Upon the facts appearing upon the record, it is claimed in behalf of Jedediah Wilcox, the defendant in the principal case, that the agreement between Foley and himself was a valid and proper contract which could be carried out without fraud, and contemplated none ; that therefore, when he began to solicit subscriptions to the stock of the new corporation, he had an interest in the patents; that he was in fact a partner with Foley, that in making this contract with Foley he acted wholly for himself, and stood in no fiduciary relation to the Yale Gas Stove Company, or any of its stockholders. “ There was,” says his counsel, “ no man, and no body of men, who had any hold upon him at the time he made this contract; nor any to whom he owed a duty, nor any selected, and in contemplation, to whom he might owe a duty.” The objections “ that a resale to some new corporation was contemplated; that the purchase price was to be new stock of such corporation; that but little time elapsed between the two contracts; ” are said to be “ all met and answered ” by the cases of Ladywell Mining Co. v. Brookes, L. R., 34 Ch. D., 398; and on appeal, L. R., 35 Ch. D., 400; Grover’s Case, L. R., 20 Eq. Cases, 114; New Sombrero Phosphate Co. v. Erlanger, L. R., 5 Ch. D., 73; and Erlanger v. New Sombrero Phosphate Co., L. R., 3 App. Cases, 1218.
It is further said that these cases, and also the case of Barr v. New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad Co., 125 New York, 263, 277, and In re Cape Breton Co., L. R, 29 Ch. D., 795, are authorities for the defendant’s further claim, that: “ If it be assumed that Mr. Wilcox, as director, or while holding a fiduciary relation to the corporation, sold the patents to it without disclosing his interest therein, such sale is yet not void, but is voidable only,” and that “ but two courses are open to the company, to wit: they could affirm the sale, or rescind it, return the patents and sue for the price. They *116cannot, as they are here attempting, keep the patents and recover the consideration received by Wilcox from Foley.”
In the light of the above claims we will first examine the cases cited in their support, and see precisely what thejr hold. The principal and most recent of these English cases is that of Ladywell Mining Co. v. Brookes, supra, in which the facts were, that on February 1st, 1873, one Palin and three associates purchased a leasehold mine for ¿£5,000, with a view of reselling it at a profit to a company to be formed. They afterwards made a provisional contract with a trustee for an intended company for ¿£18,000 in cash. The company was formed, having for its principal object the purchase of the mine, and Palin and his associates received their purchase money of ¿£18,000, April 4th, 1873. The contract of February 1st, 1873, was not disclosed to the company, nor did it become known to it until about June, 1883, after it had gone into voluntary liquidation. In June, 1883, the company allowed judgment by default to go against them, in an action by the lessor to recover possession of the mine. In 1884, the company commenced two actions, one against the executors of two deceased vendors, and the other against the two surviving vendors, to recover the secret profits made by the vendors on their sale to the company, on the ground that they stood in a fiduciary capacity to the company at the time they bought the mine. It was held that the evidence failed to show this to be the fact, and that they were not liable to refund the profit they made on the transaction. The judgment of Justice Sterling, 34 Ch. D., supra, was appealed from, and this appeal constitutes the case in 35 Ch. Div., supra, in which the former judgment was sustained. There are several opinions. In that by Cotton, L. J., it is said that the plaintiff claims that the defendants stood in such a position at the time of their purchase that they could not have claimed to have bought the mine for themselves, and could not, therefore, sell it at an advanced price, to the company. This is said to be mainly a question of fact; and on that question the contract of February 1st, 1873, was in its terms perfectly absolute, and not dependent on any company being formed; that though *117doubtless it was contemplated a company should be formed, no part of the purchase money was to be provided for Out of the funds of the company, or to consist of shares of the company ; and it is added : “ One thing which is very strong in favor of the defendants, is that the whole of the price £5,000, was, in fact, completely paid when the lease was granted out of their own money, and not in any way out of money provided by means of this company; ” and finally, it is said that the facts found did not make the defendants, at the time when they entered into the contract to purchase, persons so acting as to entitle the company afterwards to say: “ When you bought this mine, you were acting for us; this