10 Colo. App. 339 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court.
The St. Joe and Mineral Farm Consolidated Mining Company, one of the defendants, was a corporation organized under the laws of Colorado for the principal object of acquiring, buying, leasing, purchasing and locating mines and mining property, and selling and operating them. Its business
“$40,000. Aspen, Colorado, May 10, 1892.
“ One year after date, we promise to pay to the order of The Continental Divide Mining Investment Company, forty thousand ($40,000) dollars, with interest at the rate of one per cent, per month, payable at maturity, until paid, and 2| per cent, attorneys’ fees if not paid at maturity.
“ This note is secured by trust deed on three-fourths Mineral Farm, of this date. Value received.
(Signed) “ The St. Joe & Mineral Farm Consolidated Mining Company,
“ By B. Clark Wheeler, President.
“E. W. Young, Secretary.”
On the same date and by the same officers, a deed of trust was executed to one Aaron Heims, trustee, conveying to him three-fourths interest in the Mineral Farm property to secure the payment of the note.
■It is admitted that at this time defendant Wheeler was also president of The Continental Divide Mining Investment Company, the payee in the note. Within a short time thereafter, at a date not definitely fixed, but long before its maturity, the note was indorsed by the payee by Wheeler as president, and A. J. Peck as secretary, and delivered to J. B. Wheeler & Company, bankers at Aspen, as collateral to secure a debt of defendant Wheeler previously existing, and an additional loan which he desired to secure. At a subsequent date, not definitely fixed, the following indorsement was placed upon the note :
“ The Continental Divide Mining Investment Company,
“ B. Clabk Wheeleb, President.”
Afterwards a corporation known as The J. B. Wheeler Banking Company was formed, and to it J. B. Wheeler & Company sold, assigned and transferred all of their assets, including the individual notes of defendant Wheeler and the note in question held as collateral therefor. In 1893, this banking company made an assignment to one Ferris. On May 11,1894, the assignee sold, delivered and assigned to plaintiff, the First National Bank of Aspen, the transaction being conducted by Lyster, cashier, the notes of defendant Wheeler, together with the collateral held by him. The assignee received for this transfer the full sum of defendant Wheeler’s indebtedness, amounting with interest to about $34,000. The plaintiff bank then purchased from defendant Wheeler his equity in the $40,000 collateral note, and became thereby its full and absolute owner.
On May 14, 1893, at a meeting of the directors of the defendant company, a resolution was adopted, reciting the purchase of tins note by Lyster, and directing that for the purpose of making payments on the same, the royalties to become due to the company under a certain lease should be assigned to Lyster.
At a meeting of the directors held on December 18, 1893, at which four directors were present, a resolution was offered to the effect that the company refuse to recognize the validity of the note, and directing an action to be brought immediately to cancel it and the trust deed given to secure its payment. The resolution did not receive a second and failed to pass. Thereafter, during the course of the same meeting, a resolution was adopted, three directors voting therefor, whereby it was declared that the note and deed of trust were evidence of a real and bona fide indebtedness of the company, and that the action of the officers of the company in issuing and
Differences resulting in several lawsuits having arisen between J. J. Hagerman and R. J. Bolles, large stockholders in the company, on the one side, and the defendant Wheeler on the other, as to the management of the affairs of the company, on June 7, 1894, a formal agreement in writing was entered into by these three parties for the adjustment and settlement of these differences. In this it was agreed, among other tilings, that a new board of directors should be elected of which Hagerman and Bolles should have the selection of the mar jority, that defendant Wheeler should remain a director for the period of ninety days only, that he should transfer to said Hagerman and Bolles 600,000 shares of his stock in the St. Joe company, purchased by them at trustee’s sale, and also that the contract with Lyster for the receipt by him of royalties and their application on this note, should remain undisturbed. In pursuance of this, the stock was transferred by defendant Wheeler, a new board of directors was elected, and Hagerman became president of the company and remained so thereafter. Subsequently, under the statute, the St. Joe company consolidated with several other mining companies and formed a corporation known as The Mineral Farm Consolidated Mining Company, one of the defendants, which thereby succeeded to the liabilities, debts and obligations of the St. Joe company.
