154 N.Y. 518 | NY | 1898
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The right of the plaintiff to maintain this action depends upon the validity of the assignment purporting to have been made to him by the Rogers Manufacturing Company, which, although incorporated under the laws of another state, had the power to make a general assignment for the benefit of creditors under the laws of this state, provided such assignment was also valid under the law of the domicile of said corporation. (Vanderpoel v.Gorman,
The contention that there was a want of authority is based on the allegation that the president was not authorized to execute an assignment to any one, and, least of all, to himself.
As neither statute nor by-law regulating the subject was shown, the power of the corporation to make a general assignment resided in the directors. (Vanderpoel v. Gorman, supra.) Hence the president had no authority to execute the instrument in question unless it was conferred upon him, expressly or impliedly, by the resolution adopted by the board. While that resolution does not expressly authorize the president to make an assignment for the company, we think it does so by implication, because it directs "that the company execute a general assignment," and the president, as the executive officer of the corporation, was the one to carry into effect the direction. The corporation could not act for itself, and the nature of the business demanded prompt action. The directors adjourned immediately after the resolution was passed without specifically deputing any one to act for the corporation or themselves in the premises. Under these circumstances, power in the president to act for the directors by carrying into effect their resolution is fairly to be implied.
But, while he had power to select the assignee, he had no power, as against the corporation, to make a selfish use of the trust committed to him by selecting himself in the absence of express authority to that effect. (Bank of New York v. A.D. T. Co.,
Under the Assignment Act of 1860 it was held that both the acknowledgment and the indorsement of a certificate thereof were essential to the transfer of title. (Hardmann v. Bowen,
No question is raised as to the sufficiency of the acknowledgment by Asa L. Rogers, as assignee, but that is quite different from his acknowledgment as the official representative of the assignor, for the latter was the act of the corporation itself. As the venue of that acknowledgment was in this state it is presumed upon its face to have been taken in this state, for the main function of a venue to an acknowledgment is to show where it was made. (Thompson v. Burhans,
If, however, the acknowledgment in question was taken in this state, it was of no effect, because it was taken by a "master in chancery of New Jersey," an officer who has no power to act in the state of New York. In order to meet this difficulty, the plaintiff, himself, testified, without objection, that the acknowledgment was in fact taken in Jersey City, New Jersey. Thus, we have the official certificate naming one state and the testimony of an interested witness naming another state as the place where the acknowledgment was taken. As the venue is a part of the certificate, a question of fact was thus raised according to our decision in Albany County Savings Bank v. McCarty
(
We do not announce our conclusion as to any of the other questions discussed by counsel, as, we think, for the reasons already given, that a new trial must be granted in any event.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed. *532