purchase, although made by you, is one which must be considered' as having been made by you for the company which was after-wards formed at your invitation.” Lindley, L. J., concurring, said there might be a case for rescission, if rescission were possible; but that rescission was not possible, because the property assigned by the company did not belong to it any longer. He added: “ Then we are driven to consider the point which was really raised and decided in In re Cape Breton Company, whether rescission being impossible the company can obtain from Palin an account of the profit which he made by the transactions which have been alluded to, and that depends really upon the evidence. But the evidence is not sufficient to enable them to succeed. It is not proved that when Palin bought—that is on the 1st of February, 1873, he bought for the company which was ultimately formed; nor that when he bought the company was so far formed as to entitle it or its members to claim the benefit of the purchase on any theory of trusteeship; nor is it proved that persons were induced to take shares on the faith that the new company was buying from the old company. It is plain that the new company did not, in fact, find the money with which the vendors were paid. Under those circumstances, can we say that there was any such relation between Palin and the company as to entitle the company to say, You bought for us ? It appears to me that the evidence is not sufficient for that purpose. If it were we could see our way to give relief.’ *118Loopbs, L. J., also concurring, said: “ The question is, did Palin and his associates, on the 1st of February, stand in a fiduciary position towards this company that was thereafter to be formed; or, in other words, were they then acting for the company about to be formed ? If they were the plaintiffs are entitled to succeed.” This, he said, was entirely a question of evidence, and that in his view the evidence did not establish this conclusion. “They bought the mine themselves and paid for it out of their own pockets. No person is called to say they were asked to take shares, by any of these vendors, because they were forming a company.” He concludes: “ No doubt, having regard to the secret profit that was made by these vendors the company might have claimed rescission of the contract, but, in the circumstances, rescission had become impossible.”
The other cases may be more briefly stated. In Grover's Case, supra, one Mappin agreed to buy a patent from Skoines for ¿665,000, payable partly in cash, and partly in shares of a company to be formed to use the invention. Mappin also engaged to use his best efforts to organize the company. Three months later Mappin agreed with one Wright, who acted as trustee for the proposed company, to sell the patent to it for ¿6125,000 payable in cash and shares, and it was also agreed that Mappin should be appointed managing director. The company was formed and Mappin became a director. The suit was an application by Miss Gover, a subscriber pressed to pay “ calls,” to have her name removed from the company’s register of members, because of the failure to disclose the Mappin-Skoines contract in the prospectus. It was decided that the statute did not give a remedy against the company, but only against a delinquent promoter, and it held that Map-pin was not a promoter when he made the contract.
In Erlanger v. New Sombrero Phosphate Co., supra, a leasehold interest in the island of Sombrero was purchased by a syndicate acting for themselves alone, and not as the representatives of any corporation existing or proposed. Soon afterwards they formed a joint stock company and sold the lease to it for double the price paid by them. The contract *119of purchase by the corporation, at its instance, was set aside. In In re Cape Breton Company, supra, the facts, briefly, were: One Fenn was the agent of a company to purchase a specific property, in which, before the commencement of his agency, he had acquired an interest. He did purchase it for the company without disclosing to the company his interest in the property. After his purchase the facts were fully disclosed, and with the knowledge so acquired the company elected to retain the property. It was held the company could not recover. But the court said: “ This case is not the case of an agent who, after he has accepted the agency, has acquired property, the purchase of which was within the scope of his agency, and then has resold that property to his principal at a larger sum, in which case it is obvious that the principal may say that the original purchase by the- agent at a small price was a purchase in behalf of the principal.”
In Barr v. New York, Lake Erie Western Railroad Co., 125 N. Y. 263, 277, it is sufficient to say that the principle is laid down that a voidable contract remains good until rescinded, and that to rescind, the property obtained under the contract must be returned.