On April 10,1895, plaintiff commenced this suit to secure
In the view which we take of this case, after a thorough and critical examination of the record, which is unusually voluminous, the main questions involved are those of fact. There are, however, some propositions of law presented which necessarily require our consideration. It is insisted by defendants that at the time of the execution of the note The Continental Divide Mining Investment Company was not the owner or possessor of any money or propertjr of any value; that defendant Wheeler was its president, had sole supervision and control of its affairs, owned all of its capital stock, if any was ever issued, that he used the name of the company in the transaction of his own private business, and that it did not lend to the St. Joe company any móney upon or in consideration of the note. It is also denied that the defendant company was in debt at that time to the extent of $29,000, or to any considerable extent, but it is alleged that
The same doctrine has, however, been expressly announced by this court. In West v. Hanson Produce Co., 6 Colo. App. 472, the court said: “ The great weight of modern authority is to the effect that as individuals the officers of the corporation can loan it money, or legally in any other proper way become its creditors and settle with it in the same manner as with an outsider. If such is the law, — and it seems to be where there is no statutory prohibition, — it logically follows-that the right to become a creditor carries with it all the rights of a creditor.”
It follows, therefore, that admitting the payee in the note to have been merely the representative, — the alter ego, — of defendant Wheeler, the note was not invalid solely on that account. On the contrary, it was a valid obligation, if a valid indebtedness to Wheeler existed so as to furnish the necessary consideration.
It is contended that the note appeared upon its face to be executed by a corporation and to a corporation of both of which the same person was president, and that this was sufficient notice to put J. B. Wheeler & Company and each subsequent transferee upon inquiry as to all matters affecting its validity. This could be urged with more force if the president had alone executed the note and had alone indorsed it, but this is not true. The secretaries of the respective companies joined with him in the execution and indorsement, and they were different individuals. In any event, the argu
Upon the subject of constructive notice and duty of inquiry arising from suspicious circumstances, the supreme court of Colorado has expressed itself very plainly, and laid down the rule which is binding upon the courts of this state. In Merchants’ Bank v. McClelland, 9 Colo. 610, it said: “If there is nothing upon the face of a negotiable instrument or in the indorsement or assignment to notify the assignee that the instrument was originally given upon an illegal consideration (gambling debts excepted), or obtained through fraud, the assignee who pays value therefor, and takes the same in
The defendant companies further urge that notwithstanding the indorsement on the back of the note extending the time of payment for one year from maturity, all transferees of the note who took it subsequent to the time of maturity as originally expressed in the note, took it subject to such equities as the maker might have against it. In support of
The plaintiff therefore acquired the note free from equities which would have attached to it if he had acquired it after maturity.
Defendants assign error in a few instances both on the admission and exclusion by the court of certain testimony. We cannot see where any such action was prejudicial error, if error at all. The court seems to have been exceedingly liberal, there being no jury, in permitting both parties to offer for its consideration anything which they thought would even remotely tend to throw light upon the subject in controversy. In the few instances where it refused to permit some questions to be answered, it seems to have been correct in its ruling, or at least, the refusal was not as to material matters, and did not tend to injure the objecting party.
As to whether or not at the time of the execution of the note, the company was indebted as recited in the resolution of May 6, 1892, and whether the company received full consideration for the note, these and other incidental questions assailing the validity of the note are matters of fact, which were submitted to the court upon the evidence, and are covered by its findings. We would be justified under repeated decisions of this court, and of the supreme court of this state, in refusing to disturb these findings, or even review the evidence upon which they were based, solely upon the ground that the bill of exceptions does not contain all of the evidence presented at the trial. On account, however, of the
The view which we have taken of this case obviates the necessity of considering the points raised by plaintiff as to ratification, estoppel, etc., and discussed by counsel in elaborate arguments.
There being no material error, the judgment and decree will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Bissell, J., not'sittiiig.