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[CHARLES W. MEAD v. E. C. MCCULLOUGH ET AL.](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/cc7c?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GRNo. 6217, Dec 26, 1911 ]

CHARLES W. MEAD v. E. C. MCCULLOUGH ET AL. +

DECISION

21 Phil. 95

[ G. R.No. 6217, December 26, 1911 ]

CHARLES W. MEAD, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, VS. E. C. MCCULLOUGH ET AL., AND THE PHILIPPINE ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, DEFENDANTS AND APPELLANTS.

D E C I S I O N

TRENT, J.:

This action was originally brought by  Charles W.  Mead against Edwin C. McCullough,  Thomas L. Hartigan, Frank E. Green, and Frederick H. Hilbert.   Mead has died since the commencement of the  action and the case is  now  going forward in the name of his administrator as plaintiff.

The complaint  contains  three causes of action, which are substantially as follows: The first, for salary; the  second, for profits;  and  the third, for the value of the personal  effects alleged to have been left by Mead and sold by the defendants.

A joint and several judgment was rendered by default against  each  and all  of the  defendants for the sum of $3,450.61 gold.  The defendant McCullough alone having made application to have this judgment set aside, the court granted  his motion, vacating the judgment as to him only, the judgment as to  the  other three defendants remaining undisturbed.

At the new trial, which took place some two or three years later and after  the death  of Mead,  judgment was rendered upon the merits, dismissing the case as to  the first and second causes of action and for the sum of $1,200 gold in the plaintiff's  favor on the third cause of action. From this judgment both parties  appealed  and have presented separate  bills of exceptions.  No appeal was taken by the defendant McCullough from the ruling of the court denying a recovery on his cross complaint.

On March 15, 1902,  the plaintiff (Mead will be referred to as the  plaintiff in  this opinion unless  it  is otherwise stated)   and  the  defendants  organized  the "Philippine Engineering and Construction Company," the incorporators being the only stockholders and also the directors of said company, with general ordinary powers.   Each of the stockholders paid into the company $2,000 Mexican currency in cash, with the exception  of Mead,  who turned over to  the company personal property in lieu  of cash.

Shortly after the organization, the directors held a meeting and elected the plaintiff as general manager.  The plaintiff held  this position with the company for  nine months, when he  resigned to accept the position  of engineer of the Canton and Shanghai Railway Company.   Under this organization the company began business about April 1, 1902.

The  contracts and work  undertaken  by the company during the management  of Mead were the wrecking contract with the Navy  Department at Cavite for the raising of the Spanish ships sunk by Admiral Dewey; the contract for the construction of  certain  warehouses for the quarter-master department; the construction of a wharf at  Fort McKinley for the Government; the supervision of the construction of the Pacific Oriental Trading Company's warehouse; and some other odd jobs not specifically set out in the record.

Shortly after the plaintiff left the Philippine Islands for China, the other directors, the defendants in this case, held a meeting on December 24, 1903, for the purpose of discussing the condition  of the  company at that  time and determining  what course to  pursue.  They did on  that date enter  into the following  contract with the defendant McCullough, to wit:
"For value received, this contract and all the rights and interests of the Philippine Engineering and Construction Company  in  the  same are  hereby assigned to  E.  C. McCullough of Manila, P. I.
(Sgd.)  "E. C. MCCULLOUGH,
"President, Philippine Engineering and
       Construction Company,

(Sgd.)  "F.  E. GREEN, Treasurer.
(Sgd.)  "THOMAS  L.  HARTIGAN, Secretary."
The contract referred to in the foregoing document was known as the wrecking contract with the naval authorities.

On the 28th of that same month, McCullough  executed and signed the following instrument:
"For value  received,  and  having the above assignment from my associates in the Philippine Engineering and Construction Company, I hereby transfer my right,  title, and interest in the  within contract, with the exception of one-sixth, which. I hereby retain,  to  R.  W. Brown,  H. D. C. Jones, John  T. Macleod, and T. H. Twentyman."
The assignees of the wrecking contract, including  McCullough, formed what was known as the "Manila Salvage Association."  This association paid to McCullough $15,000 Mexican currency cash for the  assignment of said  contract. In addition to  this cash payment, McCullough retained a one-sixth interest in the new company or association.

The plaintiff insists that he  was to receive  as  general manager of the first company a salary which was not to be Jess than  $3,500 gold (which amount  he  was receiving as city engineer at the time of the incorporation of the company), plus 20 per cent  of the net profits which might be derived from the business; while McCullough contends that the  plaintiff was  to receive only his necessary expenses unless the company made a profit, when  he  would receive $3,500 per year and 20  per cent of the profits.   The contract entered into between the board of directors and the' plaintiff as to the  latter's salary  was a verbal  one.  The plaintiff testified that this contract was unconditional and that his salary,  which was fixed  at $3,500 gold,  was not dependent upon  the success of the company, but  that his share of the profits was to necessarily depend upon the net income.   On the other hand, McCullough, Green and Hilbert testify that the salary of the plaintiff was to be determined according to whether or not the company was successful in  its operations; that if the company made gains, he was to receive  $3,500 gold, and a percentage, but that if the company did not make any profits, he was to receive only his necessary  living  expenses.

It is  strongly urged that the  plaintiff would not  have accepted the management of the company upon such conditions, as he was  receiving from  the city of Manila  a salary of $3,500 gold.  This argument is not only answered by  the positive and direct testimony  of  three  of the defendants, but also by the circumstances under which this company was organized and its principal object, which was the raising of  the Spanish ships.  The  plaintiff  put no money into the organization, the defendants put but little: just sufficient to get the  work of raising the  wrecks under way.  This venture was  a risky  one.   All the members  of the company realized that they  were undertaking  a  most difficult and expensive project.  If  they  were successful, handsome   profits would  be  realized; while  if they  were unsuccessful, all the expenses for the hiring of machinery, launches,  and labor would be a total  loss.  The plaintiff was in complete charge and control of this work and was to receive, according to the great preponderance of the evidence,  in  case the  company made  no profits,  sufficient amount to cover his expenses,  which  included  his room, board, transportation, etc.  The defendants were to furnish money out of their  own private funds to meet these  expenses, as the original $8,000 Mexican currency was soon exhausted  in  the work thus undertaken.  So the contract entered into between the directors and  the plaintiff as  to the Jatter's salary was a contingent one.

