108 Mo. App. 594 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
— Respondent tendered for allowance to the appellant, as statutory assignee of the
Respondent, a broker at Corinth, Mississippi, was engaged in buying and selling stocks, grain, cotton and other commodities for'local customers. The Southern Stock & Grain Company was a corporation in similar business in the city of St. Louis, and a wire, for which respondent paid rental, was conducted from its office into respondent’s office; by this means respondent promptly received market reports and quotations of prices and orders obtained by him for purchases or sales were transmitted to the corporation at St. Louis, pursuant to an arrangement between. them, by which the corporation was thus to receive and execute such orders, respondent being paid a stipulated portion of the commissions charged on such transactions. The transactions and accounts of this corporation and respondent were personal between them, without knowledge or information on part of the stock corporations who were the customers and principals of respondent, all orders and transactions being in the name of respondent alone, who in turn dealt in his own name and kept his account individually with his customers, who were likewise ignorant of the stock corporation. Such
“The court instructs the jury that if you believe from the evidence that the president of the Southern Stock & Grain Company agreed with Stripling to re
The testimony introduced consisting of the statements of the president and general manager, if accepted by the jury, demonstrated that the directors consented to the execution of the agreement with respondent prolonging his relations with the corporation, one condition of which was his discharge from further obligation on the notes. The president of a corporation, as its chief executive, is entrusted with broad and liberal power and authority in the general conduct and management of its affairs;-it has been held that in an act performed by him as the legal head of the corporate body, the presumption should he indulged that such act is legally performed and binding on the corporation. Jones v. Williams, 139 Mo. 1, 39 S. W. 486, 40 S. W. 353. But without precise determination of the scope and limitations of his authority, the proposition is fully warranted that the president of a business corporation may hind the corporation by contracts on its behalf in the matters presented in ordinary course of business without express authority from the hoard of directors. Sparks v. Dispatch Co., 104 Mo. 531, 15 S. W. 417.
This instruction, however, assumes that a president of a corporation, virtute officii, has the power to release claimant from liability upon the notes involved. While the range of -the authority of a president, also general manager, óf a business corporation, as stated, is necessarily liberal and embraces general authority to perform all acts usual and essential in the ordinary transaction of the daily business of the corporation, his authority to discharge claimant as well as such discharge were both facts in issue and should both have been passed upon by the jury, and the instruction is
For the errors indicated, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.