Court Opinion

ID: 5183385
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 04:45:11.983532+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:26:39.151150
License: Public Domain

Ingraham, J.:
The only question • presented upon this appeal arises from an exception taken by the defendant to the refusal of the court to *381admit in evidence the by-laws of the defendant corporation. The action was brought to recover for services rendered by the plaintiff to the defendant. The evidence tended to show that the plaintiff was employed by the president of the defendant to render services, to the company, and that he rendered such services and sought to-recover the reasonable value therefor. The defendant’s counsel offered in evidence the defendant’s certificate of incorporation,, which was received, and thereupon produced a copy of the by-laws, of the defendant which had been in force since the defendant was, organized. The defendant offered the said by-laws in evidence,, which were objected to by the plaintiff and the objection sustained,, to which the defendant excepted. The by-laws are not printed in the record, and it is impossible for us to say whether or not they were competent or would tend to limit the authority of the president. of the defendant. It does not appear, therefore, that any competent evidence was rejected by the court or that for any reason the by-laws, of the defendant should have been admitted in evidence. The. object for which the by-laws were offered is not stated, nor is any reason assigned in the record for the objection taken by the plaintiff or for the ruling of the court. We cannot reverse a judgment, because of a rejection of evidence which does not appear from the record to have been competent; and for this reason no error appears-to have been committed which would require us to reverse the judgment.
We do not think, however, that any restriction contained in the by-laws as to the power of the president would prevent a recovery in this action. The plaintiff was employed by the president of the corporation, its principal executive officer, to render services to the company. The nature of the services was to prepare a pamphlet setting forth the patent which the company was organized to-work under.
It is well settled that a business corporation cannot, by its-by-laws, so limit the power of its executive officers that the corporation shall not be liable for ordinary engagements made by such officers in the transaction of the company’s business with those who-have no knowledge of such limitation. See Rathbun v. Snow (123 N. Y. 349), where the court says: “ By-laws of business corporations are as to third persons -private regulations binding as. *382between the corporation arid its members or third persons having knowledge of them, but of no force as ■ limitations per se as to third persons of an authority, which,:except for the by-law, would be construed as within the apparent jscope of the agency.”
The certificate of incorporation of this defendant does not of itself limit the authority of its officers. While under the statute the certificate of incorporation may contain provisions for the regulation of the, business and the conduct of the affairs of the corporation and any limitation upon its powers or upon the powers of ■ its directors and stockholders, there .is no statement in the certificate of incorporation of this defendant that the powers impliedly granted to the executive officers of the corporation in the transaction of its ordinary business were limited. ■ The statement made in the certificate of incorporation could not be construed to give notice to the world of the provisions: of the by-laws so as to bind all of those dealing with the corporation to any limitation therein contained. ■ The limitation that the statute authorizes must be in the certificate, not in by-laws not in existence when the certificate is executed, but to be made thereafter. A business corporation organized for the transaction of ordinary business must have some agent or representative who is authorized to. transact such business. The president of the company, its principal executive officer, is impliedly vested with such authority; and in the absence of express notice, a person dealing with such corporation is entitled to assume that in the ordinary transaction of its business 'the president is authorized to act for it, and the corporation is liable for contracts made in the ’ conduct of its business.• (Rathbun v. Snow, 123 N. Y. 343 Cone v. Empire Plaid Mills, 12 App. Div. 314.)
The only other exception in the case arose upon a question asked the plaintiff on cross-examination, if any statement was ever made to him by any of the officers of the defendant as to whether or not the pamphlet that he had prepared for1 the defendant would be used. That question was clearly immaterial, lío error, therefore, appears to justify "a reversal of the judgment, dnd it is affirmed, with costs.
Tan Brunt, P. J., Williams, Patterson and O’Brien, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.