Section 7. Substitutes. The Board of Directors may from time to time in the absence of any one of said officers or, at any other time, designate any other person or persons on behalf of the Corporation, to sign any contracts, deeds, notes, or other instruments in the place or stead of any of said officers, and designate any person to fill any one of said offices, temporarily or for any particular purpose; and any instruments so signed in accordance with a resolution of the Board shall be the valid act of this Corporation as fully as if executed by any regular officer. ARTICLE IV. Resignation. Any director or officer may resign his office at any time. Such resignation shall be made in writing and shall take effect from the time of its receipt by the Corporation, unless some time be fixed in the resignation, and then from that date. The acceptance of a resignation shall not be required to make it effective. ARTICLE V. Indemnification of Directors and Officers. The Corporation shall indemnify any and all of its existing and former directors and officers and their spouses against all expenses incurred by them and each of them, including but not confined to legal fees, judgments and penalties which may be incurred, rendered or levied in any legal or administrative action brought against any of then, for or on account of any action or omission alleged to have been committed while acting within the scope of employment as director of officer of the Corporation to the fullest extent allowable pursuant to the Arizona General Corporation Law as may be amended from time to time. Whenever any such person has grounds to believe that he may incur any such aforementioned expense, he shall promptly make a full report of the matter to the President and the Secretary of the Corporation. Thereafter, the Board of Directors of the Corporation shall, within a reasonable time, determine if such person acted, or failed to act, in good faith and in a manner he reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interest of the Corporation, and with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe his conduct was unlawful. If the Board of Directors determines that such person acted, or failed to act, in good faith and in a manner he reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the Corporation, and with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe his conduct was unlawful, then indemnification shall be mandatory and shall be automatically extended as specified herein, provided, however, that the Corporation shall have the right to refuse indemnification, wholly or partially, in any instance in which the person to whom indemnification would otherwise have been applicable shall have unreasonably refused to permit the Corporation, at its own expense and through counsel of its own choosing, to defend him in the action, or shall have unreasonably refused to cooperate in the defense of such action. |