Who and what are promoters, so called, of corporations, and what their relations to the corporations which they help to form, has been more frequently judicially considered and determined by the English courts than by those of this country. Some English cases appear to be more in point, as applicable to the questions arising upon the record, than those cited by the defendant, to which we have just referred. A promoter has been defined to be a person who organizes a corporation. It is said to be not a legal but a business term, “ usefully summing up, in a single word, a number of business operations, familiar to the commercial world, by which a company is generally brought into existence.” Bowen, J., in Whaley Bridge Calico Printing Co. v. Green et al., 28 Wkly. Rep., (Q. B. Div., 1880,) 351, 352. That such persons occupy a fiduciary relation toward the company or corporation whose organization they seek to promote, is well settled by the decisions of both countries. Lord Cotton prefers to *120call them “ trustees.” Bagnall v. Carlton, 6 Ch. Div., 385. Sir George Jessel, M. R., in New Sombrero Phosphate Co. v. Erlanger, supra, said: “ Promoters stand in a fiduciary relation to that company which is their creature.” In Erlanger v. New Sombrero Phosphate Co., supra, the Lord Chancellor said of promoters: “ They stand, in my opinion, undoubtedly in a fiduciary position. They have in their hands the creation and molding of the company; they have the power of defining how, and when, and in what shape, and under what supervision, it shall start into existence and begin to act as a trading corporation. If they are doing all this in order that the company may, as soon as it starts into life, become, through its managing directors, the purchasers of the property of themselves, the promoters, it is, in my opinion, incumbent upon the promoters to take care that in forming the company they provide it with an executive, that is to say, with a board of directors, who shall both be aware that the property which they are asked to buy is the property of the promoters, and who shall be competent and impartial judges as to whether the purchase ought or ought not to be made. I do not 'say that the owner of property may not promote and form a joint stock company, and then sell his property to it, but I do say that if he does he is bound to take care that he sell it to the company through the medium of a board of directors who can and do exercise an independent and intelligent judgment on the transaction, and who are not left under the belief that the property belongs, not to the promoter, but to some other person.” Lord O’Hagan, referring to the same subject, expressed a similia'r opinion in even more emphatic language, declaring that while an original purchase might be legitimate, and not less so, because the object of the purchaser was to sell it again, and to sell it by forming a company which might afford them a profit on the transaction, yet: “ The privilege given them for promoting such a company for such an object, involved obligations of a very serious kind. It required, in its exercise, the utmost good faith, the completest truthfulness, and a careful regard to the protection of the future stockholders.”
*121The test, therefore, of the validity of such transactions is that it must, in all its parts, be open and fair, so that the promoters shall not in fact, substantially “ act both as vendors and vendees, and in the latter capacity, approve a transaction suggested by them in the former.” Foss v. Harbottle, 2 Hare, 461, 488; McElhenny's Appeal, Hubert Oil Co., 61 Pa. St., 188; Simons v. Vulcan Oil and Mining Co., 61 id., 202; Densmore Oil Co. v. Densmore et al., 64 id., 43; Pittsburgh Mining Co. v. Spooner, 74 Wis., 307; So. Joplin Land Co. v. Case et al., 104 Mo., 572; In re British Seamless Paper Box Co., L. R., 17 Ch. Div., 467; Phosphate Sewage Co. v. Hartmont, L. R., 5 id., 394. In the last case, the distinctive feature was that the vendors paid the commission to the trustees who received the property on behalf of the company. They were compelled to pay it to the company. In Hichens v. Congreve, 1 Russ. & My., 150, (on appeal, 4 Russ. Ch., 562,) three promoters induced their company to buy a mine for ¿625,000, of which they received from the vendor and divided among themselves ¿615,000. This they were compelled to account for to the company. Similar cases are Beck v. Kantorowicz, 3 Kay & Johnson, 230; Whaley B. C. P. Co. v. Creen et al., supra; Emma Silver Mining Co. v. Grant, 11 Ch. Div., 918; Bagnall v. Carlton, supra; Kent v. Freehold Land Brick-making Co. (Limited), 17 L. T., N. S., 77; Ex-Mission Land & Water Co. v. Flash et al., 97 Cal., 610.
It is an undoubted rule of law that where two or more persons associate themselves for the purpose of purchasing property, and one of them represents to the others that particular property can be bought for a designated price, which he procures to be paid by his associates, when in fact he receives a difference between said sum and a less one, he may be compelled to account for such difference without any rescission of the contract, and although the property may be worth all or more than was paid for it. Emery v. Parrott, 107 Mass., 95. The same principle is applied against promoters of corporations, in case of any secret contract more favorable than that disclosed. Pittsburgh Mining Co. v. Spooner, supra, and *122the very numerous cases therein cited; and an exhaustive note by Mr. Freeman, to said case, 17 Am. St. Rep., 149, 167. See also, as applied to directors, Cook on Stock, §§ 649, 650; Gilman, Clinton Springfield Railroad Co. v. Kelly et al., 77 Ill., 426; Wardell v. Railroad Co., 103 U. S., 651; McGourkey v. Toledo Ohio Central Railroad Co., 146 id., 536.
