
    The Atlanta Hill Gold Mining & Mill Company, Resp’t, v. Constant A. Andrews, App’lt.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals, Second Division,
    
    
      Filed March 21, 1890.)
    
    1. Former adjudication—Judgment of foreign state.
    Defendant, a president of a domestic corporation having five trustees, at a meeting of the hoard of directors, procured the passage of a resolution giving him $500 salary per month, and nine notes of $500 each were executed to defendant hy the treasurer. At a subsequent meeting the treasurer was directed to pay defendant $1,500, which was done. After-wards defendant sued the plaintiff in the district court of Idaho on the six unpaid notes, and the notes were declared void and judgment directed accordingly. In this action brought to recover the $1,500 paid, defendant set up the same six notes as a counterclaim. Held, that the Idaho judgment had the same effect upon the rights of these litigants as though it had. been rendered by a court of this state.
    
      2. Same.
    As the validity of the resolutions fixing the salary of the president was involved in the action in the Idaho court, and their invalidity haying been adjudged by a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties, the judgment is conclusive in this action.
    Appeal from judgment of the New York superior court, overruling defendant’s exceptions and ordering judgment for plaintiff on verdict
    
      Adrian H. Joline, for- app’lt; Horace M Deming, for resp’t.
    
      
       Affirming 8 N. Y. State Rep., 157.
    
   ¡Follett, Ch. J.

Appeal from a judgment of the general term of the superior court of the city of New entered on a verdict directed át circuit and from an order dated June 23, 1887, denying a motion for a new trial, made on exceptions and directed to be made in the first instance at the general term.

The plaintiff is a corporation organized under the statutes of New York, but under which act does not appear. Its affairs are managed by five trustees, three of whom constitute a quorum. Its office and place of business is in the city of New York and it also owns property and is engaged in business in Alturas county, Idaho. In May, 1883, the defendant, who was then a trustee, was duly elected president of the corporation and discharged the duties of the office during the nine following months. Prior to July 12, 1883, no compensation for the president had been provided, but on that day at a meeting of the board of directors at which the defendant and two others were present, a resolution was adopted fixing his salary at $500 per month, and on the 20th of the same month, at a meeting of the board at which the defendant and three other directors were present, the minutes of the transactions of the meeting of July 12th were read and approved and the resolution of July 12th was amended so that it reads as follows :

“ Resolved, that the salary of the president of this company shall be at the rate of $500 per month from and after the 12th day. of May, 1883, payable monthly, and that Mr. 0. A. Andrews, now president, shall receive the same from said date and until the expiration of his present term of office.”

It is alleged in the complaint but denied in the answer that one of the directors other than the defendant voted against said amended resolution and that defendant’s vote was required to pass it. Afterwards, nine promissory. notes for $500 each were executed in the name of the corporation by its treasurer under the direction of the president, payable to his own order for his salary so provided for. On the 5th of September, 1883, at a meeting at which the defendant and two other directors were present, a resolution was passed directing the treasurer to pay to the president $1,500, the amount of three of the notes, which was done on the next day.

On September 22,1884, the defendant herein brought an action against the corporation in the district court of Idaho to recover on the six unpaid notes so given to him, which bore the following dates: August 16,1883; September 6,1883; October 12,1883 ; November 15,1883; December 19,1883 and January 21,1884.

The corporation appeared and answered, and upon the tidal of the issue before the court without a jury the following facts were found: (1) That the plaintiff in that action (the defendant in this) was a director of the corporation from May, 1883, until after January 21, 1884, the date of the last note. (2) That the plaintiff in that action presided at the meetings of the board which voted him his salary, prepared the resolution and asked a co-director to introduce it (3) That the notes were given for the salary so voted; that the corporation never authorized them to be given, but they were drawn by the secretary at the president’s direction, and were signed by the treasurer without express authority of the corporation, and were void. As a conclusion of law it was decided : “ That the resolutions voting plaintiff a monthly salary as president of the defendant corporation, for which plaintiff claims said promissory notes were executed, were and are void.” A judgment was directed for the defendant corporation with costs, pursuant tó which July 12, 1886, a final judgment was entered which remains in full force. January 21, 1885, this action was begun to recover the $1,500 paid, with interest from the date of payment, and July 14, 1886, two days after the entry of the Idaho judgment,- the defendant served an amended answer setting up the same six notes and the services for which they were given as a counterclaim. The plaintiff replied that the Idaho judgment was a bar. Upon the issues so joined, this action was tried. The plaintiff offered a certified copy of the Idaho judgment-roll in evidence, which was objected to by the defendant “as inadmissible and incompetent,” but the objection was overruled, and the roll received, and the defendant excepted. The roll was certainly relevant to the issues joined by the pleadings and its admissibility was not objected to on the ground that it was not certified as required by the statutes, nor that it was not admissible generally. Ho error was committed in receiving it.

The Idaho judgment has the same effect upon the rights of these litigants as though it had been rendered by a court of this state. H. S. Const., Art. 4, § 1; H. S. R S., § 905.

The appellant urges that it does not necessarily appear from the judgment-roll that the resolutions therein declared invalid are the same as those under which he claims to have derived his right to the $1,500 sought to be recovered in this action. Reading this record and the defendant’s answer in connection, it is made certain that the resolutions and proceedings'adjudged to be invalid in the Idaho case are identical with those under which the defendant was paid the sum now sought to be recovered.

The validity of the resolutions fixing the salary of the president was involved in the action in the Idaho court, and their invalidity having been adjudged by a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties, the judgment i& conclusive in this action. The resolutions under which the payment was made being invalid, the corporation is entitled to recover the sum paid. Butts v. Wood, 38 Barb., 181; affirmed, 37 N.Y., 317; Copeland V. Johnson Mfg. Do., 47 Hun, 235; 14 N. Y. State Rep., 245.

The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.  