Sturdevant Bros. & Co. v. Farmers & Merchants Bank

95 N.W. 819, 69 Neb. 220, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 53
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1903
DocketNo. 10,060
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 95 N.W. 819 (Sturdevant Bros. & Co. v. Farmers & Merchants Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sturdevant Bros. & Co. v. Farmers & Merchants Bank, 95 N.W. 819, 69 Neb. 220, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 53 (Neb. 1903).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

In this action a rehearing has been allowed, to the end that further investigation and consideration might he [222]*222had regarding the question of ultra vires, which is relied on by the défendant, a banking corporation, as a complete defense to the cause of action, pleaded in the plaintiffs’ petition. The subject was discussed at some length in the former opinion which will be found reported in 62 •Neb. 472, under the same title here given. The former opinion expresses our views on the several propositions therein discussed and no useful purpose will be subserved by a reiteration of what is said by the commissioner who prepared the same. We purpose here to confine our further discussion to but one phase of the controversy, .which has been earnestly urged upon our attention in the brief filed in support of the motion for a rehearing, also in the briefs of counsel filed subsequent to the allowance of the motion and discussed in the oral arguments made at the time of the second submission. The substance of the plaintiffs’ contention is that the execution of the replevin undertaking by the defendant bank, through its cashier, is the contract obligation of a corporation which is not ultra vires under all circumstances, but only so because of facts peculiar to the particular case; that the plaintiffs having relied on the legality and sufficiency of the undertaking, and the property having been seized on the writ of replevin and delivered to the adverse party upon the execution of such undertaking, and the plaintiffs’ position having been changed to their disadvantage in ignorance of facts which would make the transaction ultra vires as to the defendant bank, it can not be heard to assert the want of authority of its cashier to execute the replevin undertaking, when suit is brought for a breach of its conditions. It is said, the court has heretofore treated the obligations of the defendant bank as one that it could not enter into under any circumstances, and that every person was at his peril bound to take notice of the lack of authority and power of the bank to make such a contract. It is insisted that the contract obligation was not on its face ultra vires under all circumstances, that is, it was not prohibited by law or the charter of incorporation, por [223]*223was it immoral or contrary to public policy and that the plaintiffs not having any notice that it was executed as an accommodation could rightfully presume that the contract was entered into as being within the authority and power of the bank, in the furtherance of its aims and business as a banking corporation. It is contended by counsel for the plaintiffs and, as we understand, practically conceded by defendants’ counsel that under certain circumstances such an undertaking might have been executed by the bank and be perfectly valid. For the purposes of the case, therefore, we will assume that the defendant bank might, under particular circumstances and because of the existence of certain facts, execute a replevin undertaking as surety and be bound thereby, as it might be on any other contract coming indisputably within the scope of its charter powers and the actual authority of its officers and agents to malte. A banking corporation, it would seem, is empowered to do any act or make any contract, even though under usual and ordinary circumstances such transaction is beyond the scope of its charter powers, if in the particular case the act was engaged in or contract entered into in furtherance of the business of the corporation or to protect it in its property rights or maintain the integrity of the corporate entity. A bank could doubtless buy real estate on which to. conduct a banking business and yet not be authorized to enter into contracts for the buying and selling of real estate generally as speculative ventures. If, in the case at bar, the defendant bank held a note against the plaintiff in the replevin action and a mortage on the goods replevied securing the note, it would scarcely be doubted that it might not, for the purpose of collecting what was due it and thus protect its assets, execute as surety the replevin undertaking which the plaintiff in the replevin action was by statute required to give before regaining possession of the property.

Assuming then as we shall do, that a contract so entered ihto would not in all cases and under all circum[224]*224stances be beyond the power of the corporation to make, how should the rights of the parties to this litigation be measured aud determined?

The defendant is a banking corporation organized to do a business the nature of which, according to the terms of its charter, “shall be banking in all its branches including the buying and selling of United States bonds and municipal and other securities, the loaning of money on personal and collateral security and also on real estate security on regular banking time, the buying and selling of bills of exchange, promissory notes, mortgages, tax certificates, tax titles and all other business usually transacted by a bank or banker.” The defendant corporation was, at the time of the transactions out of which the present litigation grows, engaged in the prosecution of a banking business such as is ordinarily conducted in the smaller towns of the state. It possessed a limited capital stock, scarcely more than the amount for which it was obligated by the undertaking in replevin, if valid, executed by its cashier for the benefit of the defendants in the replevin action. The po wer of the corporation to make valid contracts is measured by its charter, and the scope of the authority of its cashier, like other officers and agents of a corporation, was limited and of these limitations the plaintiffs and all the world Avere bound to take notice. In the court of appeals of New York, the rule is thus stated:

“Every one knows that corporations are artificial creations existing by virtue of law, and organized for purposes (defined in their charters; and he who deals with one of them is chargeable with notice of the purpose for which tit was formed; and when he deals with agents or officers pf one of them, he is bound to know their powers and [[he extent of their authority. Corporations, like natural persons, are bound only by the acts and contracts of their agents done and made within the scope of their authority.” Alexander v. Cauldwell, 83 N. Y. 480. Again:
“A person dealing with a corporation is chargeable with [225]*225notice of its powers and tlie purposes for which it is formed, and when dealing with its agents or officers is bound to know the extent of their power and authority. A corporation necessarily carries its charter wherever it goes, for that is the law of its existence.” Jemison v. Citizens Savings Bank, 122 N. Y. 140. See also State v. Atchison & N. R. Co., 24 Neb. 143; McCormick v. Market Bank, 165 U. S. 538, 41 L. ed. 817; Pearce v. Madison & I. R. Co., 62 U. S. 441, 16 L. ed. 184.

In the former opinion, the liability of the defendant was considered and determined from the standpoint of its being a surety on the replevin undertaking as an accommodation to the plaintiff therein and that it was not otherwise interested in the litigation or the subject matter of the controversy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 N.W. 819, 69 Neb. 220, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturdevant-bros-co-v-farmers-merchants-bank-neb-1903.