The technical rule of the ancient common law, “that a corporation could not manifest its intentions by any personal act or oral discourse, and that it spoke and acted only by its common seal,” if it ever obtained in this country, is now obsolete. Unless restrained by legislative enactment to a specific mode of contracting, the contracts a corporation has capacity to make, may be made in that manner or form, in which a similar contract by an individual could be made. “The acts of the board of directors, evidenced by a written vote, are as completely binding upon the corporation, and as complete authority to their agents, as the most solemn acts done under their corporate seal.” 2 Kent, § 47. The resolutions, or declarations, or admissions of the Board of Regents, (it is not material what is their form), are as full evidence of an indebtedness due from the University to the appellee, as would have been the promissory note, or an account stated with an individual. Neither the consideration of the debt, nor the capacity of the Uni*393versity to contract it, is disputed; and in no more appropriate mode could it have been recognized, and its amount and the time of payment expressed.
The debt rests upon the corporation. It is in a large sense a public, rather than a private corporation. Though legislative power may not' divert from its uses the donation of the lands made by Congress, or the donations of individuals, (Vincennes University v. Indiana), 14 How. 2681; yet, it may alter, amend, vary or enlarge the original act of incorporation. — University v. Winston, 5 Stew. & Por. 17. The act of Congress, enabling the people of the Alabama Territory to form a constitution and State government, and for the admission of the State into the Union, required “that thirty-six sections, or one entire township, to be designated by the Secretary of the Treasury, under the direction of the President of the United States, together with the one heretofore reserved for that purpose, shall be reserved for the use of a seminary of learning, and vested in the legislature of the said State, to be appropriated solely to the use of such seminary by the said legislature.” On the 18th December, 1820, the legislature established as the beneficial donee of the trust, a seminary of learning, and denominated it “The University of Alabama.” Its corporate name and style was, “The Trustees of the University of Alabama.” In 1822, by statute it was declared, “the title of the lands, which this Sate has received as a donation from the Congress of the United States for a seminary of learning, is hereby vested in the said trustees and their successors in office,” &c. — Olay’s Dig. 583-586. The board of trustees was composed of the governor, the judges of the Supreme Court, and one trustee from each judicial circuit, except that in which the University is located, in which there were two, and these were elected by the legislature. Under this corporate organization, the University continued until the adoption of the constitution of 1868. That constitution placed the “common schools, and other educational institutions of this State, under the management “of a Board of Education, consisting of a Superintendent of Public _ Instruction and two members from each congressional district.” This board was clothed with “full legislative powers in reference to the public educational institutions of the State,” and its acts, “when approved by the governor, or when reenacted by two-thirds of the Board, in case of his disapproval,” had the force and effect of law, unless repealed by the General Assembly. The style of its acts was prescribed, and it was required to meet annually at the seat of government at the same time as the General Assembly. It was *394declared “a body politic and corporate, by the name and style of the Board of Education of the State of Alabama,” and “a Board of Rogents of the State University.” — Const. 1868, Art. 11. This Board was abolished by the constitution of 1875, and the University was placed under the management and control of a Board of Trustees, consisting of two membors from the congressional district in which the University is located, and one from each of the other congressional districts of the State. The Governor was declared ex officio a member and the president of the board. The General Assembly, by an act approved March 1, 1876, declared the trustees a body corporate, and the corporate name “The Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama.” The sixth section of the act declares, that in addition to the rights, properties, privileges and franchises thereby expressly granted, “all rights, properties, privileges and franchises heretofore vested by any act of the General Assembly in the University of Alabama, shall continue and vest in the corporation as a part of the rights, privileges and franchises of the corporation under this charter.” The 13th section is as follows : “That all laws, and parts of laws, enacted by the General Assembly, except sections 429, 430 and 1017 of the Revised Code, and acts passed by the General Assembly at its present session, and all acts, resolutions and regulations enacted or established by the Board of Education and Board of Regents relative to the University, its organization and government, shall expire on the adjournment of the first meeting of the board constituted by this act; and all other laws in conflict with its charter are hereby repealed.”
