72 Me. 226 | Me. | 1881
A notice to a bank director or trustee, or knowledge obtained by him, while not engaged either officially or as an agent or attorney in the business of the bank, is inoperative as a notice to the bank. If otherwise, corporations would incur the same liability for the unofficial acts of directors that partnerships do for the acts of partners; and corporate business would be subjected oftentimes to extraordinary confusion and hazards. Carry the proposition, that notice to a director is notice to tho* bank, to its logical sequence, and a corporation might be made responsible for all the frauds and all the negligences, pertaining to its business, of any and all its directors not officially employed. Any one director would have as much power as all the directors.
A single trustee or director has no power to act for the institution that creates his office, except in conjunction with others. It is the board of directors only that can act. If the board of
Another question arises in the case before us. It appears that Brown’s knowledge of a previous conveyance was acquired anterior to his employment by the bank, if employed by the bank at all, and not during or in the course of his employment on their •account. The question is, whether a principal is bound by 'knowledge or notice which his agent had previous to his employ- : ment in the service of the principal.
Upon this question the authorities disagree. The negative of the question has been uniformly maintained in Pennsylvania and .'some other of the states. In the late case of Houseman v. The Building Association, 81 Penn. St. 256, it was said, that "notice ’to an agent twenty-four hours before the relation commenced is no more notice than twenty-four hours after it has ceased would be.’’ But we think, all things considered, the safer and better •rule to be that the knowledge of an agent, obtained prior to his ■employment as agent, will be an implied or imputed notice to the principal, under certain limitations and conditions, which are these: The knowledge must be present to the mind of the
These elements appearing, it seems just to say that a previous notice to an agent is present notice to the principal. The presumption,- that an agent will do what it is his right and duty to do, having no personal motive or interest to do the contrary, is so strong that the law does not allow it to be denied. There may be instances where the rule operates harshly; but, under the rule reversed, many frauds could be easily perpetrated. Of course, the knowledge must be that of a person who is executing some agency, and not acting merely in some ministerial capacity, as servant or clerk. For instance; if in the present case Brown had merely taken the acknowledgment of the deed to the bank, or had transcribed the deed as a clerk or copyist, such acts would not have imposed a duty to impart his knowledge to the bank. But if employed to obtain the title for the bank by a deed to be drawn by bim for the purpose, that would place the transaction within the rule. Jones Mort. (2nd ed.) § 587. Notice of the existence of an unrecorded mortgage upon the property to an officer employed to make an attachment, is notice to the pkiiitiiT. Tucker v. Tilton, 55 N. H. 223. In the case before us, Brown, it is claimed by the defendant was employed by the bank to make an instrument to convey a title from a person to the bank. Brown knew that such person had not the title. It would be his duty to so inform his client. lie would be likely to do so. He had no motive not to do it. The law conclusively presumes that he did inform him. We think such a ease comes reasonably within the rule, though it is not so marked a case as it would be if Brown had been employed by the bank to ascertain if the grantor had the title, and if he had then to make» the deed.
An application of this rule to the facts of this case, requires the verdict to be set aside. S. S. Brown, while a trustee of the Fairfield Savings Bank, had actual knowledge that John W. Chase had deeded certain land to Isaac Chase. Knowing that fact, he as an attorney wrote and took the acknowledgment of a mortgage of the same land from John W. Chase to the bank, and the mortgage was recorded first. The question was whether the bank had knowledge of the prior, deed when the mortgage was taken. ' The pro forma ruling that the knowledge of Brown was sufficient notice to the bank to overcome the legal effect of the fact that the mortgage was recorded before the deed, irre.spective of the further question whether Brown was, at the time of making the mortgage, acting as an attorney in the business and employment of the bank or not, was erroneous. It is contended that the evidence shows that Brown was acting for the bank. But the fact being at least questionable, it should have been passed upon by the jury.
Fxceptions sustained.