36 Vt. 744 | Vt. | 1864
The orator upon this bill would be entitled to a decree allowing him to redeem the defendant Conant’s morfe
In the case of Conant v. Rutland & Burlington Railroad Co., decided at the January Term, 1863, in Chittenden County, which was a suit to foreclose this same mortgage, it was claimed that the mortgage was not properly executed because the vote appointing the agent for that purpose, was a vote of the directors merely and not a vote of the stockholders, or corporation itself.
This was claimed to be the meaning of our statute authorizing corporations to convey their real estate by an agent “ appointed by vote for that purpose.” Though this was then considered as being true of our public, municipal corporations, which have no public officer or officers clothed by law with a sufficient authority to act for them; yet as to our ordinary business corporations, like banks and railroad companies, whose charters provide for a board of directors, in whom the entire management and control of all the business and affairs of the corporation is vested, it was held not to be true ; and that as such board had full authority to make any purchase or sale of real estate required by the interest of the company, they also had authority by vote to authorize an agent to execute a conveyance.
The orator’s counsel does not question the soundness of this view. But he insists, that as the corporation who gave the mortgage was created by the legislature of this state, it could not as a corporation legally exist, or act, outside the limits of this state ; and that the vote of the directors appointing an agent to execute a deed, was giving the corporate assent to the conveyance, and was therefore a corporate act, and though the directors might have authority to give such assent, they could not do jt without the state.
The general power of a corporation to do business and make contracts, is limited by its charter, and its contracts, wherever made, in order to be valid must be within the proper scope of its corporate power. The corporation being the creation of a locaj sovereignty cannot properly be said to have a corporate existenee beyond the limits of the authority that created it, but the existence of such corporation as a legal person, capable of contracting, is recognized in other states. Contracts made by its authorized agents in other states are therefore regarded as valid, and' the courts of such states allow actions to be sustained by and against such corporations, as freely as in the case of corporations created by their own legislatures. The doctrines enunciated in Bank of Augusta v. Earle, were founded upon such eminent justice and convenience, that to a considerable extent they had obtained in this country before that decision, but still could not be regarded as definitely settled, but since that decision they seem never to have been questioned.
The orator’s counsel makes no question of the general power of the directors of the railroad company to act, even in their aggregate capacity as a board, out of this state, in all matters of ordinary business or contract, where they have authority to bind the corporation, but claims that the authorizing an agent to deed, which must be by vote under the statute, is a corporate act, and therefore can only be done in the state.
We have no occasion now to discuss or decide whether a corporation created in one state, can legally hold a corporate meeting and pass corporate votes in another. There certainly seems to be strong reason-for holding that they cannot act in a strictly corporate capacity, where they have no legal existence. But we do not regard this conferring authority by the directors upon an agent to execute a deed, as being a corporate act, any more than any and every other act, or contract, they do, or make, on behalf of the corporation.
It seems to us absurd to say that the whole effect and substance of the contract can be made out of the state, and this mere formality to make the conveyance comply with the requirement of the statute cannot. When it is once conceded that this agent may be appointed by a vote of the directors, and that a vote of the corporation is not required, it seems to us that ends the question. It is a mere question of authority in the directors, and not one of corporate .power, and when it is established that the power is vested in the directors, it cannot with any more propriety be said that they are performing a corporate act in conferring it, than in every other matter where they bind the company by their official agency as directors. They act in neither case as the corporation, but as the agents of, and on behalf of the corporation.
The orator relies mainly on the case of Miller v. Ewer, 27 Maine 509. It was decided in that case that a conveyance of land in Maine, by an agent of a Maine corporation, authorized by a vote of the directors of the corporation at a meeting in New York city, was invalid. The case is cited by Angelí & Ames on Corp. § 274, as if the point decided was, that the vote of the directors appointing the agent was invalid because their meeting was held out of the state.
But an examination of the case will show that the decision went upon quite a different ground. It appeared that the meeting for the organization of the company and all their corporate
It appeared in the above case in the 6th Conn, that all the stockholders meetings were also held in the city of New York, but their power to act out of the state was not discussed. So far as this case binds any authority in favor of the proposition that corporate meetings can legally be 'held, except in the state creating the corporation, it was disapproved by the supreme court of Maine, but no farther.
We are satisfied that the validity of the vote of the directors appointing the agent to execute the mortgage to the defendant Conant, is not affected by being passed at a meeting of the directors held out of the state, and as this is the only objection made by the orator to the mortgage, the decree of the chancellor dismissing his bill is affirmed.