9 S.D. 542 | S.D. | 1897
This is an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien. Morie H. Davis, executrix of the estate of Frank R. Davis, deceased, was the only defendant who filed an answer or defended the action. She claimed title to the property on which the lien was sought to be foreclosed under and by virtue of a sale of the same upon a mortgage given by the Tilford Milling Company to Frank R. Davis in his lifetime. The findings and judgment were in fa/or of the defendant Morie H. Davis, and the plaintiff appeals.
The evidence tended to prove that on January 2, 1889, Davis L. Chantry, Geo. B. McPherson, S. B. Miller, and John D. Hale met at the house of the latter, near the town of Tilford, in Meade county and that Chantry and McPherson proposed to furnish the machinery, complete, and put the same in running order, for a 50-barrel roller flouring mill, for the sum of §6,000 in stock of a company organized with a capital stock of §12,000. Hale and Miller assented to this proposition, and agreed to furnish a site and erect a mill building at the town of Tilford. Articles of incorporation were thereupon signed and acknowledged, in which Chantry, McPherson, Miller, Hale, and Freeman Knowles were named as directors. And the board proceeded to elect Chantry acting president, Hale acting treasurer and Miller acting secretary. No regular organization seems to have been effected until June. Under this agreement, Chantry and McPherson moved’from Iowa the machinery of a 50-barrel roller flouring mill, and proceeded to place it in a building erected for that purpose by Hale and Miller at the town of Til-ford. On June 18th a meeting of the stockholders was held, an
It is further contended that by the by-laws an executive board was created, and vested, with the general management of the business of the corporation; but the powers conferred upon this board do not seem to be broad or comprehensive enough to have authorized the president or secretary to give the orders in question. Article 4 of the by-laws reads as follows: “The executive board shall have the general management of the business and affairs of the company. They shall sign all contracts and acceptances, checks, and other instruments in the conduct of the business, and reply to the company’s correspondence in all matters not necessary to be submitted to the board of directors; keep all business accounts; prepare all statements and annual reports; and the president and secretary and treasurer shall constitute the executive board.” But, assuming that the executive board could have authorized the president to make the order, it is not shown that it did act as a board, or attempt to confer any such authority upon the president or secretary. But, on the contrary, Mr. Male, who was a member of that board — being the treasurer — shows clearly that no action by such executive board was taken. The evidence was insufficient to prove a ratification. Mr. Hale, one of the directors, and the treasurer, says: ‘‘As an officer of the Tilford Milling Company, I did not know or participate in the transactions of ordering the machinery and different articles that were purchased of the plaintiff. * * * This machinery, I suppose, came from Iowa as a mill already-built. It was not supposed to come from Des Moines. It was a mill moved from Iowa here and re-set up. It was not furnished by the Des Moines Manufacturing & Supply Company. All the machinery for the Til-ford Milling Company was furnished by Mr. Chantry. The Tilford Milling Company purchased it of Mr. Chantry and paid him for it. By what I stated I mean that the Tilford Milling Company had no transaction whatever with the plaintiff in this
It is further insisted by the appellant that the corporation having held Chantry out as its president and Miller as its secretary, clothed with the apparent authority to manage its business, and is not now questioning their authority, third parties who have succeeded to its interest in its property ought not to be permitted to .question their authority. The corporation, it is true, is not defending this action; but Morie H. Davis, as executrix, has succeeded to all the interests of the corporation in the property, and has the right to protect her interest by showing that the plaintiff has never acquired any valid lien upon the property, which it never did, unless the machinery and labor were furnished to the corporation under a contract that the parties making it had the legal right to make in order to bind the corporation.
It is further contended that as the plaintiff acted in good faith, under the belief that Chantry and Miller were fully authorized to order the machinery, it should be protected. But the rule is too well settled to now be disturbed that parties contracting with officers of a corporation must ascertain the scope