A careful examination of the cases, will, we think, disclose two grounds of the liability of defendants to corporations for undisclosed profits resulting from transactions with such corporations ; first, where the defendants are corporate fiduciaries. The characteristic of this relation is trust. Such a relation undoubtedly exists between companies and their officers, such as directors. Mallory v. Mallory Wheeler Co., 61 Conn., 135. With reference to promoters, since a man cannot receive an appointment from a non-existent company, the proof may be less obvious; but it may nevertheless be shown conclusively, by a variety of representations, admissions and acts. The second ground of liability is fraud. The law does not prohibit a promoter from dealing with his company. But he must make full disclosure to the company of his relations to the property that is the subject of his deal. Suppression, concealment, or misrepresentation of material facts, is fraud; upon proof of which, rescission of contract, or repayment of the secret profits will be compelled.
A very recent English case, in which a secret arrangement between a promoter and a director of a company was considered, is that of In re North Australian Territory Company (Archer's Case), L. R. 1892, Ch. Div., Vol. 1, p. 322. The facts in the case were these: Archer being requested by the promoter of a projected company to become a director, agreed to do so upon the terms that if he should at any time desire to part with the shares he was to take in order to qualify him as director, the promoter should purchase them of him at the price he should pay for them. The company was subsequently formed, and Archer became a director, took the qualification shares, and paid for them at par, out of his own money, and from time to time acted as director; but he never *123disclosed to his co-directors, or to the company, his agreement with the promoter. He afterwards resigned his office of director, and, subsequently to his resignation, the promoter, at his request, paid to him the sum which he had paid for the shares, arid accepted a transfer of them. At that time the shares were valueless in the market. In the winding up of the company, the liquidators asked that Archer be ordered to pajr to them the sum received by him from the promoter, with interest; and it was held, reversing the lower court, that, having regard to his position, as director of, and therefore agent for the company, whatever benefit or profit accrued to him under the indemnity constituted by his secret agreements with the promoter, belonged to the company; and that the retention by him of the proceeds of the indemnity occasioned a loss to the company, for which he was accountable, with interest, upon what was declared to be the principle of Hay's Case, Law Rep., 10 Ch., 593, and Pearson's Case, 5 Ch. Div., 336. During the argument the counsel for the liquidators, in support of the appeal, were stopped by the court, and counsel for Archer then proceeding, were submitted to some peculiar interruptions by the judges. Fry, L. J., asked: “ Why should not Archer be accountable for the £500, as ‘ property ’ of the company retained by him ? ” Counsel replied : “ The real question is, Did the company suffer loss by what was done ? They never had the £500, and therefore cannot be said to have lost it. In the majority of eases in which a director has been held accountable to the company he has, in effect, received money which originally came from the coffers of the company, as in Say's Case, and the eases already mentioned.” Bowen, L. J.: “ Smith being in a fiduciary relation to the company, had no right to give a director a benefit without the company knowing it. An indemnity against loss is a valuable consideration.” Counsel said: “At the time the letter was written Archer had not taken the shares, and had not then agreed to become a director. Again, there is no evidence that the contract was not disclosed to the company.” Fry, L. J., asked: “Would an honorable man assent, as Archer did, to accepting this indemnity, on the *124terms that he was to keep it secret ? If it was not actually dishonest, it seems to me to. be a very improper course of proceeding.” Bowen, L. J.: “ Is it right that the wolf should give a sop to the watch-dog, without his master’s leave ? ” This question appears to have practically closed the debate.” The opinions of the judges, separately declared, appear at considerable length in the report, and are so able- and apposite, that we regret that we cannot feel warranted in quoting from them.
Applying the principles recognized in the decisions to which we have referred, to the case before us, it seems clear that the plaintiff in the principal ease is entitled to recover. The finding is explicit that the original arrangement between Wilcox and Foley contemplated no acquisition of any interest in the patents by Wilcox, but the organization by Wilcox of a corporation, and the sale to it of such patents; then a division between Foley and Wilcox of the avails of such sales. The written contract between Wilcox and Foley was entered into for the purpose of carrying out said plan of organizing the company, selling the patent and dividing the avails. In the agreement itself, while it is stated, under a “ whereas,” that Wilcox is desirous of owning one half of said patents, yet the very writing discloses that the proper construction of this language is that the patents, as belonging to Foley, should be sold to a joint stock corporation to be organized by Wilcox, for twice the sum that Foley was willing to dispose of them for, namely, 'for the sum of three thousand dollars in cash to be received from the company, and five thousand dollars of the capital stock of the company, and that then Foley should give to “ said Wilcox, one half of the three thousand dollars cash, as soon as received, and one half of the five thousand dollars of the capital stock of the company, as he shall receive it.”
