88 S.E. 633 | N.C. | 1916
1. Is the deed of mortgage mentioned in the pleadings the act and deed of the Southmont Spoke, Hub and Handle Company, now bankrupt? Answer: "Yes."
2. Was the said Southmont Spoke, Hub and Handle Company at the time of the execution of said paper-writing insolvent and unable to pay its debts? Answer: "No."
3. Was the said deed of mortgage executed with the fraudulent purpose and intent to defeat the rights of other creditors and unduly prefer the defendants? Answer: "No."
4. What amount, if any, were the defendants required to pay on account of the indebtedness secured in said mortgage and what amount, if any, is now due thereon to the defendants? Answer: "$3,350.16."
From the judgment rendered, the plaintiff appealed. This action is brought by plaintiff as trustee in bankruptcy of the Southmont Spoke, Hub and Handle Company to set aside a mortgage made by the bankrupt to the two defendants, one of whom, Rothrock, was president, and both of whom were directors of the said corporation. The mortgage is dated February, 1913, was recorded 15 January, 1914, and secures the defendants as indorsers of four (390) notes of same date executed by the bankrupt to the Bank of Lexington for money loaned. The plaintiffs have paid the notes and now seek to foreclose their mortgage.
Plaintiff in apt time requested the following instructions:
1. If the jury find from the evidence that the mortgage was authorized by the directors and not by the stockholders, you will answer the first issue "No."
2. If the jury believe the evidence, they will answer the third issue "Yes."
These instructions the court properly declined to give.
The first prayer raises the general question as to the right of directors ever to mortgage the corporate property without the consent of the stockholders. It is well settled that, as a general rule, the directors of a corporation, unless they are specially restrained by the charter or by-laws, have the power to borrow money with which to conduct the business and to secure payment by mortgage on the corporate property. 10 Cyc., 765.
The power to borrow money carries with it by implication the power to secure the loan by mortgage. 2. Beach on Corp., sec. 388; 1 Morawetz, sec. 346. Cook says, voy. 3, sec. 808: "It is now the established rule that the board of directors, without any action whatever by the stockholders, has the power to authorize the execution of a mortgage on the corporate property." Same author, section 712, says: "The stockholders, indeed, have very few functions. The board of directors have the widest of powers. All the various acts and contracts which a corporation may enter into are entered into by and through the board of directors. The board of directors make or authorize the making of notes, bills, mortgages, sales, deeds, liens, and contracts generally of the corporation."
Our statute, Rev. 1905, sec. 1005, appears to recognize inferentially the power of a board of directors to mortgage the corporate property.
In Duke v. Markham,
The other prayer was properly refused, because fraud is generally a question of fact, and, taking the evidence as a whole, the court could not as matter of law pronounce the transaction fraudulent and void. *451
It is true that it is held in Edwards v. Supply Co.,
In that case it is also held that when a mortgage has been made (391) on all its property by a corporation to its officers to secure a preexisting debt, the company continued in possession, it is evidence sufficient to sustain a holding of the referee that it was void as to other creditors. In that case the property consisted of a stock of goods continuallybeing depleted, and the proposition is based upon the doctrine laid down in Cheatham v. Hawkins,
We think that there is no doubt that a board of directors, unless restricted by charter, may borrow money for the present needs of the corporation, and authorize certain directors to indorse the notes and secure them by mortgage on the corporate property, if done in good faith.
This just principle is recognized by Chief Justice Clark in Edwards v.Supply Co., supra; by Mr. Justice Manning in Powell v. Lumber Co.,
There is nothing to hinder a director from loaning money and taking liens on the corporate property to secure him. If he can do that, he can lend his credit by indorsing its paper in order to obtain needed cash, and secure himself upon the corporation's property. Such transactions are looked upon with suspicion, and strict proof of their bona fides is required. Hill v.Lumber Co.,
But the directors, occupying a fiduciary relation, are not permitted to secure themselves against preexisting liabilities of the corporation upon which they are already bound, or for money they may have already loaned, when the corporation is in declining circumstances and verging on insolvency. They cannot be permitted to take advantage of their intimate knowledge of the corporation's affairs for their own benefit at the expense of the general creditors.
We think, however, that the plaintiff's exceptions to the issues submitted are well taken. They are not determinative of the controversy. *452 There is no finding of fact as to when the debts were contracted originally, whether the notes were renewal notes of other notes already indorsed by defendants or either of them, and which one.
There is no need to submit the first and second issues tendered by plaintiff, as those facts appear to be admitted. The other three issues should have been submitted; also an issue as to whether at the time of the registration of the mortgage the corporation was in failing circumstances and verging on bankruptcy. It is immaterial that the (392) corporation was solvent at date of the mortgage. The question is, What was its condition when the defendant directors put it on record and attempted to shelter themselves under its protection as against the other creditors?
The defendant Rothrock seems to stand upon a somewhat different footing, if his evidence is taken to be true. According to his version, he was elected director and president, 13 February, 1913, and that was his first connection with the corporation. He was not on any of its outstanding notes, and refused to indorse the notes until the directors executed a corporate mortgage securing him against loss. This would be a legitimate transaction, according to the authorities cited heretofore. Nevertheless, if he failed to record the mortgage in order to give the corporation a fictitious credit, he would not be permitted to set it up against those who extended credit to the company between its execution and registration, and the same rule would apply to his codefendant, even if his indorsement was an original instead of a renewed liability.
New trial.
Cited: Steel Co. v. Hardware Co.,