The Zimmer Vacuum Renovator Company was incorporated in 1908 for the purpose of manufacturing cleaning devices, and continued in business until June, 1913, when it became insolvent and a receiver was appointed to take charge of its affairs and apply its assets in payment of its liabilities. Asa Paine and W. A. Morey appear to have been the officers who conducted and managed the business of the company, and all the books and papers of the company were in their possession. After the insolvency of the company, Paine and Morey disappeared and could not be found, and the records, books and papers of the company likewise disappeared and could not be found. In consequence the receiver never obtained the records, books and papers, and none of the parties who appeared
Zimmer Vacuum Eenovator Company.
Asa Paine.
W. A. Morey.
In itg amended complaint, plaintiff alleged the making and nonpayment of the loan, and set out in full the two notes and the guaranty. Defendants Partin, Blomstrom and Canterbury, as stockholders, interposed an answer on behalf of the company in which they alleged that the officers of the company, Paine and Morey, had been absent for more than a year; that there was’no board of directors competent to act; and that,
Section 8448, General Statutes of 1913, provides that “every written instrument purporting to have been signed or executed by any person shall be proof that it was so signed or executed until such person shall deny the signature or execution of the same by his oath or affidavit.” This statute applies to instruments, including promissory notes, purporting to have been executed by corporations, as well as to those purporting to have been executed by natural persons. Kelly v. Southern Amusement Co. 131 Minn. 386, 155 N. W. 214; La Plant v. Pratt-Ford Greenhouse Co. 102 Minn. 93, 112 N W. 889; First Nat. Bank of Freeport v. Compo-Board Mnfg. Co. 61 Minn. 274, 63 N. W. 731. Where the instrument purports to have been executed by a natural person through an agent, or by a corporation through an officer thereof, the instrument is evidence of the authority of such agent or officer to so execute it. Bausman v. Credit Guarantee Co. 47 Minn. 377, 50 N. W. 496; Tarbox v. Gorman, 31 Minn. 62, 16 N. W. 466; First Nat. Bank of Freeport v. Compo-Board Mnfg. Co. 61 Minn. 274, 63 N. W. 731; Moore v. Holmes, 68 Minn. 108, 70 N. W. 872; McGinty v. St. Paul, M. & M. Ry. Co. 74 Minn. 259, 77
In the present case, the answer of the company is verified by a stockholder. There is nothing in either the answer or the verification to show that this stockholder possessed any knowledge of the business affairs or transactions of the company during the time in question, or had any means of knowing whether the company had or had not authorized and executed the notes in controversy. While the sufficiency of the denial must be determined from the answer and verification, we may remark in passing that this stockholder was a witness at the trial, and that his testimony
The statute establishes a rule of evidence merely, not a rule of pleading. McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. v. Doucette, 61 Minn. 40, 63 N. W. 95; Smith & Nixon Piano Co. v. Lydick, 110 Minn. 82, 124 N. W. 637. binder the rules of pleading, the fact as to whether the notes had been executed by the company was in issue. The statute made the notes themselves prima facie evidence that they had been duly executed by the company, and east upon defendants the burden of proving affirmatively that the execution of the notes was unauthorized, and that they were not the notes of the company. Defendants tendered no such proof, and the notes must stand as the notes of the company. Kelly v. Southern Amusement Co. 131 Minn. 386, 155 N. W. 214.
Order reversed.