63 N.J.L. 458 | N.J. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff prevailed in a suit on a promissory note of which the following is a copy, viz.:
“ $1,000. Asbury, New Jersey.
“ One day after date we, the trustees of Museonetcong Grange, No. 114, known as W. Fleming and Company, promise to pay Emma Vliet or bearer the sum of one thousand dollars for value received, with interest at 5J per cent, from date.
Dated April 1, 1895.
“ Trustees,
The ease comes before us on rule to show cause why the verdict should not be set aside and a new trial granted. On a former trial it was ruled that the note in suit con
On the new trial it was proved that for a considerable time before the incorporation hereinafter mentioned, there had existed in the county of Warren an association claiming to be a subordinate grange of the order styled Patrons of Husbandry. It was called Musconetcong Grange and was numbered 114. It carried on a general store and milling business, which, in order to avoid an antipathy existing in commercial circles against the Patrons of Husbandry, was conducted in the name of W. Fleming & Co., Mr. Wesley Fleming being the superintendent and manager of the business, and, then or later, treasurer of the grange. Both of the defendants became members of this association at least as early as 1893. On February 3d, 1894, there was duly acknowledged by the proper officers of the grange a certificate under the act of April 21st, 1876, authorizing the incorporation of such granges. Gen. Stat., p. 1614. It was recorded in the office of the clerk of Warren county, on February 20th, 1894, and filed in the office of the secretary of state on February 27th, 1894. It was proved in evidence and reads as follows:
“ To the Cleric of the County of Warren, in the Stale of New Jersey :
“We, the subscribers, do hereby certify that Musconetcong Grange, No. 114, of the order of Patrons of Husbandry, in the State of New Jersey, was duly instituted and chartered a subordinate Grange according to the constitution of the National Grange of the order of Patrons of Husbandry by the name of Musconetcong Grange, No. 114; that said grange carry on business under the name of WT. Fleming & Co., and that said Grange is desirous of having the benefit of an act of the Legislature of New Jersey, entitled ‘An act to enable Granges of the order of Patrons of Husbandry to incorporate/*461 approved April 21st, 1876; that the members of said Musconetcong Grange, 011 the eleventh day of January, A. D. eighteen hundred and ninety-four, at a regular meeting thereof, held at Asbury, in the County of Warren, in the State of New Jersey, in accordance with the constitution of the National Grange, aforesaid, and in conformity to its own constitution and by-laws, and in pursuance of notice given and entered on the minutes of said Grange of such intended action at a previous regular meeting thereof, did at the time and place aforesaid regularly elect William M. Simanton, Isaac Woolverton and Absalom Apgar, trustees for the purpose of incorporating Musconetcong Grange under the provisions of said act. And that at the time of said election we, the subscribers, were the master, overseer and secretary of said Grange, as we have hereto respectively subscribed ourselves.
“ Robert Melroy, [l. s.]
“Master.
“ John R Dalrymple, [l. s.]
“ Overseer.
“ Lizzie Williamson, [l. s.]
“ Secretary P
The statute cited, after providing for the recording and filing of such a certificate upon the action certified, enacts: “ 2. That said trustees and their associates and successors in office shall be constituted and declared a body corporate and politic in fact and in law and shall be known by their name and number of said grange.”
The certificate of incorporation was not put in evidence on the former trial, and the decision of the Court of Errors and Appeals was reached upon the assumption of the existence of a corporation named “The Trustees of Musconetcong Grange, No. 114.” Reading the statute and certificate together, it now seems clear that the corporation of which the defendants were trustees when they gave the note in suit must have been named “Musconetcong Grange, No. 114.” It is
The court recognizes, hoAvever, as the law of this case, that under the decision of the Court of Errors and Appeals reversing the judgment readied on the former trial, the new trial, in theory, must have proceeded on the hypothesis of ambiguity in the note, with the burden of solution on the plaintiff; and the evidence in the cause has been considered from that point of vieAV, but with no different result.
The plaintiff undoubtedly thought she was loaning her money to Musconetcong Grange on the credit of the individuals avIio were its trustees. It is objected that statements by and to the plaintiff upon this subject, made in the absence of the defendants, Avere admitted in evidence. They Avere competent, not to bind the defendants but to sIioav the plaint-tiff’s purpose in the loan. Jacob Vliet, her brother, with Avhom she transacted the business, Avas in no sense her agent. He Avas an officer of the grange and told his sister that she would have the individual liability of the trustees. The defendants themselves did not see Mr. or Mrs. Vliet, but signed the note and left it with Wesley Fleming, who gave it to Jacob Vliet on receiving the money sent by the plaintiff.
We cannot say that the verdict was against the clear weight of the evidence, and are unwilling to disturb it. Some evidence admitted under objection seems immaterial, but for that very reason was harmless. It could not have influenced the verdict.
' It must not be inferred that a grange incorporated under the act of 1876 is authorized to carry on a manufacturing or mercantile business. If not so authorized, then the borrowing of money for such a business would be ultra vires; and in such case those persons who assume to act for the grange would be personally liable for any engagement effected by them and not enforceable against it. Booth ads. Wonderly, 7 Vroom 250.
As such a result would accord with that reached in this case, it is not necessary to examine or decide the question suggested.'
The rule to show cause will be discharged.