— 1. If it is not manifest from the note and mortgage, that each was executed to Chambers in an official capacity, and not individually, the parol evidence is full and clear that such is the fact. The consideration moved wholly from the corporation known as the Alabama State Grange, or by its corporate name, State Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry of Alabama; and that it was the intention the note and mortgage should be executed to Chambers as its president, and for' its benefit, is fully proved. There was no objection to parol evidence of the facts, and, if there had been, it could not have been sustained. — Douglass v. Br. Bank of Mobile,
4. We do not regard it as within our province, to inquire whether the parties now in interest, who are creditors seeking the enforcement of liens for the security of meritorious debts, ought to interpose the want of capacity in the corporation to make the loan, to defeat the priority claimed for the mortgage given to secure it. The court can not indulge in favor or disfavor to either party, and is simply without power to enforce contracts wanting in legal obligation and validity; and without power to impart capacity to corporations to enter into contracts foreign to the purposes of their creation. The powers which they may have, are derived from statutes, and it is not for the courts, by tolerating their usurpations, to defeat the will of the legislature. The corporation may, and did doubtless, part with the money in good faith ; and there is no evidence of any want of good faith on the part of the mortgagors. Each, doubtless, when
There are authorities which support the proposition, so vigorously pressed by appellant’s counsel, that as the mortgagor has reaped all the benefits of the transaction — has obtained and used the money of the corporation — all who claim under him should be estopped from denying the corporate power to make the contract. The proposition is not new in this court. It was pressed upon the consideration of the court, in the leading case of City Council of Montgomery v. Montgomery & Wetumpka Plank-Road Co.,
5. The appellant can have no higher standing than would his assignor, or the corporation, if either were seeking a foreclosure of the mortgage, in a controversy with other mortgagees. What rights a bona fide holder could have acquired, it is not necessary to inquire. It is not shown that the appellant stands in that relation; on the contrary, the weight of the evidence, so far as it touches the point, is against him. When valid defenses are shown to exist against negotiable paper, if the holder would protect himself against.
Whether the note and mortgage could not be enforced by the assignor of the appellant, or by the appellant as assignee, if it was shown that the assignor had without authority made the loan, and was bound to account for the money to the corporation, is not a question now presented. — Tomkies v. Reynolds,
The decree of the chancellor must be affirmed.
