24 Barb. 20 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
It appeared upon the trial that on the 21st day of January, 1850, one Gideon Briggs lent the company $155, for which a note was given in the following words and figures :
“$155.00. For value received, the Moravia Cotton Mill promise to pay Gideon Briggs or bearer, one hundred and fifty-five dollars, with interest. A. Cady, Agent.
Moravia, Jan. 21,1850. per G. C. Dibble.”
Dibble testified that the Moravia Cotton Mills organized and did business under the certificate of incorporation, which had been read in evidence. That he was in their employ for ten , years, up to the fall of 1850, as clerk, That Artemas Cady was the agent of the company in January, 1850, and he, the witness, was clerk. That the signature- of the note was in the witness’ handwriting. That the note was given for borrowed
I shall consider the questions raised at the circuit on the motion for a nonsuit, in the order in which they were presented.
1st. As to the form of the note. Evidence was given, tending to show that it was in the form which had been customarily used and approved by the company in other similar cases, and which had always b^n recognized by them, and the money for which it was given was used by the company in its regular legitimate business. Again: Cady was the agent, prima facie, the general agent of the corporation, with power to bind his principals, in legitimate contracts. Dibble signed the name of
2. As to whether the “ Moravia Cotton Mills” were competent to bind themselves upon a contract for borrowed money, to be used in their business. That they were capable of incurring pecuniary liability, is apparent from the seventh section of the act under which they were incorporated, (1 R. S. 4th ed. 1211,) which makes the stockholders personally liable, to the extent of the amount of their stock, for all debts due by the company at the time of its dissolution. How the debts must originate or be contracted, for which the stockholders are thus made liable, is not stated in the act. Manifestly, all debts which the corporations, contemplated in the act, were competent in law to contract, are intended. The power to borrow money is not expressly given, either in the act above mentioned, or in the title of the revised statutes defining the general powers of corporations. (1 R. S. 1st ed. 599, 600 ; 4th ed. 1172.)
The second section of the first mentioned act declares that corporations formed under it, “ shall in law be capable of buying, purchasing, holding and conveying any lands, tenements, hereditaments, goods, wares and merchandise whatever, necessary to enable the said company to carry on their manufacturing operations mentioned in such certificate.” It will not be denied, that under this provision, the company had power to do I and perform all incidental acts and things necessary to carry out and effectuate the express powers granted. Among the express powers, are those of buying and purchasing personal property necessary to carry on 'their operations; and among their implied powers, it cannot be doubted, was that of hiring workmen. It will probally not be denied that they had the; power to execute their promissory notes upon the purchase of such personal property, or in liquidating the claims of their
If these views are correct, the nonsuit, which was granted solely upon the ground just considered, was erroneous; unless the remaining ground taken by the defendant’s counsel at the trial should prevail. That was,
3d. That the “ Moravia Cotton Mills” had never been legally incorporated. The first section of the act of 1811, before cited, provides that the certificate of incorporation shall contain, among other things, the number of trustees, and their names, who shall manage the concerns of the company for the first year.” The certificate in this case omits such statement, which is the ground of the objection now being considered. This company went into operation in 1831, as a corporation under the act of
The nonsuit should be set aside and a new trial granted, with costs to abide -the event.
Ordered accordingly.
T. R, Strong, Welles and Smith, Justices.]