Barlette v. Red Star Building & Loan Ass'n

64 Pa. Super. 321, 1916 Pa. Super. LEXIS 297
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 9, 1916
DocketAppeal, No. 334
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 Pa. Super. 321 (Barlette v. Red Star Building & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barlette v. Red Star Building & Loan Ass'n, 64 Pa. Super. 321, 1916 Pa. Super. LEXIS 297 (Pa. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

Head, J.,

The facts in this case, as they have been established by the verdict, are so strikingly similar to those in Louchheim v. Somerset Building & Loan Assn., 211 Pa. 499, we search in vain for any such substantial difference between the two cases as would permit this appellant to escape the controlling authority of the decision referred to. The operative legal principle established in that case is thus well stated in the second paragraph of the syllabus: “The authority of an officer of a corporation as its agent, although distinctly designated by the corporation, may be ascertained to be different, from circumstances covering a period of time long enough to manifest a course of dealing, provided such circumstances are known also to, and acquiesced in, by the board of directors and if the course of dealing is one the board had power to authorize.”

In the case at bar, as in the one cited, a provision of the by-laws specified the manner in which the payments of fines, dues, &c., were to-be made by the stockholders. Here the direction was that such payments should be made to the board of directors at their regular stated meetings. There such payments were to be made to a finance committee consisting of three members of the board. In both cases they were in fact made to the secretary who, during a considerable period of time, turned them over to the board or its treasurer. In the case cited the secretary, to whom the payments were made, was not a member of the finance committee nor even of the board of directors. In the case at bar the secretary, to whom the plaintiff made the payments here in question, was-a member of the board and the stated meetings of the corporation were held in his office. The board con[324]*324sisted of thirteen members. Naturally enough some plan would be devised by which the many small sums accruing from dues or fines, owing by the numerous stockholders, could reach the board in a reasonably convenient way.

The plaintiffs testimony, which the jury have determined to be credible, tended to prove that she was the bookkeeper, stenographer and confidential clerk of the secretary. He constantly kejit in his possession some fifty or seventy-five of the individual passbooks of the stockholders. They were accustomed to pay their dues and fines to him without being required to be in personal attendance at the meetings of the board. These small sums of money were by him mingled with his own funds and deposited in his bank account. When the board would meet, his check would be drawn for the aggregate of all these sums and turned over to the board. When .the board was in session in the private office of its secretary, some one of the directors would go to the outside office in charge of the plaintiff: and inquire what moneys, if any, had been collected by the secretary. In some instances, where no check had been prepared in advance for the aggregate of these collections, she would draw such check, she having a power of attorney from her employer authorizing her so to do. This course of dealing was maintained for a very considerable period of time, and of course these facts were sufficient to warrant a finding that the board knew and acquiesced in the manner in which the secretary collected and paid over the moneys of the corporation.

These being the facts established by the verdict, we are unable to see hów any just distinction can be drawn that could make inapplicable the case we have already Cited. The testimony of the plaintiff and the secretary of the defendant company were radically conflicting and contradictory. The jury, however, in the exercise of their proper function, accepted as true the testimony of [325]*325the plaintiff. We can discover no error in the manner of the submission to the jury of these contested questions of fact. The assignments of error are all overruled.

Judgment affirmed.

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Related

Beck v. First Fraternal Building & Loan Ass'n
157 A. 365 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 Pa. Super. 321, 1916 Pa. Super. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barlette-v-red-star-building-loan-assn-pasuperct-1916.