128 Ala. 192 | Ala. | 1900
The Lifttle Warrior Coal Company, a body corporate, executed to the complainant, Charles A. O’Neil, in February, 1895, a deed of assignment to
The bank filed several written exceptions to the confirmation of the report of the register. These exceptions were held by the court not to be well taken and Avere overruled, and the report Avas in all things ratified and confirmed, etc.; and from that decree this appeal is prosecuted.
Again it is said, an agent to manage a business, cannot mortgage the property used in carrying it on, nor bind his principal by the execution or indorsment of negotiable paper. — 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), 1024, 1025; Spyker v. Spencer, 8 Ala. 233; Gibson v. Goldthwaite, 7 Ala. 281.
While these are the general rules on the subject, they have, in obedience to the demands of commercial necessity, been relaxed, so that, as we have heretofore held, “In the ordinary dealings of construction and trading eoiporations, it is often impracticable for a company to speak and act through its governing body, and when acting through 'agents within the scope and purview of their ‘chartered powers, the same intendments and implications arise, as spring out of similar actions of conduct of natural persons; and acts of a person assuming to represent such corporation, and transactions with him in the line of the business of the corporation, even though without express authority, become binding on the corporation, if subsequently rallied by it, and such ratification may be made expressly or by mere acquiescence, or by failure to repudiate the act, knowing It to have been done.” — Bibb v. Hall, 101 Ala. 79.
The evidence of the bank tends to show that the secretary, Hooper, had the authority claimed for him. He swore that the Goal Company did not borrow much money; that he collected money due the company, sold most- or nearly all of its coal, bought goods, paid the bills, and transacted all the general business of the company; that he failed to collect the account against the railroad, because it had gone into the hands of a receiver, and the company needed the money; that he conferred with Richard Thomas, the president of the company, who suggested the borrowing of the money, and even went with witness to the bank when he borrowed the money, though Mr. Thomas did not go in, but waited outside the bank. He further testified, that the directors were fully cognizant of the facts and made no objections. 1-Ie stated, however, that the directors had no formal meeting.
On the other hand, Mr. Thomas testified, that be was president of the coal company at the time said note purports to have been given, — on the 25th March, 1892; that he had no conversation whatever with Mr. Hooper •about borrowing the money, or pledging the security of the company for the same; that on the 2d of March, 1892, he went to Pioneer, Tennessee, where he remained until the 2d of May following, at which time he returned to Birmingham; that he had never heard or been informed, that Hooper had made a transfer of the claim against the railroad to the. bank, until about twelve months ago (about December, 1898), and lie did not know, up to March, 1894, nor was he informed that Mr. Hooper had borrowed money from the bank and given the notes of the company for it. He also testified there was no resolution or by-law adopted by the board of directors of the company authorizing Mr. Hooper to sign or pledge claims of the company against the railroad to the bank, nor was there any ratification by the board of directors of the company by resolution or otherwise of that transaction.
This was not all the evidence before the register, but the substance of so much of it as we deem it important to
Affirmed.