It is admitted that the plaintiff received $1,500 gold for his services, and whether he is entitled to receive an additional  amount depends upon the result of the  second cause of action.

The second  cause of action is more difficult to determine. On this point  counsel for the plaintiff has filed a very able and  exhaustive  brief, dealing principally with the facts.

It is urged  that the net profits accruing to  the company after the completion of all the contracts (except the salvage contract) made before the  plaintiff resigned as manager and up  to the  time the salvage contract was transferred to McCullough and from  him to the new company, amounted  to  $5,628.37 gold.   This conclusion is reached, according to the memorandum of counsel for the plaintiff which  appears on  pages  38 and  39 of the record,  in the following manner:

Profits from the  construction of warehouses for the Government........
$6,962.54
Profits from the  construction of the wall at Fort McKinley..................................
500.00
Profits from the inspection of the construction of the P. O.  T.  warehouse....
1,000.00
Profits obtained  from  other projects (according1 to Mead's  calculations)..
1,000.00
  Total  ..............................................................
9,462.54

In this same memorandum, the expense for the operation of the  company during Mead's management, consisting of rents, the hire of one muckacho, the publication  of various notices, the salary of an engineer for four months, and plaintiff's salary for nine  months,  amounts  to  $3,834.17 gold.  This amount, deducted from the sum total of profits, leaves $5,628.37 gold.

Counsel for the plaintiff, in order to show conclusively as they assert that the company, after paying all expenses and indebtedness,  had a considerable balance to its credit, calls attention to Exhibit K.  This exhibit reads as follows:
"Abstract copy of ledger No. 3, folios 276-277.  Philippine Engineering and Construction Company."
Then follows  the  debits and credits, with a balance in favor  of  the  company of  $10,728.44  Mexican  currency. This  account  purports  to  cover  the period from July 1, 1902, to April 1,  1903.  Ledger No. 3, above mentioned, is that  of the defendant  McCulIough and not one of the books of the company.

It was upon this exhibit that the lower court  based  its conclusion when it found  that  on January 25, 1903, after making the transfer of the salvage contract to  McCulIough, the company was in debt $2,278.30  gold.  The balance of $10,728.44 Mexican currency deducted from the $16,439.40 Mexican currency  (McCullough's losses in the Manila Salvage Association)  leaves $2,278.30 United States currency at the  then  existing  rate  of  exchange.  In  Exhibit  K, McCulIough charged himself  with  the $15,000  Mexican currency which he received from his associates in the new company,  but  did  not credit himself with the $16,439.40 Mexican currency, losses in said company, for the reason that on April 1, 1903, said  losses had  not occurred.  It must be borne in mind  that Exhibit K is an  abstract from a ledger.

The defendant McCulIough, in order to show  in detail his transactions with  the old company,  presented  Exhibits 1 and 2.  These accounts read as follows:
"Detailed  account of the  receipts  and disbursements  of E. C. McCullough and the Philippine  Engineering and Construction Company."
Then follow  the  debits and credits.  These two accounts cover the  period from  March  5,  1902, to June  9,  1905. According1 to Exhibit No. 1, the old company was indebted to McCuIIough in the sum of $14,918.75 Mexican currency, and according to Exhibit No. 2 the indebtedness amounted to $6,358.15 Mexican currency.  The debits and credits in these two exhibits are exactly the  same with the following1 exceptions: In Exhibit No. 1, McCuIIough credits himself with the $10,000 Mexican currency (the amount borrowed from the  bank and deposited with the admiral as a guarantee  for  the  faithful performance  of the salvage contract)  ; while in Exhibit No. 2 he credits himself with this $10,000, and at the same time charges himself with this amount.  In the same exhibit  (No. 2)  he credits himself with $16,439.40 Mexican currency, his losses in the new company,  and charges himself with the $15,000 Mexican currency,  received  from  said company.  Eliminating  entirely from these two exhibits the $10,000 Mexican currency, the $15,000 Mexican currency, and the $16,439.40 Mexican currency,  the balance shown in McCuIlough's favor  is  exactly the same in both exhibits.  This balance amounts to $4,918.75 Mexican currency.

According to McCullough's accounts in Exhibits 1 and 2, the profits derived  from the construction of the Government warehouses amounted to $4,005.02 gold,  while  the plaintiff contends that these profits amounted to $6,962.54 gold.   The plaintiff, during his management of the old company, made a contract with the Government for the construction of these warehouses and commenced work.   After he resigned and  left for China, McCuIJough took charge of and completed the said warehouses.  McCuIIough gives a complete, detailed statement of expenses  for the completion of this work, showing the dates,  to whom  paid, and for what purpose.  He  also gives the  various amounts he  received  from the  Government with  the dates  of the receipt of the  same.  On the  first examination, McCuIIough testified  that  the  total amount received from the Government for the construction of these warehouses was $11,123 gold.   The case  was suspended for the  purpose of examining the records of the Auditor and the quartermaster,  to determine the  exact  amount paid for this work.  As a result of this examination, the vouchers show an additional amount of about $5,000 gold, paid in checks.  These checks show that  the  same  were endorsed  by the plaintiff  and collected by him from the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation.  This money was not handled by McCullough and  as  it was  collected by  the  plaintiff, it must be  presumed,  in  the  absence of  proof, that  it was  disbursed by him.  McCullough did not  charge himself  with  the $2,500 gold, alleged to have been profits from the construction of the wall  at Fort McKinley, the inspection of the  construction of the P. 0. T. warehouse,  and other projects. This  work was  done under the management of the plaintiff and  it is not shown  that the profits from these  contracts ever  reached  the hands of McCullough.   McCullough  was not  the treasurer of the  company  at  that time.   The other items which the plaintiff insists that McCullough  had no right to credit himself with are the following:

Date.
To whom paid.
Amount (Mex.  currency).
Jan. 30,1903
Feb.  2,1903
Feb.  2,1903
Feb. 19,1903
May 23,1905
June  9,1905
Green......................................................................
McCullough............................................................
Green.....................................................................
P. O. T. Co. note...................................................
Hilbert.....................................................................
Hartigan..................................................................
$2,000.00
1,300.00
1,027.92
2,236.80
1,856.02
1,225.00

McCullough says that these amounts represent cash borrowed from the respective parties to carry on the operations of the old company while it was trying to raise the sunken vessels.   There is no proof  to the  contrary, and McCullough's testimony on this point is strongly corroborated by the fact that  the  work done by  the company in attempting to raise these  vessels was its first undertaking. The company had made  no profits while that work was going on under the management of the plaintiff, but its expenses greatly exceeded that of the original $8,000 Mexican currency.  It was necessary to borrow money to  continue that work.  These amounts, having been  borrowed, were outstanding  debts when McCullough took charge for the purpose of completing the warehouses and winding up the business  of  the  old  company.   These amounts do not represent payments  or  refunds  of  the original capital. McCullough did not credit himself with any amount for his services for supervising the completion of the warehouses, nor for liquidating or winding up the company's affairs. We think that the amount of $4,918.75 Mexican currency, balance in McCulIough's favor up to this point, represents a fair, equitable, and just settlement.