Such being the arrangement, it was, very appropriate^, agreed that it should be kept secret. Wilcox, in soliciting. subscriptions for stock, most scrupulously observed such obligation of secrecy, and also went further, and “for the purpose of inducing persons to subscribe for said stock, stated to *125nearly all of the persons who subscribed for said stock, and who now constitute the stockholders of said company, that he, Wilcox, was putting his money into said enterprise upon precisely the same basis as the other of said subscribers. And it was with that understanding that nearly all of said persons subscribed for said stock.” The corporation was organized, and Wilcox, at its first meeting, was present, and was elected temporary clerk and a director, and voted in favor of a resolution which was adopted, which recited that Foley was the owner of certain letters patent, necessary and convenient for the purposes of the company, and which directed their purchase for certain stock, and the sum of three thousand dollars in cash.
It will thus be seen that the transaction between Wilcox and Foley contemplated, and Wilcox, in its execution, both as promoter and director, used every possible species of bad faith, breach of trust, and infidelity while occupying such a fiduciary relation. Placing the actual conduct of Wilcox side by side with the standard of conduct required of those in such positions, as declared by the judges in the New Sombrero Phosphate Co. Case, supra, so much relied upon as authority by the defendant, the contrast is overpowering.
Although many of the very numerous cases which we have cited, and almost numberless others to which reference might also he made, are direct authorities for the doctrine that in such cases as that before us, a defendant may be compelled to account, though no offer of rescission is made, and the property may be worth as much or more than was paid for it, and although the subject has already been incidentally referred to and considered in certain aspects of it, in this opinion, yet, in view of certain language in some of the cases upon which the defendant relies, including Mallory v. Mallory Wheeler Co., supra, and Tryon v. White & Corbin Co., 62 Conn., 171, it may be useful further to say, that properly understood, there is nothing in any of such cases cited by the defendant in conflict with the doctrine stated. Thus, in Mallory v. Mallory Wheeler Co., supra, the plaintiff sought to recover a sum as balance of salary claimed to be due him *126for services rendered as chief manager and director of the defendant’s business. It was claimed that the contract under which such service was performed was void, or if not void that it rvas voidable at the option of the corporation. This court, treating it as a case in which a director had made use of a fiduciary relation to secure for himself an advantageous contract for a salary, held that, independent of the question of public policy, such transaction was voidable at the election of the corporation. The court then added: “It may fairly be gathered from the authorities cited, that the rule we are now considering does not operate ipso vire to avoid every transaction of a trustee made with his beneficiary, in which he is interested. It is generally limited in its operation to rendering it voidable at the election of the party whose interests are concerned in the question of its affirmance or disaffirmance. If, therefore, nothing was done in avoidance, the transaction remains. 2 Pomeroy’s Eq., § 1077; Duncomb et al. v. New York, Housatonic & Northern Railroad Co., 84 N. Y., 190, 198. Much more if the transaction has been ratified by that party. Barr v. New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad Co., 125 N. Y., 255.” This court, in that case, was considering a transaction in which there was no concealment or secret profit, and nothing proved to have been done, in actual, as distinguished from constructive bad faith, or fraud, and the plain distinction between such a case and the one under consideration in reference to equitable relief, is clearly shown in the section referred to in Pomeroy, 1077, and the very numerous authorities cited in the exhaustive note to that section, in the second edition. The same thing may be said in reference to other cases relied upon by the defendant; and we think the contention that a person who, first as a promoter, then as a director, induces a corporation to embark its capital in a business in such a way that the rescission of its purchase of property, essential to the continued life of the company, can only be made by the sacrifice of such existence, can retain his secret profits in the transaction, unless the contract shall be rescinded and the enterprise abandoned, is contraiy to the doctrine of numer*127ous cases, and without the intended sanction of any. Such a rule would permit retention of secret profits, and its enforcement would turn the courts into promoters, not of corporations, but of frauds upon them, numerous enough as they are, and needing no such promotion. “ It is a general rule that a party defrauded in a bargain, may, on discovering the fraud, either rescind the contract and demand back what has been received under it, or he may affirm the bargain, and sue and recover damages for the fraud.” Cooley on Torts, 589, 591, and cases cited in note 2. Thus, if, after discovering a shortage in goods, the price is paid, an action lies for the fraud, although the contract may not be disaffirmed. Numan v. Oberle, 90 Mo., 666. So also, in case of wrong dealing by s trustee, the rule is, when the facts come to the knowledge of the cestui que trust, he may either affirm or repudiate the transaction, and if he does the former he may yet recover secret profits. Thus, where a partner sold his own goods to a partnership without the knowledge of his associates, he was held liable to account to them for the profits. Bentley v. Craven, 18 Beavan, 75. See also, Kimber v. Barber, L. R., 8 Ch. App., 56; Getty et al. v. Devlin et al., 54 N. Y., 412.
