74 N.W. 194 | N.D. | 1898
This action was commenced in March, 1897, in justice court. The object was to obtain possession, under the forcible entry and detainer statute, of a section of land in Cass County. The material allegations in.the complaint were to the effect that in the spring of 1896 the plaintiff, by written lease, a copy of which was attached to the complaint, leased the said
This case cannot be controlled by those cases in which a tenant is denied the right to dispute his landlord’s title. While these leases or contracts are in the usual form, and contain a stipulation on the part of the defendant to quit and surrender possession at the termination of the contract, with a right of re-entry to the other party, and while defendant admits the execution of all those contracts, yet the central thought of the answer is that, while defendant was a tenent in form, he never was such in fact; that, in fact, he was during all of said years the equitable owner of the land, and entitled to possession .as such; and that the quit-claim deed and subsequent leases were all parts of an arrangement by which defendant secured the Amenia & Sharon Land Company for money loaned. The answer seeks to bring the case within that principle which permits a conveyance absolute in form to be shown, by parol, to be a security only. Without objection by either party, the case was tried to a jury, and, after the evidence was all in, defendant moved that the questions whether or not the quit-claim deed and subsequent leases were in fact given and received as security be submitted to the jury for its determination. This the court refused, but, on motion of plaintiff, the court proceeded to make findings upon those points, which findings were adverse to defendant. Plaintiff then moved for a directed verdict upon the law issues; whereupon the court stated to the jury that the only issue for them to decide was whether or not plaintiff was entitled to the immediate possession of the land, and instructed them that the plaintiff was so entitled, and directed a verdict accordingly, which was rendered. Exceptions were saved by defendant to all of these rulings.
It is perfectly clear to us, after a full and thorough examination, that no other result would have been proper under the evidence, and we cannot therefore disturb it, unless we find
True, the defendant was in actual possession of the land at the time the purchases were made, and it has been reiterated times
Guernsey being an innocent purchaser, plaintiff, who succeeded to his rights, would be protected on elementary principles. We need not therefore go further. But we remark that it is clear that plaintiff was also an innocent purchaser. Defendant seeks to charge plaintiff with notice in this manner: He claims that the parol contract with the Amenia & Sharon Land Company, by which he turned the land over as security, was made with E. W. Chaffee, who was an officer in and general manager of said cor
We think no case can be found which carries the doctrine of constructive notice to a corporation to any such length. As to this plaintiff corporation, H. F. Chaffee was, at the time he received such knowledge, simply a private citizen. There is nothing in the record to show or intimate that the plaintiff corporation is simply the old corporation under a new name, and we think it has never been held that knowledge received by an individual can be chai'ged to a corporation which was not organized, and of which he did not became a member, until three years thereafter. In this case express notice to plaintiff is not claimed, but only the technical constructive notice arising from the knowledge of its officer. An officer of a corporation is simply an agent of the corporation. On this doctrine of notice, it is stated in Thompson’s Commentaries on the law of corporations (§ 5191:) “The most comprehensive rule with reference to this subject which can be stated is that notice communicated to or knowledge acquired by the officers or agents of corporations, when acting in their official capacity, or within the scope of their agency, becomes notice to or knowledge of the corporation for all judicial purposes.” This announces the strict rule as to the time when the knowledge must be acquired or the notice received. It has direct authority to support it. Hood v. Fahnestock, 8 Watts, 489;
Affirmed.