147 N.W. 70 | S.D. | 1914
This action is brought for the recovery of the balance due on a promissory note. It is alleged in plaintiff’s com
It appeal's, from the evidence in the record, that the defendant was incorporated shortly before the execution of the note in question, and that the purpose for which it was organized was to: “Build, own, control, maintain, repair, improve and extend tele- . phone exchanges and telephone lines, and to do all lawful acts in maintaining, promoting and carrying on the said business.” That, immediately after its organization, defendant purchased from plaintiff a certain telephone exchange, known as the Centerville Telephone Exchange, with its lines and other accessories, together with certain franchises, for which it gave -to plaintiff 5000 shares of its capital stock and the note set out in plaintiff’s complaint. . Defendant immediately took over the telephone property and has been in possession of, and has operated, the same ever since. It also appears from the record that the directors of the defendant company, at the same meeting at which they purchased plaintiff’s telephone plant, purchased the telephone property of another company, known as the Rural Telephone Company. In fact, it is apparent that the defendant company was organized for the purpose, and with the intent, of taking over and consolidating these two telephone properties and operating them as one concern under a single management. Defendant made a payment of $2,500 on the note in question on the day of its execution, and thereafter made partial payments and paid interest .thereon, down to and including the first day of January, T911.
Defendant, by its amended answer, in addition to a general denial, alleged that, at the time the note was executed and delivered to plaintiff, no capital stock had ever been issued; that no stockholders’ meeting had ever been held; that no officers had ever been elected; that no person had ever been authorized to execute or deliver said note; -that there was no. consideration for the execution and delivery thereof; and that the payments that had been made thereon had been made by the treasurer of the company without any authority so to do, and without the knowledge, acquiescence or consent of the defendant. Defendant then set Up a
Appellant’s assignments presenting the other defenses raised by its amended answer have all been examined; but, after such examination, we do not feel that they merit discussion in detail. It may be that some of the proceedings of the defendant company leading up to the execution -of the note were informal, and there may have been some irregularities, but it appears from the minutes of the meeting of the directors of the defendant company, held at about the time of the execution of the note, that the board, by a unanimous vote, purchased from plaintiff the -said telephone properties and franchises, and, by a unanimous vote, directed and authorized the president and secretary of the board to make and deliver to .plaintiff the note in question-for $15,000, and also to deliver -to him $5,000 of the capital stock of the company in payment for the telephone property.