Hardin & Sons v. Iowa Railway & Construction Co.
This text of 6 L.R.A. 52 (Hardin & Sons v. Iowa Railway & Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
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[727]*727III. Both of the defendants are corporations, and, as the names indicate, they are railroad companies. [728]*728As is usual when the building of a railroad is in contemplation, two companies were formed. One was the railroad company proper; that is, the projector of the enterprise. The other was the railroad construction company. The construction company undertook to build the railroad for a certain amount of the stock and bonds of the railroad company. But stock and bonds are not in and of themselves available for procuring right of way and iron, and making roadbed, and building bridges, and furnishing materials necessary to construct a railroad. It requires money. The plaintiffs are bankers, and they advanced money to the construction company, and it gave the note in suit for the money, and also gave, or caused to be given, the securities now sought to be foreclosed. Among other objections raised by defendants to the decree, it is claimed that the president and secretary were not authorized to execute the note. This claim is not well founded. It appeal’s that the execution of the note was expressly authorized at a meeting of the board of directors of the corporation. It is claimed that it does noti aPPear that there was any notice to the directors that a meeting would be held. If this was material, it was for the defendants to show that there was no notice. The record shows that they met and took official action, and it should be presumed that they were rightfully in session. The chattel mortgage given as security for the debt was upon certain rolling stock or cars. It is claimed the mortgage is void because the rolling stock was not the "property of the construction company when the mortgage was executed. We do not think this claim is well founded. The contract between the companies required that the road should be finished, and turned over to the railroad company. The evidence shows that the title to the property had not passed. The construction company was in possession of the road, and operating it, when the mortgage was given. We discover no ground for reversing the decree upon the defendants’ appeal.
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“Eldoba, Iowa, December 30, 1884.
Moved by Moorman that the president and secretary of the company be, and they are hereby, authorized to execute to the City- Bank, or C. Hardin & Sons, of Eldora, this company’s note for nine thousand dollars, and a chattel mortgage upon the rolling stock of this company, to secure payment of the same due March. 1, 1885, at ten per cent, interest, being for advances heretofore made, with interest, as well as for one thousand dollars additional to be advanced. Motion carried.”
This was an explicit direction to execute a note for nine thousand dollars and interest, and no more. The company did not, by any official action, authorize the execution of a note in any amount exceeding said sum in any event. W e think the court correctly held that the measure of liability was nine- thousand dollars and interest.
Affirmed.
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6 L.R.A. 52, 43 N.W. 543, 78 Iowa 726, 1889 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardin-sons-v-iowa-railway-construction-co-iowa-1889.