91 Ga. 624 | Ga. | 1893
The general statute of Tennessee, under which this corporation was created and organized, expressly requires that the board of directors shall keep a full and true record of all their proceedings. It does not appear from the record in the present case that any authority to execute the mortgages in question was ever conferred upon the president and secretary of the company by any corporate act on the part of the directors. The minutes of the corporation, so far as we are informed, do not show that any action was taken authorizing the execution of these mortgages. It is perhaps true that their execution was authorized by the unanimous consent of all the real stockholders and directors, but this consent is not evidenced in the manner prescribed by the law of Tennessee or the charter obtained in pursuance
The mortgage to Heath was made September 28, 1890, and the mortgage to R. A. Anderson was made the 1st day of October, 1890. The indebtedness of the corporation about that time was not less than $500,000, none of which has been paid, and the record contains no hint of any assets other than those covered by the mortgages. Nall, who was the bookkeeper, testified that the failure occurred October 11, 1890. The original bill in this case was filed on that day. The lumber company virtually admits its insolvency at the time the bill was filed, and this being true, it certainly must have been insolvent a few days before that time. None of the answers or interventions filed in the case deny the
We now return to the discussion of the question last above stated. The mortgage to R. A. Anderson was to indemnify him against loss by reason of his acceptance and indorsement of divers papers amounting to more than $100,000.00, which were held by various banks and persons. The mortgage to Heath was to indemnify and save him harmless as an indorser on four promissory notes amounting to about $40,000.00, upon each and all of which R. A. and J. C. Anderson, directors of the company, were also liable. One of these notes was made by R. A. Anderson, and indorsed by the lumber company, J. O. Anderson, Hightower and Heath. Another was made by J. C. Anderson, and indorsed by the company, R. A. Anderson, Hightower and Heath. The other two were made by an Indiana corporation, and indorsed by the lumber company, both the Andersons, Hightower and Heath. It will therefore readily be seen that upon each and all of these papers, in the event of their payment by Heath, each of the Andersons would be liable to him either in the capacity of maker or as cosurety, for the real legal relation of the several parties above designated as indorsers was merely that of sureties. No additional credit was extended or money advanced to the lumber company because of the execution of these mortgages. The company had already incurred the several debts represented .by the papers above
It is asserted in Green’s Brice’s Ultra Vires, p. 477, that “ Directors come within the designation of persons filling a fiduciary relationship”; and in a note on page 479 we find the following language : “ The directors of an insolvent corporation, while it is under their management, hold the position of trustees of its assets for the benefit of its creditors. If they are themselves creditors, they are precluded by their trust from securing to themselves by their official action any preference or advantage over other creditors,” citing Bradley v. Harwell, 1 Holmes, 433. In the notes beginning on page 314 of Field’s Ultra Vires, will be found an interesting discussion of the case of Abbott v. The American Hard Rubber Co., 33 Barb. 578, which deals with the power and authority of directors of corporations to contract with themselves, and cites numerous authorities in support
We might multiply these citations to an indefinite extent, but the authorities above referred to, in connection with the numerous cases therein cited, will suffice to show how general is the recognition of the doctrine herein announced. We will therefore content ourselves with remarking that a careful perusal of what is said by the leading text-writers on the subject, and a laborious examination of the cases to which they refer, has convinced nsthat the decided weight of American authority is as indicated. Perhaps the strongest ease holding to the contrary is that of Gould v. Little Rock &c. Ry. Co. (Ark.), 52 Fed. Rep. 680. One marked distinction between that case and the one at bar is, that the deed of trust made by the corporation for the benefit of directors was the result of regular corporate action ; and the same is perhaps true in many of the cases relied on by Judge Caldwell. In so far as the case last cited is to be regarded as authority for the general doctrine that the directors of an insolvent corporation may prefer themselves by mortgage or otherwise, we cannot give the same our ap
The head-notes and this opinion sufficiently indicate
Judgment reversed in part, and in part affirmed.