The only question is whether the evidence construed most favorably for the plaintiff should have been submitted to the jury. The notes referred to in the contract were given for the purchase of property necessary for the prosecution of the defendant’s business, and the contract under consideration was incidental to the business. Reing incidental, if it was authorized and was properly executed the contract is binding on the defendant.
Hospital v. Nicholson,
The corporate seal was not necessary. In
Mershon v. Morris,
We find nothing in the evidence which as a matter of law rebuts the presumption of previous authorization. The plaintiff testified that he had attended a meeting of the directors held with reference to the agreement on 29 October. The defendant had five directors; only four of them attended the meeting; Mrs. Crockett had not been notified and did not attend. The defendant insists that as there is no evidence of by-laws fixing the time and place of the meeting any pretended authorization of the contract by the directors is void, and for this position it cites
Bank v. Lumber Co.,
The president of a corporation is
ex vi termini
its general agent.
Davis v. Ins. Co.,
If it be granted that the president of a corporation as such has no power to bind the corporation by contracts executed by him in its name without the express authority of its board of directors, a general
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manager, if bis authority is not limited, has power to bind the corporation by contracts made in good faith and within the corporate power, without any resolution of the board of directors expressly authorizing the contracts.
Lumber Co. v. Elias,
It is argued, however, that the plaintiff is trying to subject the defendant to liability for the debt of individuals. Without deciding the question let us concede the proposition that the debt the plaintiff is seeking to recover was contracted by C. E. Carter, Mrs. Crockett, and Dr. Carter; the defendant, nevertheless, had the legal right to contract for value to pay the debt of another. The contract sued on is supported by a valuable consideration — that is, the grant by the plaintiff to the defendant of an extension of time within which the defendant should pay the note. In
Fawcett v. Fawcett,
The defendant having profited by the extension should not retain the benefit and at the same time repudiate its obligation. Whether the transaction was usurious can be determined by a full disclosure of the facts.
Upon the evidence in the record we think the case should have been submitted to the jury.
New trial.