If we admit the legislative power, (a question this case does not involve), to dissolve the corporation created by the enactment of 1820, and to create a new one in its place, we are not of opinion the power was exercised by either the provisions of the constitution of 1868, or the act of March 1, 1876. The seminary of learning, established by the act of 1820, as the “University of Alabama,” has continued in existence, and is recognized as existing- by the constitution of 1868, and the subsequent legislation. The only effect and operation of the constitution of 1868, was to transfer its management and control from the Board of Trustees, to whom it was committed by the act of 1820, to the Board of Education as a Board of Regents. Whatever of corporate power the Board of Regents had, was not defined and declared by the constitution of 1868, or by subsequent legislation. It was derived by their succession to the corporate powers conferred by existing legislation on the trustees of the Univorsity. That corporation continued, and there was *395simply a change in the stylo or corporate name, and the manner of electing and appointing the board of management and control. This is equally true of the act of 1876, which treats the University as an existing institution. It simply revises former legislation, super-adding such new corporate powers, rights and privileges, as were deemed necessary to advance the interests of the University; and the Board of Education having been abolished, re-establishes as its governing power, and the agency through which it was to act, a Board of Trustees. All the legislation and the provisions of the constitution of 1868, preserve the corporate identity of the University, as it was established by the act of 1820.
Nor is there found in the act of March 1,1876, any indication of a legislative intent to absolve the corporation as reorganized, from any debt contracted, or liability incurred, under its former organization. With these the legislature had no purpose, if it had the power of interfering. These remained, if valid, as binding upon the corporation, as if a change in its board of management and control had not been rendered necessary by the abolition of the Board of Regents. It is not to be presumed from the general words of the 13th section, repealing “all acts, resolutions and regulations enacted or established by the Board of Education and Board of Regents relative to the University,” that it was intended to impair the obligation of contracts which, in their corporate capacity, they had made. These words import an intention to repeal the acts of the Board of ■ Education in its legislative capacity, and this ■ was within legislative competency, furnishing no just cause of complaint by individuals upon any other ground than that of policy. The debts and engagements of a corporation, are not the subject of legislative repeal, though the change, or modification, or unconditional repeal of its charter may be within legislative power. When such power exists, an intention to interfere with corporate contracts is not to rest on inference or presumption. — Broughton v. Pensacola, 93 U. S. 266. In this cnse, it is said by Justice Field : “When, therefore, a new form is given to an old municipal corporation, or such a corporation is reorganized under a new charter, taking in its organization the place of the old one, embracing substantially the same corporators and the same territory, it will bo presumed that the legislature intended a continued existence of the same corporation, although different powers are possessed under the new charter, and different officers administer its affairs; and, in the absence of express provision for their payment otherwise, it will also be presumed in such case that the legislature intended that the liabilities, as well *396as the rights of property of the corporation in its old form, should accompany the corporation in its reorganization.” And it is further said: “The principle which applies to the State would seem to be applicable to cases of this kind. Obligations contracted by its agents continue against the State, whatever changes may take place in its constitution of government.” “Where a statute does not, in express terms,” said this court in State v. Mayor, 24 Ala. 706, “annul a right or power given to a corporation by a former act, but only confers the same rights and powers under a new name, and with additional powers, such subsequent act does not annul the rights and powers given under the former act, and under' its former name.” And in Ready v. Mayor, 5 Ala. 336, it was held that a mere change in the corporate name, does not affect the rights or liabilities of a corporation. If the legislative act making the change, reserves these liabilities and rights, the reservation is no more than the affirmation of what the law would have implied in its absence. — See, also, Madison College v. Burke, 6 Ala. 496. It follows, from what we have said, that as the present Board of Trustees of the University have succeeded to the property, rights and privileges to which the Board of Eegents succeeded; and as there has been no break in the continuity of the corporate existence of the University, they succeed also to their debts and liabilities. The legal remedies which could have been pursued against the Board of Eegents, may now be pursued against the Board of Trustees.
It may be, and doubtless is true, that the legislative power of the Board of Education. could be exercised only in its annual sessions at the seat of government. But the adjustment of claims against the University pertained to it in its corporate capacity as a Board of Eegents, and the adjustment could be properly made at the University when the Board was acting as a corporation.
Affirmed.