70 Vt. 594 | Vt. | 1898
(1) The first contention made on thereferee’s report relates to the liability of the insolvent’s estate on claims one and two. One is a note for $7,000 and two a note for $2,200, both payable to the plaintiff and signed jointly by the insolvent and his brother, Frank E. Briggs. The plaintiff discounted both notes and neither have ever been paid. At the time these notes were discounted Frank E. Briggs was the cashier and George a director of the plaintiff bank. There is nothing on the face of the notes to indicate the relation of the signers to each other. Both signers appear upon the notes to be joint makers as principals. In fact, the insolvent was surety for the other signer. This relation was not in fact known to any of the other officers of the plaintiff. The knowledge of the makers of these notes, although one was the cashier and the other a director of the plaintiff bank, in law was not theknowledge of the plaintiff. Knowledge acquired by the officers as agents of a corporation, while not acting for the corporation, but while acting for themselves, is not imputable to the corporation. The general rule which imputes the knowledge of the agent to his principal, and charges the latter with it, is based upon the principle that it is the duty of the agent to act for his principal upon such notice, or to communicate the information obtained by him to his principal so as to enable the latter to act upon it. It does not apply when the agent
This applies to all cases where he is acting for himself with the corporation. Hence, if a corporate officer, or agent, acts avowedly for himself in a transaction with the corporation, he is regarded as a stranger to the corporation, dealing as if he had no official relations with it. Theserules apply to controversies growing out of discount of bills and notes by banks for their own officers. In such cases the bank will not be affected by notice of any conditions upon which the note in question was given. 4 Thompson’s Com. on Corporations §§ 5204 to 5208. Bank v. Gifford, 47 Iowa 575; Bank v. Christopher, 40 N. J. L. 435; Lyndon Mill Co. v. Lyndon L. and B. Institution, 63 Vt. 581. On these well established principles the plaintiff is not affected with imputable knowledge of the relation of the insolvent to the other signer of these notes. Unless knowledge of his relation to the other signer, on the facts found, is imputable to the plaintiff, it is not contended that the facts found by the referee in regard to the extension of the time of the payment of these notes, if found from competent testimony —in regard to which no decision is made — discharge the insolvent or his estate from liability to pay them. These notes therefore are proper charges upon the estate of the insolvent.
Claims three, four and five are not contested here.
(2) Claim six is a note for $5,000 executed by the insolvent Jan. 17, 1891, payable to the order of F. E. Briggs at the bank of the plaintiff one month after date. It is found that this was an acommodation note executed by the insolvent to his brother, the cashier of the plaintiff, for use at the plaintiff bank. It was made without consideration or security. The referee reports that it bears certain endorse
Judgment affirmed and ordered to be certified to the court of insolvency.