227 Pa. 235 | Pa. | 1910
Opinion by
February 14, 1910:
Three questions are involved in this case: 1. Where from its inception, the stockholders and directors of a corporation completely abandon to the president the entire management and control over its affairs, is the corporation liable on its promissory note given by the president without any express authority from the board of directors, or subsequent ratification; where he uses the proceeds for his own purposes and the corporation derives no benefit therefrom; and where the note is given to one paying full value without any knowledge of a wrongful intention on the part of such president?
2. In such a case is the statute of limitations tolled by payments of interest made through the personal check of the president, he being the owner of almost the whole capital stock of the corporation and in the habit of commingling its funds in one account with those of his own?
3. Would the fact that such president was also the president of the financial institution to which the note was given fix the latter corporation with knowledge of a wrongful intent on his part?
For many years prior to 1890, William M. Singerly was the sole proprietor and owner of a daily'newspaper known as “The Record.” On June 28, 1890, he and four other incorporators organized The Record Publishing Company, corporation
The common pleas reversed, passing over the real ground upon which the referee had placed his findings, and holding that Singerly as its president had no implied authority to give notes in the name of the publishing company; and as the evidence showed no express authority or ratification after knowledge of the transaction, he must be held to have acted without authority, and the company was not bound by his act; and further, holding the claim stale and barred by the statute.
Under the referee’s findings of fact which were expressly adopted by the court below and not attacked here, the fact
The assignments of error are sustained; the judgment is reversed, and the record is remitted to the court below with directions to enter judgment for the plaintiff upon the report of the referee.