Atkinson v. St. Croix Manufacturing Co.
Atkinson v. St. Croix Manufacturing Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was prepared by
This action, which is upon a draft, alleged to .have been drawn by an agent of the company and accepted by their treasurer, and also for money had and received, was attempted to be supported by a draft purporting to be signed “ Noah Smith, jr., agent of the St. Croix Manufacturing Company, by Sam’l H. Greene,” and in other respects corresponding with the one described in the writ; and also by the depositions of' Noah Smith, jr. and one Benjamin Williams. Said Smith testified as follows, viz.: —“In 1841, I was agent of the St. Croix Manufacturing Company, and have been so ever since said company was incorporated, and have had charge of the business and property of said company in the town of Calais, during the whole time. Benjamin F. Copeland, of Boston, acted as treasurer of said company. I am acquainted with, the handwriting of said Benjamin F. Copeland ; the acceptance of said draft is said Copeland’s handwriting. I do not know William Atkinson. The company never had any account with him to my recollection.” The justice, who took the deposition of Smith, certified among other things, that “ on the 27th day of January, 1843, the aforesaid deponent was examined, and cautioned and sworn agreeably to law to the deposition aforesaid by him subscribedand there was nothing besides the above showing the time when the oath was administered to the deponent. The deposition of Williams relates wholly to the presentment of the draft described therein, to said Smith, and a demand of payment, and his neglect to pay the same. The
The statute requires, that the deponent should be sworn before he proceeds to give his testimony in the case; and it is contended by the defendants, that tire proof of this must be in the magistrate’s certificate. Whether it be so or not, must depend upon the construction to be put upon the language, “ that the deponent was sworn according to law, and when.” The statute has pointed out specifically what must take place before, and at the time of taking a deposition, in order that the facts stated therein may be legal proof; it is not left to be presumed that the magistrate, who may take it, conformed to the law, but he is to certify to the facts, attending the caption; by whom the deposition was written, &e. From analogy we might suppose, that it was equally important, that it should also appear in the certificate, whether the deponent was first sworn to testify the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. It is undoubtedly necessary that the day, when the deposition was taken, should appear, that it might be known whether it was
The certificate annexed to the deposition, which was admitted, shows that the witness was “ sworn agreeably to law.” This is sufficient evidence, that the oath was administered in the terms of the statute, and in a mode which practice had sanctioned. But it must also appear “ when” this was done, and we cannot think, that the language used, implies that the oath was taken before the testimony was given. It is contended, that the terms used at the commencement of the deposition, “ being duly sworn,” written by the magistrate, supplies the defect in the certificate. This is no part of the certificate, which alone is made the proof of certain of the proceedings, and it is not a fact, which can be looked at any more than any other in the deposition, till it is shown, that it was legally taken.
It is true, that an agent appointed for a certain purpose is clothed with the power to effect the object. “ As if an agent is authorized to buy a cargo for his principal, if no. other means are provided, has an incidental authority to give notes or draw and negotiate bills on his principal for the amount.” Story on Agency, 93. Such a power is implied from the object of the agency. “ But an agency is never construed to extend beyond the obvious purposes, for which it was apparently created.” Ibid, 93. “ The principal is bound for the acts of the agent, done within the scope of his agency.” Ibid, 219.
In the case before us there was no evidence showing the nature of the business of the defendants, whether it required funds for its accomplishment or not. Neither is there any thing from which we can infer the character of the duties contemplated to be performed by Noah Smith, jr. as their agent, or what he had ever done before the draft was drawn, in their behalf. Without proof of this, to some extent at least, we cannot believe, that he was vested with a power to give notes or draw bills in the name of the Company.
The acceptance of the draft by the treasurer of the company, without evidence of any authority in him to perform such acts, does not in any degree render the defendants liable. A treasurer of a corporation is only an agent for another purpose, and his acceptance can no more bind his principal, without authority to make it, than would the draft made by Smith.
Waiving any consideration of other objections urged in the argument, the exceptions are sustained.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Atkinson versus St. Croix Manufacturing Company
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- 1 case
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- Published