Lowry Banking Co. v. Empire Lumber Co.

17 S.E. 968, 91 Ga. 624
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 2, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 968 (Lowry Banking Co. v. Empire Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowry Banking Co. v. Empire Lumber Co., 17 S.E. 968, 91 Ga. 624 (Ga. 1893).

Opinion

Lumpkin, Justice.

1. A corporation can do nothing except through the-individuals who are charged with the management and control of its affairs. In the very nature of things the directors are, of all persons, those who ought to be aware of everything material to a proper discharge by the corporation of its duties and obligations. To permit ignorance in these officials of its affairs would certainly be going to the extreme limit of legal indulgence.. Surely they ought to know its condition with reference to solvency or insolvency. This duty is imperative, and therefore for all purposes they are to be dealt with and treated as having absolute knowledge of what the corporation owns and what it owes, whenever a mortgage upon its property is executed with their consent or by their authority. To state this proposition is to argue it, and we have no doubt it will be accepted as correct without question.

2-3. It was insisted that the Empire Lumber Company, under its charter, had no authority to make a mortgage at all except for the direct purpose of securing-the payment of money borrowed by it in the due course [627]*627of business. In the view we take of the law controlling this branch of the case, it will be unnecessary to discuss or decide this precise question. For our purpose, it may be assumed that this corporation had the general power to execute mortgages, and could make a mortgage to indemnify an indorser or surety on an indebtedness already accrued, and though insolvent, could thus prefer such surety or indorser, provided the mortgage was authorized by proper corporate action, executed with due regularity, and did not directly or indirectly operate for the benefit of a director or directors of the corporation. An interesting case bearing upon the general power of a corporation to make mortgages is that of Jones v. Guaranty &c. Co., 101 U. S. 622. In Pyles v. Riverside Furniture Co. (W. Va.), 2 S. E. Rep. 909, it was held that an insolvent corporation, having ceased its business, had the same power as an insolvent individual to prefer a creditor in a general assignment of all its property for the payment of its debts. We do not, however, deem it necessary to pursue further this branch of the question under consideration.

The general statute of Tennessee, under which this corporation was created and organized, expressly requires that the board of directors shall keep a full and true record of all their proceedings. It does not appear from the record in the present case that any authority to execute the mortgages in question was ever conferred upon the president and secretary of the company by any corporate act on the part of the directors. The minutes of the corporation, so far as we are informed, do not show that any action was taken authorizing the execution of these mortgages. It is perhaps true that their execution was authorized by the unanimous consent of all the real stockholders and directors, but this consent is not evidenced in the manner prescribed by the law of Tennessee or the charter obtained in pursuance [628]*628thereof. If these mortgages had no other infirmity than that arising from the failure of the directors to comply with the provisions of the charter and the law applicable thereto, we are not prepared to say the mortgages for this reason alone would be invalid and void. As to whether or not they ought for this reason to be set aside, much could be said on both sides. Granting, however, for the sake of the argument, that the mortgages, by reason of the fact that they were made with the consent of the directors and stockholders, would be good if executed in favor of persons in no way connected with the corporation, although such consent was not given in the manner prescribed by law and not properly entered upon the minutes of the corporation, the main question at last is: can the mortgages of an insolvent corporation, executed for the benefit of its own directors, be good as against creditors of the corporation? Before entering upon a discussion of this question, it will perhaps be proper to remark that, in our opinion, the record clearly shows that the corporation was insolvent when the mortgages were given, and as already seen, the directors were unquestionably chargeable with full knowledge of this fact.

The mortgage to Heath was made September 28, 1890, and the mortgage to R. A. Anderson was made the 1st day of October, 1890. The indebtedness of the corporation about that time was not less than $500,000, none of which has been paid, and the record contains no hint of any assets other than those covered by the mortgages. Nall, who was the bookkeeper, testified that the failure occurred October 11, 1890. The original bill in this case was filed on that day. The lumber company virtually admits its insolvency at the time the bill was filed, and this being true, it certainly must have been insolvent a few days before that time. None of the answers or interventions filed in the case deny the [629]*629insolvency of the corporation, or set np any facts from which solvency could be inferred. There is not the slightest probability that there was any substantial change in the company’s financial status or condition during the few days intervening between the execution of the mortgages and the beginning of this litigation. In view of the foregoing, we have no difficulty in reaching the conclusion that the master’s report as to the insolvency of the corporation at the time the original bill was filed, is sufficiently supported.

We now return to the discussion of the question last above stated. The mortgage to R. A. Anderson was to indemnify him against loss by reason of his acceptance and indorsement of divers papers amounting to more than $100,000.00, which were held by various banks and persons. The mortgage to Heath was to indemnify and save him harmless as an indorser on four promissory notes amounting to about $40,000.00, upon each and all of which R. A. and J. C. Anderson, directors of the company, were also liable. One of these notes was made by R. A. Anderson, and indorsed by the lumber company, J. O. Anderson, Hightower and Heath. Another was made by J. C. Anderson, and indorsed by the company, R. A. Anderson, Hightower and Heath. The other two were made by an Indiana corporation, and indorsed by the lumber company, both the Andersons, Hightower and Heath. It will therefore readily be seen that upon each and all of these papers, in the event of their payment by Heath, each of the Andersons would be liable to him either in the capacity of maker or as cosurety, for the real legal relation of the several parties above designated as indorsers was merely that of sureties. No additional credit was extended or money advanced to the lumber company because of the execution of these mortgages. The company had already incurred the several debts represented .by the papers above [630]*630referred to, and had received the benefit of the money raised thereupon, and received nothing more because of executing the mortgages. Nor had the company made any promise or agreement, at or prior to the time when the liabilities were incurred, to give the indemnity for which the mortgages were afterwards executed.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E. 968, 91 Ga. 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowry-banking-co-v-empire-lumber-co-ga-1893.