So far we have referred to the Philippine Engineering and Construction Company as the "company," without any attempt to define its legal  status.

The plaintiff and  defendants  organized this company with a  capital stock  of  $100,000 Mexican currency, each paying  in on the organization $2,000  Mexican  currency. The remainder, $90,000, according to the articles of agreement, were to be offered to the  public in shares of $100 Mexican currency, each.   The names of all the  organizers appear  in the  articles of agreement, which  articles  were duly inscribed  in  the commercial register.  The purposes for which this  organization was effected were to engage in general engineering and construction work, operating under the name of the  "Philippine Engineering and Construction Company."  During its  active existence,  it engaged in the business of attempting to raise the sunken Spanish fleet, constructing under  contract warehouses and a wharf for the United States Government, supervising the construction  of  a warehouse  for a private firm,  and  some assay work.  It was, therefore, an industrial civil partnership,  as distinguished from  a commercial  one; a  civil partnership in the mercantile form, an anonymous partnership legally constituted in the  city of Manila.

The articles of agreement appeared in a public document and were duly inscribed in the commercial register.  To the extent of this inscription the corporation  partook of the form of a mercantile one and as such must be governed by articles 151 to 174 of the Code of Commerce, in so far as these provisions are not in conflict with the Civil Code (art.  1670, Civil  Code) ; but the direct and principal law applicable is the Civil Code.  Those provisions of the Code of Commerce are applicable subsidiarily.

This partnership or stock company (sociedad anonima) upon  the execution of the public instrument in which its articles of agreement appear, and the contribution of funds and personal property, became a juridical person - an artificial being, invisible,  intangible, and existing only  in contemplation of law - with the power  to hold, buy,  and sell property, and  to  sue  and  be  sued - a corporation - not a general co-partnership nor a limited co-partnership.  (Arts. 37, 38, 1665, and 1666  of the Civil Code; Compania Agricola de Ultramar vs. Reyes et  al., 4 Phil. Rep., 2; and Chief Justice Marshall's definition of a corporation, 17 U. S., 518.)

The inscribing  of its articles of agreement in the  commercial register was not necessary to make it a juridical person - a corporation.  Such inscription only operated to show that it partook of the form of a commercial corporation.  (Compania Agricola  de Ultramar vs. Reyes et al., supra.)

Did a majority of the stockholders, who were at the same time a majority of  the directors of this corporation, have the power under the law and its articles of agreement, to sell  or transfer to one of its members the assets of said corporation ?

In the first article of the statutes  of incorporation  it is stated that by virtue of a public document the organizers, whose names are given in full, agreed to form a sociedad anonima.   Article II provides that the organizers should be the directors and  administrators until the  second  general meeting,  and until their successors were duly elected and installed.  The  third  article provides that  the sociedad should run for ninety-nine years from the date of the execution  of its articles  of agreement.  Article IV sets forth the object  or purpose of the organization.  Article V  makes the capital $100,000 Mexican currency, divided into one thousand shares at $100  Mexican currency  each.  Article VI provides that each shareholder should be considered as a coowner in the assets of the company and entitled to participate in the profits in proportion to the amount of his stock. Article VII fixed the time of holding general meetings and the manner of calling special meetings of the stockholders. Article VIII provides that the  board  of directors shall be elected annually.  Article IX provides  for  the  filling of vacancies  in the  board of directors.   Article  X  provides that "the board of directors shall elect  the officers of the sociedad and have under its charge the administration of the said sociedad."  Article  XI: "In all the questions with reference to the administration of the affairs of the sociedad, it shall be necessary to secure  the  unanimous  vote of the board  of directors, and at least three of said board must be present in order to constitute a legal meeting."  Article XII provides that all of the stock, except that which was divided among the organizers,  should remain  in the  treasury  subject to the disposition  of the board of directors.   Article XIII  reads:  "In all  the meetings  of  the stockholders,  a majority vote of the stockholders present shall be necessary to  determine  any question  discussed."   The  fourteenth article authorizes the board of directors to adopt such rules and  regulations for  the government of the sociedad as  it should deem proper, which  were not  in conflict  with its statutes.

When  the sale  or transfer heretofore  mentioned  took place,  there were present four directors, all of whom gave their consent to that sale or transfer.   The plaintiff  was then absent and his  express  consent to make this  transfer or sale was not obtained.  He was, before leaving, one of the directors  in this corporation,  and  although  he  had resigned as manager, he had not  resigned as a  director.  He accepted the position of engineer of  the Canton and Shanghai Railway  Company,  knowing that  his duties  as such engineer would require his whole time and attention  and prevent his returning to the  Philippine Islands for at least a year or more.   The new position which he accepted in China was  incompatible with his position as director in the Philippine Engineering and Construction Company, a corporation whose sphere of operations was limited  to  the Philippine Islands.   These facts are sufficient to constitute an  abandoning or vacating of his position as  director in said corporation.  (10 Cyc, 741.)  Consequently, the transfer or sale of the corporation's assets to one of its members was made by the unanimous consent of all the directors in the corporation at that time.

There were only  five stockholders in this corporation at any time, four of whom were the directors who made the sale, and the other  the plaintiff, who was absent in China when the said sale took  place.  The  sale was,  therefore, made by the unanimous  consent  of four-fifths of all  the stockholders.  Under  the articles  of  incorporation,  the stockholders  and directors had general ordinary powers. There is nothing in  said articles which expressly prohibits the sale or transfer of the corporate property to one of the stockholders of said  corporation.