The same rule applies in the law of principal and agent, and of attorney and client; indeed in every case where one improperly conducts himself to his own advantage while acting in any fiduciary capacity. The language, therefore, cited from Mallory v. Mallory Wheeler Co., and the statement in Tryon v. White Corbin Co., supra, p. 173, that “ an acceptance of the benefits of the transaction imposes an obligation to assume its burdens,” and the principles stated in other decisions relied upon by the defendant, have no legitimate application to cases where a corporation seeks to recover from a promoter or director money had and received, which in equity and good conscience belonged to the corporation. Instead of rescinding the transaction of purchase, the corporation by its suit, affirms it and enforces the real contract as made for its benefit, and not the pretended contract, as simulated, in order to defraud it. In such a case the *128corporation recognizes the obligation to assume the burdens, and only demands that it shall receive “ the benefits of the transaction.” Indeed the principle of Murray v. Jennings, 42 Conn., 9, is decisive of this whole matter.
The defendant in the principal case further contends that the Yale Gas Stove Company does not appear in court with clean hands. It is said the finding shows that, “ the real bargain between Foley and the Yale Gas Stove Co., fixed the price to be paid for his patents at $3,000 in cash and $5,000 in stock ; ” but that to. avoid the joint stock law, and to defraud the public, a sham contract was made; that thereafter a court of equity should leave them where they have placed themselves. “ With what propriety,” it is asked, “ can the court decree that one party shall give up to the other an illegal profit, while permitting that other to keep an equally illegal profit obtaiued in the same transaction.”
The maxim that “ he who comes into equity must come with clean hands,” has no such application as the defendant seeks to give it. It refers solely to willful misconduct in regard to the matter in litigation. Snell’s Eq., 35. Though an obligation be indirectly connected with an illegal transaction, it will not thereby be barred from enforcement, if the plaintiff does not require tl?e aid of the illegal transaction to make out his case. Armstrong v. American Exchange Bank of Chicago, 133 U. S., 433; Lewis’ Nelson’s Appeal, 67 Pa. St., 153, 166; Woodward v. Woodward, 41 N. J. Eq., 224 Pittsburgh Mining Co. v. Spooner, supra.
Finally, the suit was properly brought by the corporation, instead of by its stockholders. The question arose in New Sombrero Phosphate Co. v. Erlanger, supra, and James, L. J., said (5 Ch. Div., p. 122) : “ The company represent the contracts of yesterday as of to-day, as they will the contracts of to-morrow or the next day, or next year. They represent the contracts which were made by the company; they are liable upon the contracts, and they have every right in respect of those contracts which an individual being would have if he had the like case, or was under the like liability. Therefore, I am of the opinion that the company not only can sue, but *129that the company was the only proper plaintiff that could sue upon the case made by this bill.” See, also, 1 Morawetz, § 546; 8 Pomeroy’s Eq., §§ 1094, 1096, and the numerous oases therein cited. Indeed, no contention upon this point was made.
In reference to the suit of Wilcox v. Foley, the contract between them was manifestly opposed to public policjq to good morals; it is illegal, and cannot be enforced. If any one has a cause of action against Foley, not upon the contract but by reason of the transaction to which it led, it is the corporation, and not Wilcox.
The Superior Court is advised that judgment be rendered for the plaintiff, in Yale Gas Stove Co. v. Wilcox, to recover three thousand dollars, with interest on $500 of said sum, from Oct. 9th, 1890, to the date of said judgment, and interest on the balance of $2,500, from Dec. 1st, 1890, with costs. And in the case of Wilcox v. Foley, that judgment be rendered for the defendant.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.