Court Opinion

ID: 7999552
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:48:07.190254+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:40.153949
License: Public Domain

Scott, Judge,
delivered the opinion of the court.
It is no defence' to an action brought by a corporation that it has violated its charter, whereby it has become subject to forfeiture. (12 Mo. Rep. 131.) This principle,'however, it is conceived, does not prevent the making of the defence that the contract of a corporation is unauthorized by its charter. (Ang. 233.) In this respect, a corporation and an individual stand upon very different' grounds. The latter may make all contracts not pi’ohibited by law, while the former, having been created for a specific purpose, not only can make no contract forbidden by its charter, which is, as it were, the law of its nature ; but, in general, can make no contract which is not necessary, either directly or incidentally, to enable it to answer that purpose. (Angel on Corporations, 238.)
In general, an express authority is not indispensable to confer upon a corporation the right to borrow money, to deal on credit, or become drawer, endorser nr acceptor of a bill of exchange, or to become a party to any other negotiable paper. (Angel, 234.) In deciding whether a corporation can make a particular contract, we are to consider, in the first place, whether its charter, or some statute binding upon it, forbids or permits it to make such a contract, and if the charter and statutory law are silent on the subject, in the second place, whether a power to make such a contract may not be implied, on the part of the corporation, as directly or incidentally necessary, to enable it to fulfil the purpose of its existence; or, whether the contract is entirely foreign to that purpose. (Angel, 234.)
*93This corporation (the defendant) might have received notes in the course of its proper business, although it was expressly restrained from exercising any banking privileges whatever. Under such circumstances, evidence would be admissible against the corporation to impeach the notes, by showing that they were issued for another purpose, or received in the course of business improper or forbidden to it.
As the defendant (the corporation) might have received the note, the subject of the set-off in this suit, in the regular course of its business, and as a violation of law is not to be presumed, it was the duty of the plaintiff to set up in his reply the facts on which he relied to show the illegality of the conduct of the defendant, in receiving the note used as a set- off. Having failed to do this, as the set-off exceeded his demand, and was unanswered, the court correctly entered judgment for the defendant.
The other judges concurring, the judgment will be affirmed.