Is there anything in the law which prohibits such a sale or transfer?  To determine  this  question, it is necessary to examine, first, the provisions  of the Civil  Code, and second,  those provisions (arts. 151 to  174)  of the Code of Commerce.

Articles  1700 to  1708  of the Civil  Code deal with  the manner of dissolving a corporation.   There is  nothing in these articles  which expressly or impliedly prohibits  the sale of  corporate property to one of  its members, nor a dissolution of a corporation  in this manner.  Neither is there anything in articles 151 to 174 of the Code of Commerce which prohibits the dissolution  of a corporation by such sale or transfer.
"The articles of incorporation must include:

*       *       *      *       *       *      *

"The  submission to the vote of the majority of the meeting of members,  duly called  and held, of such matters as may properly be brought before the same."   (No. 10, art, 151, Code of Commerce.)

Article XIII of the corporation's statutes expressly provides that "in all the meetings of the stockholders, a majority vote  of the  stockholders present shall be necessary to determine any question discussed."
The sale or transfer to one of its  members was a matter which a  majority of  the stockholders could very properly consider.  But it is said that if the  acts and resolutions of a majority of the stockholders in a corporation are binding in every case upon  the minority, the minority would  be completely wiped out and their rights would be wholly at the mercy of the abuses of the majority.

Generally speaking, the voice of a majority of the stockholders is the law of  the corporation, but there are exceptions to this  rule.  There must necessarily be a limit upon the power of the majority.   Without  such a limit the will of the majority would be absolute and irresistible and might easily  degenerate into an arbitrary tyranny.  The reason for these limitations is that in every  contract of partnership (and a corporation can be considered a partnership for this purpose) there  is always something fundamental  and  unalterable which is beyond the power of the majority of the stockholders, and which constitutes the rule controlling their actions.  This rule which must be observed is to  be found in the essential compacts of such a partnership, which have served as a basis upon which the members have united, and without which it is not probable that they would have entered into the corporation.   Notwithstanding these limitations upon the power of the majority of the stockholders, their (the majority's)  resolutions,  when passed  in good faith and for a just cause, deserve careful consideration and are generally binding upon the minority.

Eixala, in  his work  entitled  "Instituciones del  Derecho Mercantil de Espana,"  speaking  of sociedades andnimas, says:
"The resolutions of the boards passed by a majority vote are valid  *   *   *  and authority for passing such resolutions is unlimited, provided that the  original contract is not broken by them,  the partnership funds not devoted to foreign purposes, or  the partnership transformed, or changes made which are against public policy or which infringe upon the rights of third persons."
The supreme court of Spain, in its decision dated  June 30, 1888, said:
"In order to be valid and binding upon dissenting members, it is an indispensable requisite that resolutions passed by a  general meeting of stockholders conform absolutely to the compacts and conditions of the articles of the association,  which are to be strictly construed."
That  resolutions passed within certain  limitations by a majority of the stockholders of a corporation are binding upon the minority, is therefore  recognized by the  Spanish authorities.
"Power of private corporation to alienate property. - This  power  of  absolute alienability of  corporate  property applies especially to private corporations that are established solely for the  purpose of trade or manufacturing and  in which the public has no direct interest.   While this power is spoken of as belonging to the corporation it  must be observed  that the authorities point out that the trustees  or directors of  a corporation do not possess the power to dispose  of the  corporate property so as to virtually  end the existence of  the corporation and  prevent it from  carrying on the business for which it was incorporated."   (Thompson on Corporations, second edition, sec. 2416, and cases cited thereunder.)

"Power to dispose of all property. - Where  there are no creditors, and  no  stockholder  objects,  a corporation, as against all other persons but the state, may sell and dispose of all its property.  The  state  in its  sovereign  capacity may question the power of the  corporation to do  so, but with these exceptions such a sale is valid.  A rule of general application is that a  corporation of a  purely  private business  character, one which  owes no special duty to the public, and is not given the right of eminent domain, where it is in failing circumstances or is insolvent, and when the exigencies of its business  require it or when the circumstances are vSuch that it can no longer continue the business with profit, may sell and dispose of all its property, pay its debts, divide the remaining assets and wind up the affairs of the corporation."   (Id., sec. 2417.)

"When directors or officers may dispose of all the property. - It  is within the dominion of  the managing officers and agents of the corporation to dispose  of all the corporate property  under certain circumstances;  and  this may be done  without reference to the  assent or authority of the stockholders.  This disposition of the property may be temporarily by lease, or permanently by absolute  conveyance. But it can only be done in the course of  the corporate business and for the furtherance of the purposes of the incorporation.   The board of directors possess this power when the corporation  becomes involved and by reason of its embarrassed or insolvent condition is unable either to pay its debts or to secure capital and funds for the further prosecution of its  enterprise,  and  especially where  creditors are pressing their claims and demands and  are threatening to or  have instituted actions to  enforce their claims.   This power of  the directors to alienate the property  is conceded where it is regarded as of imperative necessity."  (Id., sec. 2418,  and cases  cited.)

"When  majority stockholders  may dispose of all corporate property. - Another  rule that permits a majority of the stockholders to  dispose  of  all the corporate property and wind up the business, is  where the corporation  has become insolvent, and  the disposition  of the property is necessary to pay the debt; or where from any cause the business is a failure, and the best interest of the corporation and all the stockholders require it,  then  the majority have clearly the power to dispose of all the property even as against the protests of a minority.  It would be a harsh rule that would  permit one stockholder, or any minority of the  stockholders, to  hold the majority to their  investment where the continuation of the business would be at a loss and where there was no  prospect or hope that the enterprise could be made profitable.   The rule as stated by some courts is that  the majority stockholders may dispose of the property when just cause  exists; and  this just cause  is usually  defined to be the unprofitableness of the business and  where its  continuation would be ruinous to the  corporation and against the interest of  stockholders."  (Id., sec. 2424, and cases cited.)

"Nothing is better settled in the law of corporations than the doctrine that a corporation has the  same capacity  and power as a natural person to dispose of and convey its property,  real or personal,  provided it does not do so for  a purpose which  is foreign to the  objects for which  it was created, and  provided,  further, it violates no  charter or statutory  restriction, or  rule  of law based upon  public policy   *   *   *.  This  power need not  be expressly conferred upon a corporation by its  charter.  It is implied as an incident to  its ownership of  property, unless there is some  clear restriction  in its charter or  in some statute." (Clark and Marshall's Private  Corporations, sec. 152, and cases cited.)

