, to the effect that Medlock had written to Jaudon about buying and selling some goods, was not sufficiently material, in view of all the evidence, to require a new trial.
o. Only one material error was committed. Lawton was made a party defendant to the equitable petition filed by Stubbs, administrator, and injunction was prayed to prevent his proceeding to levy on the property under a foreclosure of his mortgage. A temporary restraining order was granted, and the next day he voluntarily applied for and obtained a consent order directing the receiver to sell the property and to pay into court the fund arising, any liens on the property being preserved on the fund, and the mortgaged property being sold separately. His application was based oh the ground that the business could not be properly conducted, and that the security for his debt was deteriorating in value and was of such a nature that there was great expense connected with the keeping of it. He afterwards filed an “answer and intervention,” in which he alleged that the amount arising from the sale of the mortgaged property was $1,050, and that, “after applying the proceeds received from the sale of the said mortgaged property, there would still be an indebtedness due the said Lawton in the sum of $ , and that he was entitled to share pro rata on this indebtedness with the 'other creditors in the amount remaining from the sale of said property.” Where a mortgagee is made a defendant in an action seeking to place the property of the mortgagor in the hands of a receiver, and is involuntarily prevented from foreclosing his mortgage, and does no more than contest the appointment of a receiver, he is not liable for the costs or expenses of the proceeding. In Bradford’s case, infra, it was held that merely calling the court’s attention to the lien did not render the mortgagee liable for costs or expenses, especially where the plaintiffs attacked the mortgage by amendment and made the mortgagee a party ‘ defendant. If the mortgagee comes in and makes himself a party complainant, and sets forth the fact of his mortgage, and voluntarily litigates with the other creditors, he thereby recognizes the necessity for the petition and ratifies the filing of it; and thus becomes chargeable with his proportion of the expenses of the suit. Lowry Banking Co. v. Abbott, 87 Ga. 134; Lewis v. Edwards, 92 Ga. 633; Central Trust Co. v. Thurman, 94 Ga. 735; Bradford v. Cooledge, 103 Ga. 753, 761. When the defendant Lawton applied to the court and *884obtained an order for a sale of tbe property through the instrumentality of the receiver, and afterwards filed an answer and intervention, praying not only to have the amount arising from the sale of the mortgaged property paid to him, but also to share in any other funds in the hands of the receiver, he voluntarily recognized the necessity for a receiver, and used the equitable method of securing payment. He therefore became liable for his pro rata share of the costs.- This error, however, does not require the grant of a new trial; but it is directed that the presiding judge so modify his decree as to charge the mortgagee with his proper share of the costs and expenses, to be determined by the ratio between the amount realized from the sale of the mortgaged property and the total amount on hand for distribution, not including the stock sold as the individual property of Medlock. It does not affirmatively appear that any of such funds arose from operating the business. No other error requiring correction appears in the record.
Judgment affirmed, with direction.
All the Justices concur, except AtJcinson, J., who did not preside.