Wichita Motors Co. v. Homefolks Co.
Wichita Motors Co. v. Homefolks Co.
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff sues upon six promissory notes each for the sum of $320.00 or a total of $1920.00, all secured by mortgage upon and representing the balance of the purchase, price of one “New Wichita Bus Truck No. R 3347, Motor No. 52878” which is alleged to have been sold to defendant.
Judgment is prayed for in personam with • recognition of the mortgage.
There was judgment as prayed for and defendant has appealed.
The defendant answers that the alleged act of sale and mortgage is illegal and invalid because unauthorized by any proper resolution of its board of directors.
The defendant corporation was organized, if organized at all, in any legal sense, concerning which there seems to be much doubt, for the purpose of conducting a bus line for the carriage of' passengers for hire. Its original conception was grandiose for a resolution of its board of directors is in evidence purporting to authorize the purchase of 100 motor busses at $6000.00 each and later, and more modestly, 50 busses are mentioned, and, finally one bus is purchased, from the plaintiff, a foreign corporation, represented in this city, by one George W. Stem, as its agent. Stem in addition to representing the plaintiff was also a- member of the board of directors of the defendant, and made one of the four, constituting a bare quorum, at the meeting which authorized the purchase of the plaintiff’s bus. The resolution authorizing the purchase also provided for the issuance of $1750.00 in stock to Mr. Stem.
There is nothing to show that the plaintiff was improperly influenced in making the sale, nor is there any proof that it had any knowledge of Stem’s connection with the defendant company as director or beneficiary of a gratuity in stock. So far as the record discloses plaintiff simply sold a bus for which it received $750.00 in cash and 12 notes maturing one each month for $320.00 each. Six of these notes were paid and the remaining six are sued on here.
Without any express authorization given to its executive officer to buy this bus, its acceptance and possession for six months .as well as the payment of the six notes constitutes a ratification of the unauthorized sale. Five of the six notes were paid by checks signed by Stem and A. M. Savage, the vice-president who was the officer acting for the corporation in the purchase of the truck whose authority so to do was conferred by the resolution in which Stem participated which is alleged to be invalid. Counsel urges, and we think with propriety, that these payments cannot be considered as a ratification. But the sixth note was paid by a check signed by V. K. Irion, the president and countersigned by R. T. Leland, the secretary of defendant corporation.
As to this payment counsel contends that these last named officers did not have "full knowledge of the transaction” and the rule that a principal must have' knowledge of the material facts of a transaction consummated by an unauthorized act of an agent before he can be said to ratify the transaction is referred to.
We do not think this rule applicable here because it was the duty of these officers to know, before paying out the funds of the corporation, what occasion there was to do so. Particularly, is this true when paying for the first time one of a series of notes issued by the corporation. It will not do to say that these officers, ■the president and the secretary did not entirely understand what they were doing. It is not alleged that any fraud or deception was practiced consequently we must presume that these officials in disbursing the funds of the corporation knew what they were doing.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.