Atwood v. Bank of Chillicothe

10 Ohio St. 526
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 10 Ohio St. 526 (Atwood v. Bank of Chillicothe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atwood v. Bank of Chillicothe, 10 Ohio St. 526 (Ohio 1841).

Opinion

Hitchcock, J.

Two questions are raised for the consideration of the court in this case:

1. Whether the plaintiff is entitled to judgment for the amount of notes acquired by him subsequent to the ^commence- [528 ment of the suit, and which are now giyen in evidence?

2. If he is entitled to such judgment is ho entitled to interest, and from what time should the interest be computed?

As a general rule, it is well settled that the rights of parties litigant must be adjudicated as they wore at the commencement of the suit. And if a plaintiff has no cause of action when his writ is issued, ho can not subsequently acquire a right which can be enforced in such suit. Apply this principle to the present case, and the plaintiff could only recover a judgment for the amount of notes which he demanded on the 21st of April, with interest from that date. He would be precluded from the recovery of the 84,080.

It is supposed, however, by his counsel that a different rule prevails where a suit is brought against a bank to recover upon its notes or bills, and they refer to the act of January 28, 1824, “to regulate judicial proceedings where banks and bankers are par.ties,” and rely upon this act as sustaining them in this position. It is perhaps a little singular that although this law has been in force for seventeen years, and was preceded by a similar law as early as 1819, this court has never before been called upon to give to it a construction. A case was reserved in Cuyahoga county some two or three years since for the express purnose of obtaining the opinion of the court upon this law, -but it was settled by the parties, and never brought before the court. But perhaps this is to be accounted for by the fact, that from the passage of the law until within three or four yeai’S past, the banks of the state redeemed their notes when demanded.

The legislature, in the enactment of this law, intended to give an easy and effectual remedy to those who held the notes of a bank which did not redeem its promises, and to make it the interest of all such institutions to deal honestly and fairly. If there is anything of apparent severity in the law, it can not be at[529, 530]*529, 530tributed to any prejudice existing in the body who passed it 529] against banks. No such prejudice existed. They *were supposed to be institutions necessary to the welfare and prosperity of the country. There was the same disposition to do justice to them as to individuals. According to our understanding of the law, there is nothing in it which will operate unjustly. It may change some of the rules of pleading and evidence as known to the common law, but it is done only for the furtherance of justice.

The first section of the law, and this is the only section with which we have anything to do in the present case, provides, That in all actions brought against any bank or banker, whether of a public or private character, to recover money due from such bank or banker, on notes or bills by him or them issued, the plaintiff may file his declaration for money had and received generally, and on trial may give in evidence, to support the action, any notes or bills of such bank or banker, which said plaintiff may hold at the time of trial, and may recover the amount thereof, with interest lrom the time the same shall have been presented for payment and payment thereof refused, or from the time such bank or banker shall have ceased and refused to. redeem his notes with go'od and lawful money of the United States.”

This section would seem "to be sufficiently explicit in its terms, with respect to the rights of a plaintiff in introducing evidence, and in securing to him a judgment for the entire amount of notes and bills given in evidence. If is strongly urged, however, by the defendant’s counsel, that this statute should not have a literal construction, so far as to secure to a plaintiff a judgment for any greater amount than he was entitled to at the commencement of the suit. In other words, that the statute shall not be so construed as to infringe the general rule, that the rights of parties shall be adjudicated upon as they wore at the commencement of the suit. And it is claimed that the intention of the legislature was to permit a plaintiff who had in his possession notes or bills of a bank at the time of the commencement of a suit, but had afterward disposed of them, to give in evidence notes or bills of an equal amount, which he might have acquired at a subsequent period, but pre580] vious *to the trial. This certainly would be a forced construction of the law, and would equally interfere with the rule referred to. New rights would have been acquired, and those new rights would be the rights adjudicated.

[531]*531Tho legislature passing this law intended undoubtedly to interfere with this rule. They, entertained the opinion that no bank ought to enter into obligations beyond what it could meet, nor ought it to throw into circulation a currency which would be irredeemable. To prevent such course of conduct they intended to give to a bill-holder a speedy and effectual remedy to redeem the amount of bills in his hands, not only such as he might have on hand at the time of the commencement of the suit, but such as might subsequently and before judgment come into his possession. It is not perceived that there is anything wrong in this. The paper of a bank is intended and designed, when issued, to pass and circulate as money; it is loaned as money, it is received as money) and if it fails in fulfilling the object for which it is intended, those who have it in possession ought to have every needful facility furnished by law for changing it into money.

It is true, that under this law it is possible that a judgment may be recovered against a bank upon its paper, when it has never refused to redeem it. But such institutions have nothing to fear. No man having a bank note will ever commence suit upon that note if he can receive its amount upon demand. Nor if he has commenced a suit, will he collect in other paper, merely for the purpose of enhancing the amount of his judgment. But even should such an event happen, it can do the bank no essential injury. The only difference it will make will be that the institution will have to redeem its paper in the hands of tho sheriff instead of the bill-holder, with perhaps a little additional cost.

There may be, and undoubtedly are, circumstances occasionally occurring which may in some measure excuse one of theso institutions in a temporary suspension of-the redemption of its paper. But when such is the fact they are less likely to suffer than individuals placed under like circumstances. Let *this be as it [581 may, however, there is no more reason why the courts of justice should be closed against those who have claims against banking institutions, than against those who have claims against other corporations, or against individuals.

In any view which we can take of the subject, it seems to us clear under this statute, that in a suit against a bank, the plaintiff “ may give in evidence, to support the action, any notes or bills of such bank which said plaintiff may hold at the, time of trial, and may recover the amount thereof.”

[532]*532But it is said, by giving this construction to the act, it will conflict and be inconsistent with many parts of the act regulating the practice of the judicial courts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio St. 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atwood-v-bank-of-chillicothe-ohio-1841.