"A  purely private business corporation,  like a manutacturing or trading company, which is  not  given  the right of  eminent domain,  and which owes no special duties to the  public,  may certainly sell  and convey absolutely  the whole of its property, when the exigencies of its business require it to do so, or when the circumstances are such that it can no longer profitably continue its business, provided the transaction  is not in fraud of the rights of creditors. or in violation of charter or statutory restrictions.   And, by the weight of authority, this may be done by a majority of the stockholders  against  the  dissent  of the minority." (Id., sec. 160,  and cases  cited.)
The above citations are  taken from the works  of the most eminent writers on corporation law.  The citation of cases in support of  the rules  herein  announced are too numerous to insert.

From these authorities it appears to be  well settled, first, that a private corporation, which owes no  special duty to the public and which has not been given the right of eminent domain, has the absolute right  and power  as against the whole world except the state, to sell and dispose of all of its property; second,  that the board of  directors  has this power, without reference to the assent or authority of the stockholders,  when the corporation is  in failing  circumstances or insolvent or when it can no longer continue the business with profit, and when it is  regarded as an imperative necessity; third, that a majority of the stockholders or directors, even against  the  protest of the minority,  have this power where, from  any cause, the business is a failure and the best interest of the corporation  and all the stockholders require it.

May officers or directors of the corporation purchase the corporate property?   The authorities are not uniform on this question,  but  on the general  proposition whether  a director or an  officer may deal with the corporation, we think  the weight of authority is  that he may.   (Merrick vs. Peru Coal Co., 61 111., 472; Harts et al. vs. Brown et al., 77 111., 226; Twin-Lick Oil Company vs. Marbury, 91 U. S., 587; Whitwell vs. Warner, 20 Vt., 425; Smith vs. Lansing, 22 N. Y., 520; City of  St. Louis vs. Alexander, 23 Mo., 483; Beach et al vs. Miller, 130 111., 162.)

While a corporation remains solvent, we can see no reason why a director or officer, by the authority of a majority of the stockholders or board of managers, may not deal  with the corporation, loan it money or  buy property from it, in like  manner  as a stranger.   So long as a purely  private corporation remains  solvent, its  directors are agents or trustees for the stockholders.   They owe  no duties or  obligations to others.   But the  moment such  a corporation becomes insolvent, its directors are trustees of all the creditors, whether they are members of  the corporation or not, and must manage its property and assets with strict regard to their interest; and if they are themselves creditors while the insolvent corporation is under their management,  they will not be permitted to secure to themselves by purchasing the corporate property or otherwise any personal advantage over the other creditors.  Nevertheless, a  director or officer may in good faith and for an adequate consideration  purchase  from  a majority of the directors  or stockholders the property even of an insolvent corporation, and a sale thus made to him is valid and binding upon the minority. (Beach et al. vs.  Miller, supra; Twin-Lick Oil Company vs. Marbury, supra;  Drury vs. Cross, 7 Wall.,  299; Curran vs. State of Arkansas, 15 How., 304; Richards vs. New Hampshire Insurance  Company, 43 N. H., 263;  Morawetz on Corporations  (first edition), sec. 579; Haywood vs. Lincoln Lumber Company et al., 64 Wis., 639; Port vs. Russell, 36 Ind., 60; Lippincott vs. Shaw Carriage Company, 21 Fed. Rep., 577.)

In the case of  the Twin-Lick Oil  Company vs.  Marbury, supra, the complainant was a corporation organized under the laws of West Virginia,  engaged in the business of raising and selling petroleum.  It became  very  much embarrassed and a note was given secured by a deed of trust, conveying all the property rights, and franchise  of the corporation  to William Thomas to secure the payment of said note, with the usual power of sale in  default of payment.   The property was sold  under the deed  of  trust; was bought in by defendant's agent for his benefit,  and conveyed to  him  the same year.  The defendant was at the time of these transactions a stockholder and director in the company.   At the time the defendant's money became due there was no apparent possibility of the corporation's paying  it at any time.  The  corporation was then insolvent.   The property was sold by the trustee and bought in by the defendant  at a fair and open sale and at a reasonable price.  The sale and purchase was the only mode left to the defendant to make his  money.  The  court said:
"That a director of a joint-stock corporation occupies one of those fiduciary relations where  his dealings  with  the subject-matter of his trust or agency, and  with  the beneficiary  or party whose interest is confided to his care, is viewed with jealousy by the courts, and may be  set aside on slight grounds, is a doctrine founded on the  soundest morality, and  which has received the clearest recognition in this court and  others.  (Koehler vs. Iron  Co., 2  Black, 715; Drury vs.  Cross, 7 Wall., 299; R. R. Co. vs. Magnay, 25 Beav., 586; Cumberland Co. vs. Sherman, 30 Barb., 553; Hoffman S.  Coal Co. vs.  Cumberland Co.,  16 Md., 456.) The general doctrine, however,  in regard to contracts of this class, is, not that they are absolutely  void, but that they are voidable at the election of the party whose interest has  been so represented by the party  claiming  under it. We  say, this is the general rule; for there  may be cases where such contracts would be void ab  initio; as when an agent to sell buys of himself, and by his power of attorney conveys  to himself  that which he was  authorized  to sell. But even here, acts which amount to  a ratification by the principal may validate the sale.

"The present case is not one of that class.  While it is true that the defendant, as  a  director of the corporation, was bound by all those rules of conscientious fairness which courts of equity have imposed as the guides for dealing in such cases, it can not be maintained that any rule forbids one director among several from loaning money to the corporation when the money is needed, and the transaction is open, and otherwise free from  blame.   No  adjudged case has gone so  far as this.  Such a doctrine, while it would afford little  protection  to the corporation against actual fraud or oppression, would deprive it of the aid of those most interested in giving aid judiciously, and best qualified to judge of the necessity of that aid, and  of the extent to which it may safely be given.

"There are in  such a  transaction three distinct parties whose interest is affected by it; namely, the lender, the corporation, and the stockholders of the corporation.

