93 Ky. 525 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1892
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Swift Iron and Steel Works Company is a corporation, created by the Legislature of this State in January, ■1871. At the time of the transactions i-n controversy in this case, E. L. Harper was president of the company and •J. H. Mathews was its treasurer; there were also a vice-president and board of directors of said company. The ■powers of each are set forth in the company’s by-laws, as follows: “Sec. 3. All contracts and obligations binding the corporation may be signed by the president or vice-president.” “ Sec. 5. The treasurer shall have charge of the finances of the company, and shall sign all checks and receive and account for all moneys and property coming into his hands.” “ Sec. 8. There shall be a business committee consisting of the president and vice-president, who shall have full power to transact the business of the ■company, under such restrictions as the board of directors may devise from time to time.” This by-law was amended so as to authorize either member of the business committee to act in the absence of the other, and in the .■absence of both “the treasurer shall have power to act ■as such committee.”
J. II. Mathews, in April and May, 1887, drew six promissory notes in the name of the Swift Iron and Steel Works for twenty-five thousand dollars each, due respectively in four months, and signed by him as treasurer and made payable to himself individually, which he . then indorsed individually and delivered to E. L. Harper, who was then vice-president of the Fidelity' National Bank of Cincinnati. Said Harper, as vice-president of the Fidelity National Bank of Cincinnati, indorsed said notes to the appellants — two to the Chemical National
It is conceded, for the sake of the argument, that the notes, dated at Cincinnati, Ohio, indorsed and payable to •order at a bank in New York, were, by the laws of Ohio ■and New York, negotiable paper, and that the appellants, .as innocent holders thereof for value, are not prejudiced by any equities existing between the antecedent parties, ■of which they had no notice, or notice of sucÍl facts as -should put them upon inquiry as to the existence of the antecedent equities. But the rule protecting innocent purchasers of negotiable paper against antecedent equities does not apply to the authority to make the paper. The holder of the paper purchases it at his peril in reference to the authority to make it. Caveat emptor applies to him in full force in reference to the authority to make the paper. For instance, if the person making the paper pro
So the question is, did Mr. Mathews have authority to issue these notes ? "We think not, for the following reasons: By the fifth by-law, supra, his authority is confined to taking charge of the finances of the company, signing its checks, receiving and accounting for its money coming to his hands; and, by an amendment, to act as a business committee in the absence of the president and vice-president. Now, by the fifth by-law, he had no authority to issue said notes, and there is no pretense that he issued them as a committee. But suppose he did, had he the authority to do so? We think not; because, in the first place, if he could issue them at all he could do so only in case of discharging the business of the company in the absence of the president and vice-president, and it is not
Now the notes bear upon their face the conclusive evi
The judgment is affirmed.
There is no brief o.n file for the appellees.