referred to, need not be determined. Within the period mentioned,
that is, before the expiration of six months after the conclusion of
peace, and, to be quite precise, on 11th June 1920, a Mr. Constantini,
acting for Nauer, paid in to the credit of an account with Hernsheim
& Co., at Rabaul, the sum of 16,575 shillings, representing
the 12,500 marks additional capital with 8 per cent interest to
date. The only point of contest is whether that was a compliance
with the proviso in the entry. The only reason advanced for denying
that it was a compliance is, not that it was out of time or that the
amount was insufficient, but that it was not a payment to the
company direct or to Mrs. Mainka. We may put aside the latter
reason, because clearly a payment to Mrs. Mainka herself or to any-
one for her individually would not have been a " payment in" to
the company or a compliance with the registration notice. Was it
then a " payment in" to the company ? The company had not, so
far as appears, anything in the nature of a registered office. It had a
business manager, Mr. Rudolf Wolff, of Paparatava, and the business
manager was by law a sufficient representative of the company.
But, by a registration notice of 5th March 1914, it was notified that
Joseph Mainka (who in fact is the husband of Mrs. Mainka) in
Londip had been appointed business manager and that both
managers "can represent the firm only jointly." But with that
notification was another on the same date, stating that by a deed of
9th February 1914, power was taken to appoint one or several
business managers, and that "the right of representation is to be
regulated from case to case." It was argued on behalf of the
appellant that the payment in to Hernsheim & Co. was bad for two
reasons: first, because payment to that firm, a mere creditor of
the company, enabling it to set off the amount against a debt owing
to it by the company, was not "compliance with the proviso " ;
and next, because it was not authorized by Wolff and Mainka
jointly as the company's representatives. The first is met by the
facts that there was no place suggested as the home of the company,
that Hernsheim & Co. were (inter alia) bankers, and at all events
were bankers of the company, and the payment in was apparently
made merely in the course of paying in the sum to the credit of the
company's banking account. But, however that might be, the