Buchwald Transfer Co. v. Hurst

75 A. 111, 111 Md. 572, 1909 Md. LEXIS 137
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 1, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 A. 111 (Buchwald Transfer Co. v. Hurst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buchwald Transfer Co. v. Hurst, 75 A. 111, 111 Md. 572, 1909 Md. LEXIS 137 (Md. 1909).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing a petition filed by the appellant against the appellee and dissolving an injunction which had been granted as prayed for in the petition. A chattel mortgage had been given to the appellee which was executed in the name of the Buchwald Transfer Company by William J. Keyes, its President, for the sum of $1,580.00. The appellee was proceeding to foreclose the mortgage when the above mentioned petition was filed, alleging that it was given by the President without authority, and for his own benefit and not that of the company. The mortgage is not in the record, hut we understand it to he conceded that it purports on its face to have been regularly executed by the company, signed by its President, attested by its secretary and having the seal of the company affixed.

That company became involved and some of the creditors organized the appellant — the Buchwald Delivery and Express Company of Baltimore City. The other general creditors were settled with, and the new company purchased all of the property of the old one. In the petition it is alleged': “That your petitioner, in purchasing the property, while being advised of the alleged chattel mortgage held by the said John J. Hurst upon the property of the Buchwald Transfer Company, was advised that said chattel mortgage had been made, executed and delivered to the said John J. Hurst by William J. Keyes, the President of said defendant, in order to secure *574 monies to enable tbe said Keyes to pay personal obligations and debts of his, and that no moneys in consideration of said chattel mortgage ever passed to the Buchwald Transfer Company or to William J. Keyes, as President thereof.” It is also alleged that the check which the appellee gave Keyes was payable to him individually, and Hot to him as President, and that the appellee “knew or should have known that said $1,580 were not to be payable to the Buchwald Transfer Company.” The check itself was, however, produced and is payable “to the order of Wm. J. Keyes, President.”

By the admission in the petition, it is therefore shown that the new company purchased the property with knowledge that there was on record what appeared on its face to be a valid chattel mortgage, regularly executed by the company. It is true that the stockholders of the appellant were creditors of the old company, but the relief sought is in the name of the appellant, and not the stockholders as creditors of the old company, and hence the fact that it purchased the property with full knowledge of the existence of the mortgage is a material one.

The defendant answered the petition under oath, and denied the material allegations in it with reference to his knowledge that the money was to be used by Keyes personally, etc. The answer alleges that the company was organized by Keyes as a business expediency and that he owned about ninety per cent, of the stock, that it was dominated and controlled by him, that he continued after the organization of the company to exercise all the powers and control over its business affairs that had been exercised by him prior to the incorporation, when he was sole proprietor of the business, that Keyes bought all the horses, wagons and other property useful to the defendant and sold the same or so much thereof as was by him deemed advisable, when and as he thought proper, that he borrowed money for the corporation and pledged its credit therefor whenever he considered the same to be to. the best interest thereof, signed all checks and notes, that the sign in front of the building occupied by the company reads “Buch *575 wald Transfer Company, William J. Keyes, Proprietor,” and the company is so listed in the city directory and in the telephone directories, that the directors were at all times well aware of said dealings hy William J. Keyes, as President, and acquiesced in the same and that the directors and stockholders are identical.

A general replication was filed and evidence taken. It is shown that the directors never .authorized the mortgage — indeed there was not a meeting of the directors from the daj< of the organization of the company until May 9, 1908, when they passed a resolution that the action of the President “in placing a chattel mortgage of $1,580 on the equipment of this company he disapproved.” The mortgage was dated April 21, 1908. The transfer business was originally conducted by William J. Keyes. The company was organized with an authorized capital of $17,000 and Mr. Keyes transferred his business and the equipment owned by him for $16,900, for which he took stock of the company. He was entitled to 169 shares of stock, of which he sold five to Mr. Bennett, ten to William F. Keyes, and gave two to Mr. Rafferty.

Mr. Keyes testified that there was no cash capital invested at the time of the organization of the company, and in answer to the question: “State what difference, if any, there was between the manner in which you managed the company before and after its incorporation,” replied: “There was very little difference. I was in entire control and did control and manage everything, such as buying and selling horses, ordering new wagons if necessary, ordering repairs, purchasing the horses, etc. There was virtually no difference in the management of the business. I had entire control the same afterward as I had before. I borrowed money when it was necessary, transacted the business of the concern and was looked to to furnish all funds for the concern.” Mr. Rafferty said there was no actual cash transferred to the company when it was incorporated and he was asked this question, “Then after its incorporation in March, 1907, the company never received *576 any cash from any one except Mr. Wm. J. Keyes and parties from whom the company borrowed money through him,” to which he answered, “That is right.” He also said that William F. Keyes, Mr. Bennett and himself, who were directors, knew that William J. Keyes was overdrawing his account and also his method of dealing. There can.he no question therefore that William J. Keyes exercised entire control over the affairs of the company, with the knowledge of the other members of the hoard, who, together with him, constituted the stockholders. It is true that he had hypothecated a good portion of his stock, hut there is nothing to show that the parties with whom it was so hypothecated ever had anything to do with the management or the affairs of the company. It is also proper to mention the fact that Mr. Rafferty said that when he signed his name to the mortgage as secretary he did not know what it was, hut he had signed at least one other mortgage, which had been previously given in the same waji to Mr. Marchant.

How with these facts established the important question is, whether the mortgage given to the appellee must he declared invalid merely because the directors had not formally authorized its execution, for that is what the testimony reduces the inquiry to. Under the circumstances, it cannot he said that the Buchwald Transfer Company could have successfully attacked the validity of the mortgage without showing more than this record discloses. It is true that a president of a corporation does not ordinarily have authority to mortgage its property, unless authorized by the Board' of Directors, hut that authority may he implied under some circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
75 A. 111, 111 Md. 572, 1909 Md. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchwald-transfer-co-v-hurst-md-1909.