Du Bois-Matlack Lumber Co. v. Henry D. Davis Lumber Co.

42 P.2d 152, 149 Or. 571, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 172
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 42 P.2d 152 (Du Bois-Matlack Lumber Co. v. Henry D. Davis Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Du Bois-Matlack Lumber Co. v. Henry D. Davis Lumber Co., 42 P.2d 152, 149 Or. 571, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 172 (Or. 1935).

Opinion

RAND, J.

This is an appeal by the Union National Bank of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, from an order of the circuit court for Multnomah county, affirming the action of its receiver in the disallowance of a claim of the bank upon a promissory note for $11,000, payable to its order and purporting to be the note of the defendant, Henry D. Davis Lumber Company.

The note in question was executed in the name of the Henry D. Davis Lumber Company on February 1, 1932, by Henry D. Davis, its president, and P. H. Fortune, its vice-president, and was a second renewal of another note for the same amount which Davis as *573 president had executed in the name of the company and delivered to said bank. The proceeds of the note first executed were used by Davis in payment of a balance of $10,000 then due upon another promissory note for $30,000 which he had previously executed in the name of the company and delivered to the First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee, the balance of $1,000 not so used having been by him applied to his own personal account. At the time the said notes were executed, Davis indorsed upon the back of each thereof his personal guarantee in the following words:

“For value received, I hereby guarantee the payment of the within note at maturity, or at any time thereafter, with interest, waiving demand, presentation, protest and notice of protest. Henry D. Davis.”

It appears from the evidence offered upon the trial in the court below that the Henry D. Davis Lumber Company is an Oregon corporation and maintains its principal office and place of business in Portland, Oregon. It was organized for the purpose of engaging in the business of buying and selling lumber and is now insolvent. Ever since the organization of the Henry D. Davis Lumber Company in 1912, Davis has been its president and one of its principal stockholders. He is a resident of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, and has resided there for more than sixty years. He has been a depositor in the Union National Bank of Eau Claire ever since it was organized and during said time has borrowed large sums of money from that bank and never has been required to furnish any security for any of said loans.

Prior to the giving of the note for $30,000 to the First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee, Davis had become interested in the Crooked Biver Lumber Company, another Oregon corporation, and that company had become indebted to the First National Bank *574 of Portland in the snm of $30,000. In order to meet said obligation and for the sole benefit of that company, Davis borrowed the snm of $30,000 from the First Wisconsin National Bank and executed the note above referred to in the name of the Henry D. Davis Lumber Company without any authorization therefor, or without the knowledge of any of its officers or directors, and applied the proceeds thereof in payment of the obligation owed by the Crooked Biver Lumber Company to the First National Bank of Portland, and Davis thereafter paid said note out of his own personal account with the exception of said balance of $10,000, and this balance, as stated, was paid from the proceeds of the. loan secured from the Union National Bank.

It further appears from the testimony that the First Wisconsin National Bank is the correspondent bank of the Union National Bank of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, and that the $10,000 was remitted to the First Wisconsin National"Bank by a draft drawn against its own proceeds in the hands of the Milwaukee bank and that the remaining $1,000 of the loan was paid by a cashier’s check payable to the order of the Henry D. Davis Lumber Company and was indorsed in its name by Davis and deposited to his own credit in the Union National Bank and afterwards applied to his own personal use.

There is no evidence anywhere to be found in the record that the Henry D. Davis Lumber Company ever authorized the borrowing of any of said sums or the execution of any of said notes, or that said Company has ever ratified the borrowing of any of said sums or the execution of any of said notes. The evidence further shows that the Henry D. Davis Lumber Company had no interest whatever in the Crooked Biver Lumber Company and did not receive any part of the consideration for which said notes or any thereof were given.

*575 Section 25-213, Oregon Code 1930, in defining the powers of the president and directors, provides that the directors “shall elect one of their number president, who shall preside at their meetings, and perform such other special duties as the directors may authorize * * * From the first meeting of the directors, the powers vested in the corporation are exercised by them, or by their officers or agents under their direction, except as otherwise specially provided in this chapter.”

It is settled law in this state that, unless so provided in the by-laws or expressly authorized by the board of directors, the president of a domestic corporation has no inherent power to make, accept or indorse for the corporation any bill, note or bond which will be binding upon the company and, of course, the vice-president, who can only act as such in the absence of the president, can have no greater power. This principle was approved and followed in Crawford v. Albany Ice Company, 36 Or. 535 (60 P. 14), where this court said:

“* * * It is elementary law that the president and secretary of a corporation, as such, have no power to bind the corporation by the execution of promissory notes or other contracts, but such authority ‘must be derived from some bylaw of the corporation, or some special order, or must be implied by some acquiescence or ratification on the part of the corporation, whose powers, under our law, are exercised by the directors. ’ ’ ’

In support of this holding, the court cited numerous authorities, among which was Luse v. Isthmus Transit Ry Co., 6 Or. 125 (25 Am. Hep. 506), where the same principal had been previously announced. To the same effect see Harding v. Oregon-Idaho Company, 57 Or. 34 (110 P. 412); Baines v. Coos Bay Nav. Co., 45 Or. 307 (77 P. 400); Peek v. Skelley Lumber Co., 59 Or. 374 (117 P. 413); Wilson v. Investment Co., 80 Or. 233 (156 P. 249); see also Daniel on Negotiable Instruments (6th *576 Ed.), sections 393, 394; Fletcher, Cyc. on Private Corporations (4th Ed.), sec. 1934. In Baines v. Coos Bay Nav. Co., supra, the rule was further elucidated as follows:

“The rule is general that no managing agent of a corporation, except the cashier of a bank, possesses implied power to bind it by issuing, accepting, or indorsing on its behalf negotiable instruments: 10 Cyc. 929; [authorities cited]. This is so because such paper, in the hands of an innocent holder, is subject practically to no defense, and to protect corporations from the fraud of their agents, for through them alone can they act, the law requires that such an agent must possess express authority before he can bind his principal by putting in circulation negotiable instruments: Elwell v. Puget Sound & C. R. Co., 7 Wash. 487, 35 P. 376.”

The court further said:

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42 P.2d 152, 149 Or. 571, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/du-bois-matlack-lumber-co-v-henry-d-davis-lumber-co-or-1935.