"The directors are the officers or agents of the corporation, and represent the interests of that abstract legal entity, and of those who own the  shares of its stock.   One of the objects of creating a corporation by law is to enable it to make contracts; and these  contracts may be  made with its stockholders as well as with others.   In some classes of corporations, as in mutual insurance companies, the main object of the act of incorporation  is to enable the company  to make contracts with its stockholders, or with parsons who become stockholders by the very act of making the contract of insurance.   It is very true, that as a stockholder in making  a contract of any  kind with  the  corporation  of which he is a member, is in some sense dealing with a creature of  which he is a part, and holds  a common interest with the other  stockholders, who, with  him,  constitute the whole of that artificial entity, he is properly held to a larger measure of candor  and good faith  than if  he were not a stockholder.   So,  when the  lender  is a  director, charged, with others, with the control and management of the affairs of the corporation,  representing in  this  regard  the aggregated interest of all the stockholders, his obligation,  if he becomes a party to a contract with the company, to candor and fair dealing, is increased in the precise degree that his representative character has given him power and control derived from the  confidence reposed in him  by the  stockholders who appointed him  their agent.  If he should be a  sole director, or one  of  a smaller number vested  with certain powers, this obligation would be  still stronger, and his acts subject to more severe  scrutiny, and their validity determined by more rigid principles of morality, and freedom from motives  of selfishness. All this falls far  short, however,  of  holding that  no such  contract  can be made which will be valid;  *   *   *."
In the case of Hancock vs. Holbrook et al.  (40 La. Ann., 53), the court said:
"As  a strictly legal  question, the right of a board of directors of a corporation to apply its property to the payment of  its debts,  and the right of a majority of stock holders present at a meeting called for the purpose to ratify such action and to dissolve the corporation, can not be questioned.

"But  where such action  is taken at the  instance,  and through the influence of the president of the corporation, and where the debt to which the property is applied is one for which he is himself primarily liable, and  especially where he subsequently acquires, in his personal right, the property thus disposed of, such circumstances undoubtedly subject his acts to severe scrutiny, and oblige him to establish that he acted with the utmost candor and fair-dealing for the interests of the corporation, and  without  taint of selfish motive."
The sale  or transfer of the corporate  property in the case at bar was made by three directors who were at the same time a majority of the stockholders.  If a majority of the stockholders have a  clear and a better right to sell the corporate property than a majority of the directors, then it can be said that a majority of the stockholders made this sale or transfer to the defendant McCullough.

What were the circumstances under which said sale was made ?  The corporation had been going from bad to worse. The work of trying to raise the sunken Spanish fleet had been for several months abandoned.  The corporation under the management of the plaintiff had entirely failed in this undertaking.  It had  broken its  contract with the naval authorities and the $10,000 Mexican currency deposited had been confiscated. It had no money.  It was considerably in debt.   It was a losing concern and a financial failure.  To continue its operation meant more losses.   Success  was impossible.  The corporation was civilly dead and had passed into the limbo of utter insolvency.  The  majority of the stockholders or directors sold the assets of this corporation, thereby relieving themselves and the plaintiff of all responsibility.  This  was the  only  wise and sensible thing for them to do.   They acted in perfectly good faith and for the best interests of all the stockholders.  "It would be  a harsh ruile that would permit one stockholder, or  any minority of stockholders to hold a majority to their investment where a continuation of the business would be at a loss and where there was no prospect or hope that the enterprise would be profitable."

The above sets forth the condition of this insolvent corporation when the defendant McCullough  proposed to the majority of stockholders to take over the assets and assume all responsibility for the payment of the debts  and the completion of the warehouses which had been undertaken. The assets consisted of office furniture of a value of less than P400, the uncompleted contract for the construction of the Government warehouses, and the wrecking contract. The liabilities amounted to at  least $19,645.74 Mexican currency.   $9,645.74 Mexican currency of this amount represented borrowed money, and $10,000 Mexican currency was the deposit with the naval authorities which had been confiscated and which was  due the bank.   McCullough's profits on the warehouse contract amounted to almost enough to pay the amounts  which the corporation  had borrowed from its members.   The wrecking contract which had been broken was of no value to the corporation for  the reason that the naval authorities absolutely refused to have anything further to do with the Philippine  Engineering and Construction Company.  They  (the naval authorities) had declined to consider the petition  of the corporation for an extension of time in  which to raise  the Spanish fleet, and had also refused to  reconsider their action in confiscating the deposit.  They did agree, however, that if the defendant McCullough would organize  a  new  association, that they would give the new concern an extension of time and would reconsider  the question of forfeiture of the amount deposited.  Under these circumstances and  conditions, McCullough organized the  Manila  Salvage Company, sold  five-sixths  of this wrecking  contract to  the new company for $15,000 Mexican currency and  retained  one-sixth as his share of the stock in the new concern.  The Manila Salvage Company paid to the bank the $10,000 Mexican currency which had  been borrowed to deposit with the naval authorities, and began operations.  All of the $10,000 Mexican currency so deposited was refunded to the new company except P2,000.  The new association failed and McCullough, by reason of this failure, lost over $16,000 Mexican currency. These facts show that McCullough acted  in good faith in purchasing  the old corporation's assets, and  that he certainly paid for the same,  a valuable consideration.

But counsel for the plaintiff say: "The board of directors possessed only ordinary powers of administration  (Article X  of the articles of incorporation), which in no manner empowered it either to transfer or to authorize the transfer of  the  assets of the company to McCullough  (art. 1773, Civil Code; decisions of the  supreme  court  of  Spain of April 2, 1862, and July 8, 1903)."

Article X of the articles of incorporation above referred to  provides that the  board of  directors  shall elect the  officers of the corporation and "have  under its  charge  the administration of the said corporation."   Article XI reads: "In all  the  questions with reference to  the administration of  the  affairs of the corporation, it shall be necessary to .secure the unanimous vote of the board of directors, and at least three  of said board must be present in  order to constitute  a legal meeting."  It will be noted that Article X placed the administration of the affairs of the corporation in the hands of the board of directors.  If Article XI  had been omitted, it is clear that under the rules which govern business of that character,  and  in  view of the fact that before  the  plaintiff left this country and abandoned  his office as director, there were only five directors in the corporation, then three would have been sufficient to constitute a quorum and could perform all the duties and exercise all the powers conferred upon  the  board under this article. It would not have been necessary to obtain the consent of all  three of such members which constituted the quorum in order that a resolution affecting the administration of the corporation should be binding,  as two votes - a majority of  the  quorum - would have been sufficient for this purpose.    (Buell.vs. Buckingham & Co.,  16 Iowa, 284; 2 Kent. Com., 293;  Cahill vs. Kalamazoo Mutual Insurance  Company, 2 Doug. (Mich.), 124;  Sargent vs. Webster, 13 Met., 497; In re Insurance Company, 22  Wend., 591; Ex parte Wilcox, 7 Cow.,  402;  id., 527, note a.)

