Mchugh v. Duane

Decision Date28 May 1947
Docket NumberNo. 491.,491.
PartiesMcHUGH v. DUANE et al.
CourtD.C. Court of Appeals

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from the Municipal Court for the District of Columbia, Civil Division.

Action on a note by Howard Duane, receiver, Investors Fund of America, Inc., against Maxine Davis McHugh. Judgment for plaintiff and defendant appeals.

Affirmed.

Ellis B. Miller, of Washington, D. C., (Milton W. King and Bernard I. Nordlinger, both of Washington, D. C., on the brief), for appellant.

George A. Cassidy, Jr., of Washington, D. C., (Frederick Stohlman, of Washington, D.C., on the brief), for appellee.

Before CAYTON, Chief Judge, and HOOD and CLAGETT, Associate Judges.

CLAGETT, Associate Judge.

Appellee, as receiver of Investors Fund of America, Inc., an insolvent Delaware corporation, sued defendant on an overdue promissory note. The only defense was a release purportedly signed by the president of the corporation and bearing its seal. The trial court, sitting without a jury, held the release invalid and gave judgment to the receiver for the face amount of the note less a small credit representing the proceeds of stock deposited as collateral for the note and sold under order of court in Delaware. Defendant prosecutes this appeal.

The trial resolved itself into a controversy over the validity of the release. Defendant originally owned some stock in Investors Fund of America, Inc., together with some stock in an associated oil corporation. She had bought this stock several years previously for $3,100 at the suggestion of her mother, who was a director of the Delaware corporation. In 1937 she borrowed $2,000 from the corporation on her promissory note and deposited as collateral the Investors Fund of America stock and the oil stock.

From time to time defendant paid the interest on the note and signed renewal notes when each became due. The mother, who lived in Chicago, visited the daughter in Washington on December 24, 1939, and during this visit the daughter received another renewal note for signature. The indebtedness was discussed between mother and daughter, the daughter signed the renewal note, due three months after date, and returned it to the corporation. Her testimony was that she inquired of her mother whether the note could not be canceled in exchange for releasing the collateral to the corporation, and the mother stated she would see what could be arranged. A few days later the mother went to the New York headquarters of the corporation and on January 5, 1940, defendant received from one Keppler, claimed to be president, the release in controversy.

The note was not canceled; neither was it returned to defendant. Defendant made no formal transfer of the stock. The collateral was sold by the receiver in February 1942 for $61.43 under order of the Delaware Chancery Court after notice, as that court found, to defendant that the collateral was being sold as collateral. The proceeds of such sale were credited on the note.

The release did not mention the collateral but recited that it was given in consideration of $1 ‘and other good and valuable considerations.’ Neither did it refer to the specific note but purported to be a release from all indebtedness and claims of every sort on the part of the corporation against defendant. It was signed ‘Investors Fund of America, Inc., by R. S. Keppler, President,’ and also bore a certificate of acknowledgment before a notary public. This certificate did not contain the name of Keppler or anyone else but recited that (........), being first duly sworn, deposed and said he was president of Investors Fund of America, Inc., that the seal affixed to the document was the seal of that corporation and that he had signed the document and the seal had been affixed ‘by order of the Board of Directors of said corporation.’

The validity of this release was denied by the receiver on the principal grounds that it was delivered in violation of a restraining order issued by the Chancery Court in Delaware, that it was given as a result of an arrangement between defendant and her mother, a director of the corporation, at a time when the stock of the corporation was known by them to be practically valueless, that it was signed by Keppler, who was not the properly elected president of the corporation, and that it was never authorized by the corporation directors. Referring to the minutes of the stockholders and of the directors, the receiver testified that although the corporation had six elected directors in 1938 only three had been elected in 1939, that there were various irregularities in notices of meetings, and that only one meeting of the Board of Directors was held during the period in controversy, and that the minutes of that meeting contained no reference to any authorization of the release.

Those shown to have been pressent at this directors' meeting were Keppler, defendant's mother and one Case Edwards. Keppler did not appear as a witness, and at the time of the trial Edwards and defendant's mother were deceased. In order to prove that the release had been authorized by the directors, defendant attempted to introduce in evidence a letter from Edwards to counsel for defendant written over three years after the signing of the release and bearing on various matters involved in the controversy. This evidence was rejected by the trial court, and such rejection is one of the errors assigned on this appeal. An alleged copy of Edwards' letter together with a copy of letter from counsel to which it was a reply are attached to defendant's brief, but they do not appear in the record; neither did counsel take the witness stand to identify them, nor to recite the circumstances of their being written. We do not believe, therefore, that they are properly before us on this appeal. We believe further that the letter from Edwards was inadmissible because it constituted hearsay and was written in contemplation of this suit. And even if the letter were admissible for the purpose for which it was offered, we believe that its rejection was harmless error because its admission could not legally have changed the result.

The trial court in a written memorandum found that the release was executed and issued in violation of an order dated April 13, 1939, issued by the Delaware Court of Chancery, in a creditor's suit against the corporation, such order enjoining and restraining the corporation, its officers and directors, from ‘transferring, assigning, selling or otherwise disposing of or pledging or encumbering any of the property’ of the corporation; that such restraining order was in effect when the release was signed and until January 12, 1940; that on January 10, 1940, five days after the date of the release, a stipulation was entered in the receivership suit between counsel for the corporation and for the suing creditor that the corporation was ‘insolvent in the equity sense, in that it was unable to pay its obligations as they matured in due course of business'; that there was serious doubt whether Keppler was the duly elected president of the corporation at the time he signed the release, but that even if he was president the signing of the release was beyond his power, and that there was no authorization by the Board of Directors for the release; that although defendant denied she knew of the restraining order or of the insolvent condition of the corporation at the time the release was given the court was of the opinion from the evidence and reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom that defendant was fully advised of those facts.

We have concluded that under the circumstances the trial court was justified in finding that defendant had notice of the restraining order and of the financial condition of the corporation at the time the release was given. Defendant was a stockholder in the corporation, and her mother, a director, acted as agent for her daughter in securing the release. According to the daughter's testimony, she turned this matter entirely over to her. A principal is charged with the knowledge of the agent acquired by the agent in the course of the principal's business. 1 The same rule applies where the agent is agent for both parties. 2 The principal is affected by the knowledge which an agent has a duty to disclose to the principal to the same extent as if the principal had the information. 3 The rule springs from the actual or presumed performance of the duty resting upon the agent to inform the principal of all matters coming to his notice or knowledge concerning the subject matter of the agency, which it is material for the principal to know for his protection or guidance. So far as third persons are concerned, the law will not permit the principal to escape the consequences of notice by alleging that his own agent has not performed his duty. 4 Therefore, although defendant herself denied that she knew of the restraining order or of the bad financial condition of the corporation, the circumstances here were such that the trial court was justified, to say the least, in refusing to accept such denial.

Furthermore, the relationship of a stockholder to a corporation and to the public who deal with the latter is such as to...

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    ...concerning the subject of the agency, which it is material for the principal to know for his protection or guidance." McHugh v. Duane, 53 A.2d 282, 285 (D.C.1947); see Spaziani, 30 Cal.Rptr. at The complaint alleges that Commonwealth knew the insurable title condition was not satisfied and ......
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    ...knowledge of facts known to his agent which the agent had a responsibility to bring to the attention of the principal. McHugh v. Duane, 53 A.2d 282, 285 (D.C.1947); see also Bowen v. Mount Vernon Savings Bank, 105 F.2d 796, 799 (D.C. Cir.1939) (rule seeks to prevent "the injustice of allowi......
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