It might appear on first examination that the organizers of this  corporation when they inserted  the  first part of Article XI intended that no resolution affecting the administration of the affairs should be binding upon the corporation unless the  unanimous consent of the entire board  was first obtained; but the reading of the last part of this same article shows clearly that the said organizers had no such intention,  for  they said:  "At  least three  of said  board must  be present  in order to constitute a  legal meeting." Now,  if three constitute a  legal meeting, three were  sufficient to transact business, three constituted the quorum, and,  under the above-cited authorities, two of the three would be sufficient to pass  binding resolutions relating to the administration of the corporation.

If the clause  "have under its charge and administer the affairs of the corporation" refers to the ordinary business transactions  of the  corporation  and does not include  the power to sell the corporate property and  to dissolve  the corporation when  it  becomes insolvent - a change we admit organic and fundamental - then the majority of the  stockholders in whom  the ultimate and controlling power  lies must surely have the power to do so.

Article 1713 of  the Civil Code reads:
"An agency  stated in general terms only  includes acts of administration.

"In order to compromise, alienate, mortgage, or to execute any other act of strict ownership  an express commission is required."
This article  appears  in title  9,  chapter  1 of the Civil Code, which deals with the  character, form,  and kinds of agency.  Now, were the positions of Hilbert, Green, Harigan,  and McCullough that of agents within the meaning of the article above quoted when  the assets of the corporaion  were transferred or sold to McCullough?  If  so, it would  appear from said  article that in order to make  the sale valid, an express commission would be required.  This provision of law is based upon the broad principles of sound reason and public policy.   There is a manifest impropriety in allowing the same person to act as the agent of the seller and to become himself the buyer.  In  such cases,  there arises so  often a conflict between duty and interest.   "The wise policy of the iaw hath put the sting of a disability into the temptation; as a defensive weapon against the strength of the danger which lies in the situation."

Hilbert, Green, and Hartigan were not only all creditors at the time the sale or transfer of the assets of the insolvent corporation was made,  but  they were also  directors and stockholders.   In addition to being a creditor, McCullough sustained to the corporation  the  double relation of a stockholder and president.  The plaintiff was only a stockholder. He would have been a creditor to the extent of his unpaid salary if  the corporation had been a  profitable instead of a losing concern.

But as we  have said when the sale or transfer  under consideration took place, there were three directors present, and  all voted  in  favor  of making this  sale. It was not necessary for the president, McCullough, to vote.   There was a quorum without him: a quorum of the  directors, and at the same time a majority of the stockholders.

A corporation is essentially a partnership, except in form. "The directors are the trustees or managing  partners, and the stockholders are the cestui que trust and have a joint interest in all the property and effects of the corporation." (Per Walworth, Ch., in  Kobinson vs. Smith,  3 Paige, 222, 232; 5 idem, 607; Slee vs.  Bloom, 19 Johns., 479; Hoyt vs. Thompson, 1 Seld., 320.)

The Philippine  Engineering and Construction Company was  an artificial person, owning its property and necessarily  acting  by its  agents; and  these  agents  were the directors.   McCullough was then an agent or a trustee, and the stockholders the principal.  Or say (as the corporation was  insolvent)  that he  was an  agent or trustee and the creditors were  the beneficiaries.  This being the true relation, then the rules  of law (art. 1713  of the Civil Code) applicable to sales and purchases  by  agents and trustees would not apply to the purchase in question for the reason that there was a quorum without McCullough, and for the further reason that an officer or director of a corporation, being  an agent of an artificial person and having a joint interest in the corporate property, is not such an agent as that treated of in article 1713 of the Civil Code.

Again, McCullough did not represent the corporation in this transaction.  It was represented by a quorum  of the board  of directors, who were at the same time a majority of the stockholders.  Ordinarily,  McCullough's duties  as president were to preside at the meetings, rule on questions of order, vote in case of a tie,  etc.   He  could not have voted in this transaction because there was no tie.

The acts of Hilbert, Green,  Hartigan, and McCullough in this transaction, in view of the relations which they bore to the corporation, are subject to the most severe scrutiny. They are obliged  to  establish  that they acted with the utmost candor and fair dealing for the interest of  the corporation, and without taint of selfish motives.

We have  subjected their conduct to this test,  and,  under the evidence, we believe it has safely emerged from the ordeal.
"Transactions which only accomplish justice, which are done in good faith and operate legal injury to no one, lack the characteristics  of fraud  and  are not  to  be  upset because the relations of  the parties give rise to suspicions which  are fully cleared away."  (Hancock vs.  Holbrook, supra.)
We therefore conclude that  the  sale or transfer made by the quorum of the board of directors - a majority of the stockholders - is valid and binding upon the minority - the plaintiff.  This conclusion is not in violation of the  articles of incorporation of the  Philippine Engineering  and Construction  Company.   Nor do we here announce a doctrine contrary to that announced by the supreme court of Spain in its decisions dated April 2,  1862, and July 8, 1903.

As to the third cause of action,  it is insisted: First, that the court erred  in  holding  the  defendant McCullough responsible for the personal  effects of the plaintiff; and second, that the court erred in finding that the effects left by the plaintiff were worth P2,400.

As we have said, the plaintiff was the manager of the Philippine Engineering  and  Construction  Company from April 1, 1902, up to January 1, 1903.  Sometime during the previous month of December he resigned to accept a  position in China, but did not leave Manila until about January 20.  He remained in Manila  about twenty days after  he severed his  connection  with  the company.   He  lived  in rooms in the same building which was rented by the  company and where  the company  had its offices.   When  he started for China he left his personal effects in those rooms, having turned the same over to one Paulsen.  Testifying on this point the plaintiff said:
"Q. To  whom did you turn over these  personal effects on leaving here? - A. To Mr. Paulsen.

"Q. Have you demanded payment of this sum [referring to the  value of his personal effects] ? - A. On leaving for China I gave Mr. Haussermann power of attorney to represent  me in this case and demand payment.

"Q. Please state whether or not you have an inventory of these effects. - A. I had an inventory which was in my possession but it was lost when the company took all  of the books and carried them away from the office.

"Q. Can you give a list or a partial list of your effects? - A. I remember some of the items.  There was a complete bedroom set, two marble tables, one glass bookcase, chairs, all of the household effects I used when I was  living  in the Botanical Garden as city engineer, one theodolite, which I bought after commencing work with the company.

"Q. How much do you estimate  to be the total reasonable value of these effects? - A. The total value would not be less than $1,200 gold."

Counsel for the plaintiff, on page 56 of their brief, say:

"Mr.  McCullough, in his  testimony (pp.  39  and 40) admits full knowledge of and participation in the removal and sale of the effects and states that he took the proceeds and considered them  part  of the assets  of  the company. He further admits that Mr. Haussermann made a demand for the proceeds of Mr. Mead's personal effects (p. 44)."
McGuIlough's  testimony,  referred to by  counsel, is  as follows: "Q.  At the time Mr. Mead left for China, in the building where the office was and in the office, there were left some of the personal effects of Mr. Mead.  What do you know about  these effects,  a list  of  which is  Exhibit  B? - A. Nothing appearing in  this Exhibit B was  ever delivered to the Philippine Engineering  and Construction  Company, according to my list.
"Q.  Do you know what became of these effects? - A. No, sir.  I have no idea.  I never saw  them.  I never heard these effects talked about.   I only heard something said about  certain  effects  which Mr. Mead had  in  his living room.

"Q.  Do you know what became of the bed of Mr. Mead? - A. I know there were effects, such as a bed, washstand, chairs, table, and other things, which are used in a living room,  and  that  they  were  in Mr.  Mead's  room.  These effects were sent  to the warehouse of the Pacific Oriental Trading Company, together with the office furniture.  We had to vacate the building  where the offices  were  and we had  to take out  everything therein.  These things were deposited in the warehouse  of the Pacific Oriental Trading Company and were finally  sold  by  that company and the money turned over to  me.

"Q.  How much? - A. P49.97.

"Q. What did you do with this money? - A. I took it and considered it  part of  the assets of the company.   All of the other effects of the office were sold at the same time and brought P347.16.

"Q. Did Mr. Mead leave anyone in charge  of his  effects when he left Manila? - A. I think he left Paulsen in charge, but Paulsen did not take these effects, so when we vacated the office we.had to move them.

"Q.  Did Paulsen  continue  occupying the living  room where these effects were and did he use these effects? - A. I  do not know because I was not  in the office for  three months before we vacated.

"Q.  Don't you  know that it is a fact  that Mr. Haussermann, as representative of Mr.  Mead,  demanded of you and  the company the payment of  the  salary  which was due Mr. Mead and the value  of his personal effects? - A. Yes, sir."
As to the value of these personal  effects, Hartigan, testifying as witness for the defendant, said:
"I think the personal effects were sold for P50.  His personal effects  consisted of ordinary articles, such as a person  would use who had to be going  from one place to another all the time, as Mr. Mead.   I know that all  those effects were sold for less than P100, if I  am not mistaken."
The foregoing  is the material testimony with reference to the  defendant McCullough's responsibility and the  value of the  personal effects of the plaintiff.

McCullough was  a member of the company and was responsible as such  for the rents where the offices  were located.  The company had no further use for the building after the plaintiff resigned.   The vacating of the building was the proper thing to do.   The office  furniture was removed and stored in a place where it cost nothing for rents. When  Hilbert, member  of the company, went to the  office to remove the company's office furniture, he found no one in charge of "the  plaintiff's personal effects.   He took  them and stored them in  the same place and later  sold them, together with the office furniture, and  turned  the entire amount over to defendant McCullough.

Paulsen, in whose  charge Mead left his effects, apparently took no interest in caring for  them.  Was the company to leave Mead's personal effects in that building and take the chances of having to  continue to pay rents, solely on account of the  plaintiff's  property  remaining there? The  company had reason to  believe that  it would  have to continue paying these rents,  as  they  had  rented the building and authorized the  plaintiff  to occupy  rooms therein.

The plaintiff knew when he left for China that he would be away a long time.   He had accepted a position of importance, and which he knew would  require his  personal attention.  He did not gather up his personal effects, but left them in the room  in charge of Paulsen.  Paulsen took no interest in caring  for them,  but  apparently left these effects to take care of themselves.   The plaintiff did not even  carry with him an inventory  of  these  effects, but attempted on the trial to give a  list of them and  did give a  partial list of the things he left in his room; but it is not shown that all these things  were there when Hilbert removed the office furniture and  some of  the plaintiff's effects.  The fact that the  plaintiff remained in Manila some twenty  days after resigning and never cared for his own effects but left them in  the possession of an irresponsible  person,  shows  extreme negligence on his part.  He exhibited a reckless  indifference to  the consequences  of leaving his effects in the leased premises.  The law imposed on every person the duty of using ordinary care against injury or damages.  What  constitutes ordinary care depends  upon the circumstances of each particular case  and the dangers reasonably to be apprehended.

McCullough did  not  have anything  personally to do with these effects  at any time.   He only accepted the money which Hilbert turned over to him.  He, personally, did not contribute in any way whatsoever to the loss of the property, neither did he as a member of the  corporation  do so.

The plaintiff gave an estimate of the value of the effects which he left in his rooms and placed this value at P2,400. He did not give a complete list of  the effects so left, neither did he give the value  of a  single item separately.  The plaintiff's testimony is  so indefinite and uncertain that it is impossible to determine with any degree of certainty just what these personal effects  consisted of and their values, especially when we take into consideration the significant fact that these effects were abandoned by Paulsen.  On the other hand, we  have before us the positive testimony of Hilbert as  to the amount received for the  plaintiff's personal effects, the testimony of Hartigan that the same were sold for less than P100,  and the testimony of McCullough as to the amount turned  over to him by Hilbert.

So we conclude that the great preponderance of evidence as to the value of these effects is in favor of the contention of the  defendant.  Their value must therefore be fixed at P49.97.

For these reasons the judgment  appealed from  as to the first and second causes of action is hereby affirmed.  Judgment appealed from as  to the third cause of  action is reduced to P49.97, without costs.

Arellano, C. J., Torres, Mapa, Carson, and Moreland, JJ., concur.

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